• Hulu New Releases: June 2025

    FX’s The Bear returns to Hulu for a fourth season on June 25. This season will once again test Carmy, Sydney, and the rest of The Bear crew as they try to push their restaurant, and each other, to be the best they can be.

    The original docuseries Call Her Alex arrives on June 10, following podcast host and media mogul Alex Cooper as she prepares for her first tour. This docuseries also tells the story of how Cooper went from the host of a successful podcast to the CEO of a media empire, all within six years.
    Here’s everything that’s coming to Hulu in June.
    Hulu New Releases – June 2025
    June 1
    AdamAlienAlien 3Alien ResurrectionAlien vs. PredatorAlien: CovenantAliensAliens vs. Predator: RequiemBeasts Of The Southern WildBefore MidnightBetsy’s WeddingBeverly Hills NinjaBig EdenBig FishThe Big HitBig Mommas: Like Father, Like SonBlue JasmineBoy Meets GirlBreakin’ All the RulesThe BronzeBubble BoyBugsyCedar RapidsThe Chronicles Of Narnia: The Voyage Of The Dawn TreaderCold PursuitCyrusDaddy Day CareDeath on the NileDeja VuDelivery ManDude, Where’s My Car?Edge of TomorrowElena UndoneFreddy Got FingeredThe Girl Next DoorGrown UpsGrown Ups 2Happy GilmoreThe HeatHitchcockHurricane BiancaIdiocracyIndependence DayThe Joy Luck ClubJust Go With ItKung Fu Panda 3Let’s Be CopsLoving AnnabelleMamma Mia: Here We Go Again!Mamma Mia!The MaskMe And Earl And The Dying GirlMirrorsThe NamesakeA Perfect EndingPineapple ExpressPredatorThe PredatorPredator 2PredatorsPride + Prejudice + ZombiesPrometheusReno 911! Miami: The MovieSordid Lives28 Weeks LaterThe War of the RosesWe’re The MillersWorking GirlYou Don’t Mess With The ZohanJune 3
    I’ve Somehow Gotten Stronger When I Improved My Farm-Related Skills: Complete Season 1Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid: Complete Season 1The Quiz With Balls: Season 2 PremiereSo I’m a Spider, So What?: Complete Season 1Wise Man’s Grandchild: Complete Season 1Yuri on Ice: Complete Season 1PresenceJune 4
    The Great House Revival: Complete Season 5June 5
    National AnthemJune 6
    Not Her First Rodeo: Complete Season 1Predator: Killer of Killers: Film PremiereBorat: Cultural Learnings Of America For Make Benefit Glorious Nation …Deuce Bigalow: Male GigoloHot Shots!Hot Shots! Part DeuxShallow HalThe RingerJune 7
    Gypsy’s Revenge: Complete Season 1IGot Away With It: Complete Season 3Kids Baking Championship: Complete Season 12Murder in the Heartland: Complete Season 1Naked and Afraid: Last One Standing: Complete Season 1Sister Wives: Complete Season 12June 8
    ScreamJune 9
    Beyblade X: Season 1B

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    June 10
    Call Her Alex: Complete DocuseriesAnd Then We DancedClifford the Big Red DogJune 11
    The Snake: Series PremiereGran TurismoJune 12
    The 1% Club: Season 2 PremiereJune 13
    Atsuko Okatsuka: Father: Special PremiereAbsolutionJune 14
    90 Day Fiance: Complete Season 590 Day Fiance UK: Complete Season 2Guy’s Grocery Games: Complete Seasons 32 & 33I’d Kill For You: Complete Season 3Joel McHale: Live from PyongyangJune 16
    My Happy Ending: Complete Season 1Black ChristmasJune 17
    SALLYSkincareJune 19
    The Quiet OnesJune 20
    The Bravest Knight: Season 2BOut Come the WolvesJune 23
    Barbara Walters Tell Me Everything: Documentary PremiereHelck: Complete Season 1My Instant Death Ability is Overpowered: Complete Season 1My Isekai Life : Complete Season 1June 24
    SurviveJune 25
    FX’s The Bear: Complete Season 4June 27
    F*ck Marry KillJune 29
    The Bachelor: Complete Seasons 27 & 28June 30
    Boonie Bears: Time TwistTexas True Crime: Complete Season 5The ActorLeaving Hulu – June 2025
    June 1
    Christmas with the CampbellsJune 2
    The Amazing MauriceJune 4
    Intrigo: Dear AgnesJune 8
    IndemnityJune 10
    Here BeforeWarhuntJune 11
    Intrigo: SamariaJune 13
    The Worst Person in the WorldJune 17
    Ted KThe LedgeJune 22
    The Burning SeaJune 24
    Big Gold BrickGasoline AlleyJune 25
    The Desperate HourJune 30
    Transfusion
    #hulu #new #releases #june
    Hulu New Releases: June 2025
    FX’s The Bear returns to Hulu for a fourth season on June 25. This season will once again test Carmy, Sydney, and the rest of The Bear crew as they try to push their restaurant, and each other, to be the best they can be. The original docuseries Call Her Alex arrives on June 10, following podcast host and media mogul Alex Cooper as she prepares for her first tour. This docuseries also tells the story of how Cooper went from the host of a successful podcast to the CEO of a media empire, all within six years. Here’s everything that’s coming to Hulu in June. Hulu New Releases – June 2025 June 1 AdamAlienAlien 3Alien ResurrectionAlien vs. PredatorAlien: CovenantAliensAliens vs. Predator: RequiemBeasts Of The Southern WildBefore MidnightBetsy’s WeddingBeverly Hills NinjaBig EdenBig FishThe Big HitBig Mommas: Like Father, Like SonBlue JasmineBoy Meets GirlBreakin’ All the RulesThe BronzeBubble BoyBugsyCedar RapidsThe Chronicles Of Narnia: The Voyage Of The Dawn TreaderCold PursuitCyrusDaddy Day CareDeath on the NileDeja VuDelivery ManDude, Where’s My Car?Edge of TomorrowElena UndoneFreddy Got FingeredThe Girl Next DoorGrown UpsGrown Ups 2Happy GilmoreThe HeatHitchcockHurricane BiancaIdiocracyIndependence DayThe Joy Luck ClubJust Go With ItKung Fu Panda 3Let’s Be CopsLoving AnnabelleMamma Mia: Here We Go Again!Mamma Mia!The MaskMe And Earl And The Dying GirlMirrorsThe NamesakeA Perfect EndingPineapple ExpressPredatorThe PredatorPredator 2PredatorsPride + Prejudice + ZombiesPrometheusReno 911! Miami: The MovieSordid Lives28 Weeks LaterThe War of the RosesWe’re The MillersWorking GirlYou Don’t Mess With The ZohanJune 3 I’ve Somehow Gotten Stronger When I Improved My Farm-Related Skills: Complete Season 1Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid: Complete Season 1The Quiz With Balls: Season 2 PremiereSo I’m a Spider, So What?: Complete Season 1Wise Man’s Grandchild: Complete Season 1Yuri on Ice: Complete Season 1PresenceJune 4 The Great House Revival: Complete Season 5June 5 National AnthemJune 6 Not Her First Rodeo: Complete Season 1Predator: Killer of Killers: Film PremiereBorat: Cultural Learnings Of America For Make Benefit Glorious Nation …Deuce Bigalow: Male GigoloHot Shots!Hot Shots! Part DeuxShallow HalThe RingerJune 7 Gypsy’s Revenge: Complete Season 1IGot Away With It: Complete Season 3Kids Baking Championship: Complete Season 12Murder in the Heartland: Complete Season 1Naked and Afraid: Last One Standing: Complete Season 1Sister Wives: Complete Season 12June 8 ScreamJune 9 Beyblade X: Season 1B Join our mailing list Get the best of Den of Geek delivered right to your inbox! June 10 Call Her Alex: Complete DocuseriesAnd Then We DancedClifford the Big Red DogJune 11 The Snake: Series PremiereGran TurismoJune 12 The 1% Club: Season 2 PremiereJune 13 Atsuko Okatsuka: Father: Special PremiereAbsolutionJune 14 90 Day Fiance: Complete Season 590 Day Fiance UK: Complete Season 2Guy’s Grocery Games: Complete Seasons 32 & 33I’d Kill For You: Complete Season 3Joel McHale: Live from PyongyangJune 16 My Happy Ending: Complete Season 1Black ChristmasJune 17 SALLYSkincareJune 19 The Quiet OnesJune 20 The Bravest Knight: Season 2BOut Come the WolvesJune 23 Barbara Walters Tell Me Everything: Documentary PremiereHelck: Complete Season 1My Instant Death Ability is Overpowered: Complete Season 1My Isekai Life : Complete Season 1June 24 SurviveJune 25 FX’s The Bear: Complete Season 4June 27 F*ck Marry KillJune 29 The Bachelor: Complete Seasons 27 & 28June 30 Boonie Bears: Time TwistTexas True Crime: Complete Season 5The ActorLeaving Hulu – June 2025 June 1 Christmas with the CampbellsJune 2 The Amazing MauriceJune 4 Intrigo: Dear AgnesJune 8 IndemnityJune 10 Here BeforeWarhuntJune 11 Intrigo: SamariaJune 13 The Worst Person in the WorldJune 17 Ted KThe LedgeJune 22 The Burning SeaJune 24 Big Gold BrickGasoline AlleyJune 25 The Desperate HourJune 30 Transfusion #hulu #new #releases #june
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    Hulu New Releases: June 2025
    FX’s The Bear returns to Hulu for a fourth season on June 25. This season will once again test Carmy (Jeremy Allen White), Sydney (Ayo Edebiri), and the rest of The Bear crew as they try to push their restaurant, and each other, to be the best they can be. The original docuseries Call Her Alex arrives on June 10, following podcast host and media mogul Alex Cooper as she prepares for her first tour. This docuseries also tells the story of how Cooper went from the host of a successful podcast to the CEO of a media empire, all within six years. Here’s everything that’s coming to (and leaving) Hulu in June. Hulu New Releases – June 2025 June 1 Adam (2019)Alien (1979)Alien 3 (1992)Alien Resurrection (1997)Alien vs. Predator (2004)Alien: Covenant (2017)Aliens (1986)Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem (2007)Beasts Of The Southern Wild (2012)Before Midnight (2013)Betsy’s Wedding (1990)Beverly Hills Ninja (1997)Big Eden (2000)Big Fish (2003)The Big Hit (1998)Big Mommas: Like Father, Like Son (2011)Blue Jasmine (2013)Boy Meets Girl (2014)Breakin’ All the Rules (2004)The Bronze (2016)Bubble Boy (2001)Bugsy (1991)Cedar Rapids (2011)The Chronicles Of Narnia: The Voyage Of The Dawn Treader (2010)Cold Pursuit (2019)Cyrus (2010)Daddy Day Care (2003)Death on the Nile (2022)Deja Vu (2006)Delivery Man (2013)Dude, Where’s My Car? (2000)Edge of Tomorrow (2014)Elena Undone (2010)Freddy Got Fingered (2001)The Girl Next Door (2004)Grown Ups (2010)Grown Ups 2 (2013)Happy Gilmore (1996)The Heat (2013)Hitchcock (2012)Hurricane Bianca (2016)Idiocracy (2006)Independence Day (1996)The Joy Luck Club (1993)Just Go With It (2011)Kung Fu Panda 3 (2016)Let’s Be Cops (2014)Loving Annabelle (2006)Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again! (2018)Mamma Mia! (2008)The Mask (1994)Me And Earl And The Dying Girl (2015)Mirrors (2008)The Namesake (2007)A Perfect Ending (2012)Pineapple Express (2008)Predator (1987)The Predator (2018)Predator 2 (1990)Predators (2010)Pride + Prejudice + Zombies (2016)Prometheus (2012)Reno 911! Miami: The Movie (2007)Sordid Lives (2000)28 Weeks Later (2007)The War of the Roses (1989)We’re The Millers (2013)Working Girl (1988)You Don’t Mess With The Zohan (2008) June 3 I’ve Somehow Gotten Stronger When I Improved My Farm-Related Skills: Complete Season 1 (DUBBED & SUBBED)Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid: Complete Season 1 (DUBBED & SUBBED)The Quiz With Balls: Season 2 PremiereSo I’m a Spider, So What?: Complete Season 1 (DUBBED & SUBBED)Wise Man’s Grandchild: Complete Season 1 (DUBBED & SUBBED)Yuri on Ice: Complete Season 1 (DUBBED & SUBBED)Presence (2025)June 4 The Great House Revival: Complete Season 5June 5 National Anthem (2023)June 6 Not Her First Rodeo: Complete Season 1Predator: Killer of Killers: Film PremiereBorat: Cultural Learnings Of America For Make Benefit Glorious Nation … (2006)Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo (1999)Hot Shots! (1991)Hot Shots! Part Deux (1993)Shallow Hal (2001)The Ringer (2005)June 7 Gypsy’s Revenge: Complete Season 1I (Almost) Got Away With It: Complete Season 3Kids Baking Championship: Complete Season 12Murder in the Heartland: Complete Season 1Naked and Afraid: Last One Standing: Complete Season 1Sister Wives: Complete Season 12June 8 Scream (2022) June 9 Beyblade X: Season 1B Join our mailing list Get the best of Den of Geek delivered right to your inbox! June 10 Call Her Alex: Complete DocuseriesAnd Then We Danced (2019)Clifford the Big Red Dog (2021)June 11 The Snake: Series PremiereGran Turismo (2023)June 12 The 1% Club: Season 2 PremiereJune 13 Atsuko