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The beauty backfire effect: Being too attractive can hurt fitness influencers, new research shows

  • Written by Andrew Edelblum, Assistant Professor of Marketing, University of Dayton

“Sex sells” has been a mantra in marketing for decades. As researchers who studyconsumer behavior, we’ve seen plenty of evidence to support it: Attractive models and spokespeople have been shown to reliably grab attention, boost clicks and make products seem more desirable.

But our new research suggests that in a digital world...

Read more: The beauty backfire effect: Being too attractive can hurt fitness influencers, new research shows

Bad Bunny and Puerto Rican Muslims: How both remix what it means to be Boricua

  • Written by Ken Chitwood, Affiliate Researcher, Religion and Civic Culture Center, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences; Bayreuth University
imageThe Mezquita Al-Madinah in Hatillo, Puerto Rico, about an hour west of San Juan, is one of several mosques and Islamic centers on the island.Ken Chitwood

Bad Bunny, born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, is more than a global music phenomenon; he’s a bona fide symbol of Puerto Rico.

The church choir boy turned “King of Latin...

Read more: Bad Bunny and Puerto Rican Muslims: How both remix what it means to be Boricua

The White Stripes join the Rock Roll Hall of Fame − their primal sound reflects Detroit’s industrial roots

  • Written by Nathan Fleshner, Associate Professor of Music Theory, University of Tennessee

In the opening scene of “It Might Get Loud,” a 2008 music documentary, musician Jack White appears surrounded by scrap wood and garbage. He hammers nails into a board, wraps wire around a glass Coca-Cola bottle as a makeshift guitar bridge, attaches a pickup, and plugs the contraption into a vintage Sears Silvertone amplifier –...

Read more: The White Stripes join the Rock Roll Hall of Fame − their primal sound reflects Detroit’s...

China’s new 5-year plan: A high-stakes bet on self-reliance that won’t fix an unbalanced economy

  • Written by Shaoyu Yuan, Adjunct Professor, New York University; Rutgers University

Every few years since 1953, the Chinese government has unveiled a new master strategy for its economy: the all-important five-year plan.

For the most part, these blueprints have been geared at spurring growth and unity as the nation transformed from a rural, agrarian economy to an urbanized, developed powerhouse.

The task that faced China’s...

Read more: China’s new 5-year plan: A high-stakes bet on self-reliance that won’t fix an unbalanced economy

Zohran Mamdani’s transformative child care plan builds on a history of NYC social innovations

  • Written by Simon Black, Associate Professor of Labour Studies, Brock University
imageAssembly member Zohran Mamdani attends a news conference on universal child care at Columbus Park Playground on Nov. 19, 2024, in New York City.Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Zohran Mamdani, the 34-year-old New York State Assembly member and democratic socialist, was elected New York City’s mayor on Nov. 4, 2025, after pledging to make the...

Read more: Zohran Mamdani’s transformative child care plan builds on a history of NYC social innovations

Dick Cheney’s expansive vision of presidential power lives on in Trump’s agenda

  • Written by Graham G. Dodds, Professor of Political Science, Concordia University
imageVice President Dick Cheney appears at a Washington D.C., event in 2007.AP Photo/Charles Dharapak

Former Vice President Dick Cheney will be remembered for many things. He was arguably the most powerful vice president in American history. He was a paragon of conservatism. He was the architect of many of the more extreme measures in President George...

Read more: Dick Cheney’s expansive vision of presidential power lives on in Trump’s agenda

Declining union membership could be making working-class Americans less happy and more susceptible to drug overdoses

  • Written by Samia Islam, Professor of Economics, Boise State University
imageProtesters gather at a union-organized rally outside the U.S. Capitol in February 2025. Allison Robbert/AFP via Getty Images

When fewer people belong to unions and unions have less power, the impact goes beyond wages and job security. Those changes can hurt public health and make people more unhappy.

We’re economistswho research labor and...

Read more: Declining union membership could be making working-class Americans less happy and more susceptible...

Singles’ Day is a $150B holiday in China. Here’s why I think ‘11/11’ will catch on in the US

  • Written by Peter McGraw, Professor of Marketing and Psychology, University of Colorado Boulder

On Nov. 11 each year, a curious holiday takes over China. What began among Nanjing University students in the 1990s as a tongue-in-cheek counter to Valentine’s Day has exploded into the world’s largest shopping event: Singles’ Day.

The date, 11/11, was chosen because the four ones resemble “bare sticks,” Chinese slang...

Read more: Singles’ Day is a $150B holiday in China. Here’s why I think ‘11/11’ will catch on in the US

Diane Keaton’s $5M pet trust would be over the top if reports prove true – here’s how to ensure your beloved pet is safe after you are gone

  • Written by Allison Anna Tait, Professor of Law, University of Richmond

Diane Keaton loved her dog, Reggie.

The award-winning actor, director and real estate entrepreneur frequently posted photos and video clips of the golden retriever on her social media accounts. After she died on Oct. 11, 2025, at 79, some news outlets reported that she left US$5 million of her estimated $100 million estate to her dog.

I’m a law...

Read more: Diane Keaton’s $5M pet trust would be over the top if reports prove true – here’s how to ensure...