Okatsuka: Father: Special PremiereAbsolution (2024)June 14 90 Day Fiance: Complete Season 590 Day Fiance UK: Complete Season 2Guy’s Grocery Games: Complete Seasons 32 & 33I’d Kill For You: Complete Season 3Joel McHale: Live from Pyongyang (2019) June 16 My Happy Ending: Complete Season 1 (Sub)Black Christmas (2019)June 17 SALLY (2025)Skincare (2024)June 19 The Quiet Ones (2024)June 20 The Bravest Knight: Season 2BOut Come the Wolves (2024)June 23 Barbara Walters Tell Me Everything: Documentary PremiereHelck: Complete Season 1 (DUBBED & SUBBED)My Instant Death Ability is Overpowered: Complete Season 1 (DUBBED & SUBBED)My Isekai Life : Complete Season 1 (DUBBED & SUBBED)June 24 Survive (2024) June 25 FX’s The Bear: Complete Season 4June 27 F*ck Marry Kill (2024)June 29 The Bachelor: Complete Seasons 27 & 28June 30 Boonie Bears: Time Twist (2024)Texas True Crime: Complete Season 5The Actor (2025)Leaving Hulu – June 2025 June 1 Christmas with the Campbells (2022)June 2 The Amazing Maurice (2022) June 4 Intrigo: Dear Agnes (2019)June 8 Indemnity (2021)June 10 Here Before (2021)Warhunt (2022)June 11 Intrigo: Samaria (2019)June 13 The Worst Person in the World (2021)June 17 Ted K (2021)The Ledge (2022) June 22 The Burning Sea (2021)June 24 Big Gold Brick (2022)Gasoline Alley (2022)June 25 The Desperate Hour (2022)June 30 Transfusion (2023)
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  • 18-Million-Year-Old Megalodon Teeth Reveal the Predator's Surprising Diet

    Comparison of a megalodon tooth and a great white shark tooth, not associated with the study.NewsletterSign up for our email newsletter for the latest science newsMegalodon teeth have always been key to understanding the ancient marine predator. Fossilized teeth are all that remain to prove the existence of these massive sharks, and the name megalodon is from the Greek for “big tooth.”A new study, published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters, highlights the importance of the megalodon’s human-hand-sized teeth once again. Thanks to extracting and analyzing the traces of zinc left in the fossilized teeth, researchers now know that the megalodon’s diet was much broader than scientists once believed.“Megalodon was by all means flexible enough to feed on marine mammals and large fish, from the top of the food pyramid as well as lower levels – depending on availability,” said Jeremy McCormack from the Department of Geosciences at Goethe University, in a press release.What Did the Megalodon Eat?Clocking in at 78 feet in length and weighing about twice as much as a semi truck, the megalodon was a big fish with a big appetite. It is suggested that a member of the Otodus shark family would require about 100,000 kilocalories per day to survive. Due to this extreme number, scientists have often assumed that the megalodon’s main source of calories came from whales.This new study suggests that whales were not the only item on the megalodon’s daily menu and that these sharks were actually quite adaptable when it came to their food. The research team analyzed 18-million-year-old giant teeth that came from two fossil deposits in Sigmaringen and Passau. What they were looking for was the presence of zinc-66 and zinc-64, two isotopes commonly ingested with food. Typically, the higher up in a food pyramid an animal is, the lower the presence of zinc. As they are oftentimes at the top of the food chain, species such as Otodus megalodon and Otodus chubutensis have a low ratio of zinc-66 to zinc-64 compared to species lower on the food chain.“Sea bream, which fed on mussels, snails, and crustaceans, formed the lowest level of the food chain we studied,” said McCormack in the press release. “Smaller shark species such as requiem sharks and ancestors of today’s cetaceans, dolphins, and whales, were next. Larger sharks, such as sand tiger sharks, were further up the food pyramid, and at the top were giant sharks like Araloselachus cuspidatus and the Otodus sharks, which include megalodon.”Surprisingly, the zinc levels in the megalodon teeth weren’t always that different from the zinc levels in species lower down the food chain. This result means that the commonly held scientific belief that megalodons focused their attention on eating large marine mammals may be incorrect. Instead, McCormack refers to the megalodon as an “ecologically versatile generalist” that adapted to environmental and regional constraints that changed the availability and variety of their prey.A New Method in Teeth TestingUsing the zinc content of fossilized teeth is a relatively new method of analysis, and the research team working on the megalodon couldn’t be happier with their results. The methods used in this study have not only been used for prehistoric shark and whale species but also modern-day shark species, and have even been used on herbivorous prehistoric rhinoceroses.Overall, these new methods have begun to rewrite the history of megalodon’s eating habits and may help to explain more about why these giants of the food chain went extinct. “gives us important insights into how the marine communities have changed over geologic time, but more importantly the fact that even ‘supercarnivores’ are not immune to extinction,” said Kenshu Shimada, a paleobiologist at DePaul University and a coauthor of this study, in the press release.Article SourcesOur writers at Discovermagazine.com use peer-reviewed studies and high-quality sources for our articles, and our editors review for scientific accuracy and editorial standards. Review the sources used below for this article:Earth and Planetary Science Letters. Miocene marine vertebrate trophic ecology reveals megatooth sharks as opportunistic supercarnivoresAs the marketing coordinator at Discover Magazine, Stephanie Edwards interacts with readers across Discover's social media channels and writes digital content. Offline, she is a contract lecturer in English & Cultural Studies at Lakehead University, teaching courses on everything from professional communication to Taylor Swift, and received her graduate degrees in the same department from McMaster University. You can find more of her science writing in Lab Manager and her short fiction in anthologies and literary magazine across the horror genre.1 free article leftWant More? Get unlimited access for as low as /monthSubscribeAlready a subscriber?Register or Log In1 free articleSubscribeWant more?Keep reading for as low as !SubscribeAlready a subscriber?Register or Log In
    #18millionyearold #megalodon #teeth #reveal #predator039s
    18-Million-Year-Old Megalodon Teeth Reveal the Predator's Surprising Diet
    Comparison of a megalodon tooth and a great white shark tooth, not associated with the study.NewsletterSign up for our email newsletter for the latest science newsMegalodon teeth have always been key to understanding the ancient marine predator. Fossilized teeth are all that remain to prove the existence of these massive sharks, and the name megalodon is from the Greek for “big tooth.”A new study, published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters, highlights the importance of the megalodon’s human-hand-sized teeth once again. Thanks to extracting and analyzing the traces of zinc left in the fossilized teeth, researchers now know that the megalodon’s diet was much broader than scientists once believed.“Megalodon was by all means flexible enough to feed on marine mammals and large fish, from the top of the food pyramid as well as lower levels – depending on availability,” said Jeremy McCormack from the Department of Geosciences at Goethe University, in a press release.What Did the Megalodon Eat?Clocking in at 78 feet in length and weighing about twice as much as a semi truck, the megalodon was a big fish with a big appetite. It is suggested that a member of the Otodus shark family would require about 100,000 kilocalories per day to survive. Due to this extreme number, scientists have often assumed that the megalodon’s main source of calories came from whales.This new study suggests that whales were not the only item on the megalodon’s daily menu and that these sharks were actually quite adaptable when it came to their food. The research team analyzed 18-million-year-old giant teeth that came from two fossil deposits in Sigmaringen and Passau. What they were looking for was the presence of zinc-66 and zinc-64, two isotopes commonly ingested with food. Typically, the higher up in a food pyramid an animal is, the lower the presence of zinc. As they are oftentimes at the top of the food chain, species such as Otodus megalodon and Otodus chubutensis have a low ratio of zinc-66 to zinc-64 compared to species lower on the food chain.“Sea bream, which fed on mussels, snails, and crustaceans, formed the lowest level of the food chain we studied,” said McCormack in the press release. “Smaller shark species such as requiem sharks and ancestors of today’s cetaceans, dolphins, and whales, were next. Larger sharks, such as sand tiger sharks, were further up the food pyramid, and at the top were giant sharks like Araloselachus cuspidatus and the Otodus sharks, which include megalodon.”Surprisingly, the zinc levels in the megalodon teeth weren’t always that different from the zinc levels in species lower down the food chain. This result means that the commonly held scientific belief that megalodons focused their attention on eating large marine mammals may be incorrect. Instead, McCormack refers to the megalodon as an “ecologically versatile generalist” that adapted to environmental and regional constraints that changed the availability and variety of their prey.A New Method in Teeth TestingUsing the zinc content of fossilized teeth is a relatively new method of analysis, and the research team working on the megalodon couldn’t be happier with their results. The methods used in this study have not only been used for prehistoric shark and whale species but also modern-day shark species, and have even been used on herbivorous prehistoric rhinoceroses.Overall, these new methods have begun to rewrite the history of megalodon’s eating habits and may help to explain more about why these giants of the food chain went extinct. “gives us important insights into how the marine communities have changed over geologic time, but more importantly the fact that even ‘supercarnivores’ are not immune to extinction,” said Kenshu Shimada, a paleobiologist at DePaul University and a coauthor of this study, in the press release.Article SourcesOur writers at Discovermagazine.com use peer-reviewed studies and high-quality sources for our articles, and our editors review for scientific accuracy and editorial standards. Review the sources used below for this article:Earth and Planetary Science Letters. Miocene marine vertebrate trophic ecology reveals megatooth sharks as opportunistic supercarnivoresAs the marketing coordinator at Discover Magazine, Stephanie Edwards interacts with readers across Discover's social media channels and writes digital content. Offline, she is a contract lecturer in English & Cultural Studies at Lakehead University, teaching courses on everything from professional communication to Taylor Swift, and received her graduate degrees in the same department from McMaster University. You can find more of her science writing in Lab Manager and her short fiction in anthologies and literary magazine across the horror genre.1 free article leftWant More? Get unlimited access for as low as /monthSubscribeAlready a subscriber?Register or Log In1 free articleSubscribeWant more?Keep reading for as low as !SubscribeAlready a subscriber?Register or Log In #18millionyearold #megalodon #teeth #reveal #predator039s
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    18-Million-Year-Old Megalodon Teeth Reveal the Predator's Surprising Diet