Oklahoma tried out a test to ‘woke-proof’ the classroom. It was short-lived, but could still leave a mark

  • Written by Emery Petchauer, Visiting Professor, Teachers College, Columbia University
imageOklahoma's short-lived PragerU teacher assessment was one of the final projects under former Superintendent Ryan Walters, who resigned in September 2025. eyegelb/iStock/Getty Images Plus

Oklahoma has become a testing ground for reshaping public school curriculum to reflect conservative viewpoints, Make America Great Again priorities and a push for...

Read more: Oklahoma tried out a test to ‘woke-proof’ the classroom. It was short-lived, but could still leave...

More Articles ...

  1. America’s teachers are being priced out of their communities − these cities are building subsidized housing to lure them back
  2. SETI’s ‘Noah’s Ark’ – a space historian explores how the advent of radio astronomy led to the USSR’s search for extraterrestrial life
  3. 2 ways you can conserve the water used to make your food
  4. Congress has been dodging responsibility for tariffs for decades – now the Supreme Court will decide how far presidents can go alone
  5. Signatures meant more in Mesopotamia than they do now − what cylinder seals say about ancient and modern life
  6. Trump is changing student loan forgiveness rules – barring some public workers from getting relief, but resuming it for others
  7. Strict school vaccine mandates work, and parents don’t game the system − new research
  8. Amateur hour in Congress: How political newcomers fuel gridlock and government shutdowns
  9. The military’s diversity rises out of recruitment targets, not any ‘woke’ goals
  10. Why can’t every country get along with each other? It comes down to resources, inequality and perception
  11. Private equity firms are snapping up mobile home parks − and driving out the residents who can least afford to lose them
  12. Investors prefer ‘I’ over ‘we’ when CEOs apologize
  13. Bangladesh’s accession to the UN Water Convention has a ripple effect that could cause problems with India
  14. All government shutdowns disrupt science − in 2025, the consequences extend far beyond a lapse in funding
  15. Trump’s squeeze of Venezuela goes beyond Monroe Doctrine – in ideology, intent and scale, it’s unprecedented
  16. Trump’s squeeze of Venezuela goes beyond ‘Monroe doctrine’ – in ideology, intent and scale, it’s unprecedented
  17. The shutdown – and the House’s inaction – helps pave Congress’ path to irrelevance
  18. ‘Only death can protect us’: How the folk saint La Santa Muerte reflects violence in Mexico
  19. What is DNS? A computer engineer explains this foundational piece of the web – and why it’s the internet’s Achilles’ heel
  20. Symbolism of cemetery plants: How flowers, trees and other botanical motifs honor those buried beneath
  21. Wildlife recovery means more than just survival of a species
  22. It’s always been hard to make it as an artist in America – and it’s becoming only harder
  23. Back pain during pregnancy is often dismissed as a passing discomfort − a nurse explains why it should be taken seriously and treated
  24. 25 Years of the International Space Station: What archaeology tells us about living and working in space
  25. Health headlines can be confusing - these 3 questions can help you evaluate them
  26. People abused by intimate partners have worse asthma – but researchers are still untangling the reasons behind this surprising link
  27. The Jew in King Shaka’s court: How a 19th-century castaway shaped a Zulu leader’s legacy
  28. Trump’s ability to counter Netanyahu’s spoiler tactics in public may have been key to advancing a ceasefire in Gaza
  29. US squeeze on Venezuela won’t bring about rapid collapse of Maduro – in fact, it might boomerang on Washington
  30. 4 urgent lessons for Jamaica from Puerto Rico’s troubled hurricane recovery – and how the Jamaican diaspora could help after Melissa
  31. Voters lose when maps get redrawn before every election instead of once a decade − a trend started in Texas, moving to California and likely spreading across the country
  32. ‘Night of the Living Dead’ helped me process the Tree of Life massacre and other real-world horrors
  33. Beware the Anglo-Saxons! Why Russia likes to invoke a medieval tribe when talking about the West
  34. ‘My gender is like an empty lot’ − the people who reject man, woman and any other gender label
  35. Atorvastatin recall may affect hundreds of thousands of patients – and reflects FDA’s troubles inspecting medicines manufactured overseas
  36. What both sides of America’s polarized divide share: Deep anxieties about the meaning of life and existence itself
  37. Where does human thinking end and AI begin? An AI authorship protocol aims to show the difference
  38. Signature size and narcissism − a psychologist explains a long-ago discovery that helped establish the link
  39. With more Moon missions on the horizon, avoiding crowding and collisions will be a growing challenge
  40. Water bears survive cosmic radiation with one DNA-protecting protein – learning how could boost human resilience, too
  41. How autism rates are rising – and why that could lead to more inclusive communities
  42. Polarizing political events are leading Americans to increasingly call for a national divorce
  43. Nuclear-powered missiles: An aerospace engineer explains how they work – and what Russia’s claimed test means for global strategic stability
  44. Why are 4.7 million Floridians insured through ACA marketplace plans, and what happens if they lose their subsidies?
  45. Rediscovery of African American burial grounds provides long-overdue opportunities for collective healing
  46. Trump’s anti-Venezuela actions lack strategy, justifiable targets and legal authorization
  47. SNAP benefit freeze will leave millions nationwide struggling to pay for food – including 472,711 people in Philadelphia
  48. US leaders view China as a ‘pacing threat’ − has Washington enough stamina to last the race?
  49. Hurricane Melissa turned sharply to devastate Jamaica − how forecasters knew where it was headed
  50. Washington state settles controversy over child abuse law that tested the limits of ‘priest-penitent’ privilege