    Comparison of a megalodon tooth and a great white shark tooth, not associated with the study. (Image Credit: Mark_Kostich/Shutterstock) NewsletterSign up for our email newsletter for the latest science newsMegalodon teeth have always been key to understanding the ancient marine predator. Fossilized teeth are all that remain to prove the existence of these massive sharks, and the name megalodon is from the Greek for “big tooth.”A new study, published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters, highlights the importance of the megalodon’s human-hand-sized teeth once again. Thanks to extracting and analyzing the traces of zinc left in the fossilized teeth, researchers now know that the megalodon’s diet was much broader than scientists once believed.“Megalodon was by all means flexible enough to feed on marine mammals and large fish, from the top of the food pyramid as well as lower levels – depending on availability,” said Jeremy McCormack from the Department of Geosciences at Goethe University, in a press release.What Did the Megalodon Eat?Clocking in at 78 feet in length and weighing about twice as much as a semi truck, the megalodon was a big fish with a big appetite. It is suggested that a member of the Otodus shark family would require about 100,000 kilocalories per day to survive. Due to this extreme number, scientists have often assumed that the megalodon’s main source of calories came from whales.This new study suggests that whales were not the only item on the megalodon’s daily menu and that these sharks were actually quite adaptable when it came to their food. The research team analyzed 18-million-year-old giant teeth that came from two fossil deposits in Sigmaringen and Passau. What they were looking for was the presence of zinc-66 and zinc-64, two isotopes commonly ingested with food. Typically, the higher up in a food pyramid an animal is, the lower the presence of zinc. As they are oftentimes at the top of the food chain, species such as Otodus megalodon and Otodus chubutensis have a low ratio of zinc-66 to zinc-64 compared to species lower on the food chain.“Sea bream, which fed on mussels, snails, and crustaceans, formed the lowest level of the food chain we studied,” said McCormack in the press release. “Smaller shark species such as requiem sharks and ancestors of today’s cetaceans, dolphins, and whales, were next. Larger sharks, such as sand tiger sharks, were further up the food pyramid, and at the top were giant sharks like Araloselachus cuspidatus and the Otodus sharks, which include megalodon.”Surprisingly, the zinc levels in the megalodon teeth weren’t always that different from the zinc levels in species lower down the food chain. This result means that the commonly held scientific belief that megalodons focused their attention on eating large marine mammals may be incorrect. Instead, McCormack refers to the megalodon as an “ecologically versatile generalist” that adapted to environmental and regional constraints that changed the availability and variety of their prey.A New Method in Teeth TestingUsing the zinc content of fossilized teeth is a relatively new method of analysis, and the research team working on the megalodon couldn’t be happier with their results. The methods used in this study have not only been used for prehistoric shark and whale species but also modern-day shark species, and have even been used on herbivorous prehistoric rhinoceroses.Overall, these new methods have begun to rewrite the history of megalodon’s eating habits and may help to explain more about why these giants of the food chain went extinct. “[Determining zinc isotope ratios] gives us important insights into how the marine communities have changed over geologic time, but more importantly the fact that even ‘supercarnivores’ are not immune to extinction,” said Kenshu Shimada, a paleobiologist at DePaul University and a coauthor of this study, in the press release.Article SourcesOur writers at Discovermagazine.com use peer-reviewed studies and high-quality sources for our articles, and our editors review for scientific accuracy and editorial standards. Review the sources used below for this article:Earth and Planetary Science Letters. Miocene marine vertebrate trophic ecology reveals megatooth sharks as opportunistic supercarnivoresAs the marketing coordinator at Discover Magazine, Stephanie Edwards interacts with readers across Discover's social media channels and writes digital content. Offline, she is a contract lecturer in English & Cultural Studies at Lakehead University, teaching courses on everything from professional communication to Taylor Swift, and received her graduate degrees in the same department from McMaster University. You can find more of her science writing in Lab Manager and her short fiction in anthologies and literary magazine across the horror genre.1 free article leftWant More? Get unlimited access for as low as $1.99/monthSubscribeAlready a subscriber?Register or Log In1 free articleSubscribeWant more?Keep reading for as low as $1.99!SubscribeAlready a subscriber?Register or Log In
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  • Some homeowners are tired of overly manicured lawns—so they’re embracing No Mow May all year

    No Mow May encourages homeowners to stash the lawn mower each spring and let flowers and grass grow for pollinators and water retention. And if your neighbor’s lawn already looks like a wildflower field most of the time, it could be more intentional than passersby might assume.The movement has expanded to “Let It Bloom June” and the fall version: “Leave the leaves.” Conservation and horticulture groups say year-round low-mowing while selectively leaving native plants to grow can save huge amounts of drinking water and lead to lasting and impactful ecological changes.When Amanda Beltramini Healan moved into her Nashville ranch house in 2016, the yard had been manicured for sale: a walnut tree, roses from a home improvement store and short grass. So she experimented, first with a 10-by-10-foot patch where she dug up the grass and sowed native seeds. Then she planted goldenrods in the culvert near the street, and let more of her yard grow tall without mowing.Local authorities apparently didn’t appreciate her natural look: “I got a letter from the city saying that I had to mow it,” she said.But then, a friend told her about No Mow Month signs, provided by the Cumberland River Compact, a local water conservation nonprofit. Soon she was signaling to the city that she’s no derelict, but a participant in an international movement.These days, every month is No Mow May in parts of her property. While she keeps the growth shorter near the culvert and street, her backyard is filled with native grasses and plants up to her knees or waist. There’s a decomposing tree trunk where scores of skinks and bugs live, birds nest under her carport and she regularly finds fawns sleeping in the safety of the high grasses.“I have a lot of insects and bugs and that’s protein, so the birds and the bird’s nests are everywhere. Cardinals and wrens and cowbirds and robins,” she said. “I wake up to them, especially during spring migration right now. It’s just a cacophony in the morning and in the evening, especially when the mulberries come in.”The movement is popularized by groups such as Plantlife, a conservation organization based in England.American lawns, based on English and French traditions, are increasingly seen as a wasteful monoculture that encourages an overuse of pesticides, fertilizer and water. Outdoor spraying and irrigation account for over 30% of a U.S. household’s total water consumption, and can be twice that in drier climates, according to the EPA.Some criticize No Mow campaigns as a fad that could invite invasive plants to spread unchecked without helping pollinators much, if only done for a month.A guide outlining No Mow pros, cons and limitations, written by consumer horticulture extension specialist Aaron Steil at Iowa State University, says reducing mowing to every two weeks and replacing turf with plants that pollinate all year long can offer more benefits without risking a citation or complaints.The No Mow effort does encourage people to think more about biodiversity in their yards, and many local nature organizations advise provide guidance on picking noninvasive plants that fit each region’s climate and precipitation levels.Reducing mowing encourages longer-rooted native grasses and flowers to grow, which breaks up compacted soil and improves drainage, “meaning that when it rains, more water is going to be captured and stored in lawns versus being generated as a runoff and entering into our stormwater system,” said Jason Sprouls, urban waters program manager for the Cumberland River Compact.Beltramini Healan isn’t just letting just anything grow — she learned which plants are invasive, non-native or not beneficial to the ecosystem and carefully prunes and weeds so the keepers have room to thrive.Nashville homeowner Brandon Griffith said he was just tired of mowing when he decided years ago wait and see what comes up. Then he consciously added flowering plants to attract bees and bugs. Now he sees so many insects and pollinators all over his garden that the neighbors’ kids come over to look for butterflies.It’s about giving them the time “to come out of their larva or their egg stage and be able to grow,” said Griffith. He said he’s never heard a complaint — in fact, some of his neighbors also stopped mowing for a month each spring. His four-year-old son catches lizards, digs for worms and hunts for bugs in the yard.“I just enjoy coming out and walking around,” said Griffith. “And looking at it, it’s kind of peaceful. It’s kinda relaxing.”__This story has been updated to correct the spelling of Amanda Beltramini Healan’s name and to correct that Aaron Steil works at Iowa State University, not the University of Iowa.

    —Kristin M. Hall, Associated Press
    #some #homeowners #are #tired #overly
    Some homeowners are tired of overly manicured lawns—so they’re embracing No Mow May all year
    No Mow May encourages homeowners to stash the lawn mower each spring and let flowers and grass grow for pollinators and water retention. And if your neighbor’s lawn already looks like a wildflower field most of the time, it could be more intentional than passersby might assume.The movement has expanded to “Let It Bloom June” and the fall version: “Leave the leaves.” Conservation and horticulture groups say year-round low-mowing while selectively leaving native plants to grow can save huge amounts of drinking water and lead to lasting and impactful ecological changes.When Amanda Beltramini Healan moved into her Nashville ranch house in 2016, the yard had been manicured for sale: a walnut tree, roses from a home improvement store and short grass. So she experimented, first with a 10-by-10-foot patch where she dug up the grass and sowed native seeds. Then she planted goldenrods in the culvert near the street, and let more of her yard grow tall without mowing.Local authorities apparently didn’t appreciate her natural look: “I got a letter from the city saying that I had to mow it,” she said.But then, a friend told her about No Mow Month signs, provided by the Cumberland River Compact, a local water conservation nonprofit. Soon she was signaling to the city that she’s no derelict, but a participant in an international movement.These days, every month is No Mow May in parts of her property. While she keeps the growth shorter near the culvert and street, her backyard is filled with native grasses and plants up to her knees or waist. There’s a decomposing tree trunk where scores of skinks and bugs live, birds nest under her carport and she regularly finds fawns sleeping in the safety of the high grasses.“I have a lot of insects and bugs and that’s protein, so the birds and the bird’s nests are everywhere. Cardinals and wrens and cowbirds and robins,” she said. “I wake up to them, especially during spring migration right now. It’s just a cacophony in the morning and in the evening, especially when the mulberries come in.”The movement is popularized by groups such as Plantlife, a conservation organization based in England.American lawns, based on English and French traditions, are increasingly seen as a wasteful monoculture that encourages an overuse of pesticides, fertilizer and water. Outdoor spraying and irrigation account for over 30% of a U.S. household’s total water consumption, and can be twice that in drier climates, according to the EPA.Some criticize No Mow campaigns as a fad that could invite invasive plants to spread unchecked without helping pollinators much, if only done for a month.A guide outlining No Mow pros, cons and limitations, written by consumer horticulture extension specialist Aaron Steil at Iowa State University, says reducing mowing to every two weeks and replacing turf with plants that pollinate all year long can offer more benefits without risking a citation or complaints.The No Mow effort does encourage people to think more about biodiversity in their yards, and many local nature organizations advise provide guidance on picking noninvasive plants that fit each region’s climate and precipitation levels.Reducing mowing encourages longer-rooted native grasses and flowers to grow, which breaks up compacted soil and improves drainage, “meaning that when it rains, more water is going to be captured and stored in lawns versus being generated as a runoff and entering into our stormwater system,” said Jason Sprouls, urban waters program manager for the Cumberland River Compact.Beltramini Healan isn’t just letting just anything grow — she learned which plants are invasive, non-native or not beneficial to the ecosystem and carefully prunes and weeds so the keepers have room to thrive.Nashville homeowner Brandon Griffith said he was just tired of mowing when he decided years ago wait and see what comes up. Then he consciously added flowering plants to attract bees and bugs. Now he sees so many insects and pollinators all over his garden that the neighbors’ kids come over to look for butterflies.It’s about giving them the time “to come out of their larva or their egg stage and be able to grow,” said Griffith. He said he’s never heard a complaint — in fact, some of his neighbors also stopped mowing for a month each spring. His four-year-old son catches lizards, digs for worms and hunts for bugs in the yard.“I just enjoy coming out and walking around,” said Griffith. “And looking at it, it’s kind of peaceful. It’s kinda relaxing.”__This story has been updated to correct the spelling of Amanda Beltramini Healan’s name and to correct that Aaron Steil works at Iowa State University, not the University of Iowa. —Kristin M. Hall, Associated Press #some #homeowners #are #tired #overly
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    Some homeowners are tired of overly manicured lawns—so they’re embracing No Mow May all year
    No Mow May encourages homeowners to stash the lawn mower each spring and let flowers and grass grow for pollinators and water retention. And if your neighbor’s lawn already looks like a wildflower field most of the time, it could be more intentional than passersby might assume.The movement has expanded to “Let It Bloom June” and the fall version: “Leave the leaves.” Conservation and horticulture groups say year-round low-mowing while selectively leaving native plants to grow can save huge amounts of drinking water and lead to lasting and impactful ecological changes.When Amanda Beltramini Healan moved into her Nashville ranch house in 2016, the yard had been manicured for sale: a walnut tree, roses from a home improvement store and short grass. So she experimented, first with a 10-by-10-foot patch where she dug up the grass and sowed native seeds. Then she planted goldenrods in the culvert near the street, and let more of her yard grow tall without mowing.Local authorities apparently didn’t appreciate her natural look: “I got a letter from the city saying that I had to mow it,” she said.But then, a friend told her about No Mow Month signs, provided by the Cumberland River Compact, a local water conservation nonprofit. Soon she was signaling to the city that she’s no derelict, but a participant in an international movement.These days, every month is No Mow May in parts of her property. While she keeps the growth shorter near the culvert and street, her backyard is filled with native grasses and plants up to her knees or waist. There’s a decomposing tree trunk where scores of skinks and bugs live, birds nest under her carport and she regularly finds fawns sleeping in the safety of the high grasses.“I have a lot of insects and bugs and that’s protein, so the birds and the bird’s nests are everywhere. Cardinals and wrens and cowbirds and robins,” she said. “I wake up to them, especially during spring migration right now. It’s just a cacophony in the morning and in the evening, especially when the mulberries come in.”The movement is popularized by groups such as Plantlife, a conservation organization based in England.American lawns, based on English and French traditions, are increasingly seen as a wasteful monoculture that encourages an overuse of pesticides, fertilizer and water. Outdoor spraying and irrigation account for over 30% of a U.S. household’s total water consumption, and can be twice that in drier climates, according to the EPA.Some criticize No Mow campaigns as a fad that could invite invasive plants to spread unchecked without helping pollinators much, if only done for a month.A guide outlining No Mow pros, cons and limitations, written by consumer horticulture extension specialist Aaron Steil at Iowa State University, says reducing mowing to every two weeks and replacing turf with plants that pollinate all year long can offer more benefits without risking a citation or complaints.The No Mow effort does encourage people to think more about biodiversity in their yards, and many local nature organizations advise provide guidance on picking noninvasive plants that fit each region’s climate and precipitation levels.Reducing mowing encourages longer-rooted native grasses and flowers to grow, which breaks up compacted soil and improves drainage, “meaning that when it rains, more water is going to be captured and stored in lawns versus being generated as a runoff and entering into our stormwater system,” said Jason Sprouls, urban waters program manager for the Cumberland River Compact.Beltramini Healan isn’t just letting just anything grow — she learned which plants are invasive, non-native or not beneficial to the ecosystem and carefully prunes and weeds so the keepers have room to thrive.Nashville homeowner Brandon Griffith said he was just tired of mowing when he decided years ago wait and see what comes up. Then he consciously added flowering plants to attract bees and bugs. Now he sees so many insects and pollinators all over his garden that the neighbors’ kids come over to look for butterflies.It’s about giving them the time “to come out of their larva or their egg stage and be able to grow,” said Griffith. He said he’s never heard a complaint — in fact, some of his neighbors also stopped mowing for a month each spring. His four-year-old son catches lizards, digs for worms and hunts for bugs in the yard.“I just enjoy coming out and walking around,” said Griffith. “And looking at it, it’s kind of peaceful. It’s kinda relaxing.”__This story has been updated to correct the spelling of Amanda Beltramini Healan’s name and to correct that Aaron Steil works at Iowa State University, not the University of Iowa. —Kristin M. Hall, Associated Press
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  • How to watch the American Music Awards without cable

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Smile”Marshmello & Kane Brown “Miles on It”Post Malone Featuring Morgan Wallen “I Had Some Help”ROSÉ & Bruno Mars “APT.”Taylor Swift Featuring Post Malone “Fortnight”SOCIAL SONG OF THE YEARChappell Roan “HOT TO GO!”Djo “End of Beginning”Doechii “Anxiety”Lola Young “Messy”Shaboozey “A Bar Song (Tipsy)”Tommy Richman “Million Dollar Baby”FAVORITE TOURING ARTISTBillie EilishLuke CombsMorgan WallenTaylor SwiftZach BryanFAVORITE MUSIC VIDEOBenson Boone “Beautiful Things”KAROL G “Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido”Kendrick Lamar “Not Like Us”Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars “Die With A Smile”Shaboozey “A Bar Song (Tipsy)”FAVORITE MALE POP ARTISTBenson BooneBruno MarsHozierTeddy SwimsThe WeekndFAVORITE FEMALE POP ARTISTBillie EilishChappell RoanLady GagaSabrina CarpenterTaylor SwiftFAVORITE POP ALBUMBillie Eilish HIT ME HARD AND SOFTChappell Roan The Rise and Fall of a Midwest PrincessCharli xcx BRATSabrina Carpenter Short n’ SweetTaylor Swift The Tortured Poets DepartmentFAVORITE POP SONGBenson Boone “Beautiful Things”Billie Eilish “Birds of a Feather”Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars “Die With A Smile”Sabrina Carpenter “Espresso”Teddy Swims “Lose Control”FAVORITE MALE COUNTRY ARTISTJelly RollLuke CombsMorgan WallenPost MaloneShaboozeyFAVORITE FEMALE COUNTRY ARTISTBeyoncéElla LangleyKacey MusgravesLainey WilsonMegan MoroneyFAVORITE COUNTRY DUO or GROUPDan + ShayOld DominionParmaleeThe Red Clay StraysZac Brown BandFAVORITE COUNTRY ALBUMBeyoncé COWBOY CARTERJelly Roll BEAUTIFULLY BROKENMegan Moroney AM I OKAY?Post Malone F-1 TrillionShaboozey Where I’ve Been, Isn’t Where I’m GoingFAVORITE COUNTRY SONGJelly Roll “I Am Not Okay”Koe Wetzel & Jessie Murph “High Road”Luke Combs “Ain’t No Love in Oklahoma”Post Malone Featuring Morgan Wallen “I Had Some Help”Shaboozey “A Bar Song (Tipsy)”FAVORITE MALE HIP-HOP ARTISTDrakeEminemFutureKendrick LamarTyler, The CreatorFAVORITE FEMALE HIP-HOP ARTISTDoechiiGloRillaLattoMegan Thee StallionSexyy RedFAVORITE HIP-HOP ALBUMEminem The Death Of Slim Shady (Coup De Grâce)Future & Metro Boomin WE DON’T TRUST YOUGunna one of wunKendrick Lamar GNXTyler, The Creator CHROMAKOPIAFAVORITE HIP-HOP SONGFuture, Metro Boomin & Kendrick Lamar “Like That”GloRilla “TGIF”GloRilla & Sexyy Red “WHATCHU KNO ABOUT ME”Kendrick Lamar “Not Like Us”Kendrick Lamar & SZA “Luther”FAVORITE MALE R&B ARTISTBryson TillerChris BrownPARTYNEXTDOORThe WeekndUsherFAVORITE FEMALE R&B ARTISTKehlaniMuni LongSummer WalkerSZATylaFAVORITE R&B ALBUMBryson Tiller Bryson TillerPARTYNEXTDOOR PARTYNEXTDOOR 4 (P4)PARTYNEXTDOOR & Drake $ome $exy $ongs 4 USZA SOS Deluxe: LANAThe Weeknd Hurry Up TomorrowFAVORITE R&B SONGChris Brown “Residuals”Muni Long “Made For Me”SZA “Saturn”The Weeknd & Playboi Carti “Timeless”Tommy Richman “Million Dollar Baby”FAVORITE MALE LATIN ARTISTBad BunnyFeidPeso PlumaRauw AlejandroTito Double PFAVORITE FEMALE LATIN ARTISTBecky GKAROL GNatti NatashaShakiraYoung MikoFAVORITE LATIN DUO or GROUPCalibre 50Fuerza RegidaGrupo FirmeGrupo FronteraJulión Álvarez y su Norteño BandaFAVORITE LATIN ALBUMBad Bunny DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToSFuerza Regida Dolido Pero No ArrepentidoPeso Pluma ÉXODORauw Alejandro Cosa NuestraTito Double P INCÓMODOFAVORITE LATIN SONGBad Bunny “DtMF”FloyyMenor X Cris Mj “Gata Only”KAROL G “Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido”Oscar Maydon & Fuerza Regida “Tu Boda”Shakira “Soltera”FAVORITE ROCK ARTISTHozierLinkin ParkPearl JamTwenty One PilotsZach BryanFAVORITE ROCK ALBUMHozier Unreal Unearth: UnendingKoe Wetzel 9 livesThe Marías SubmarineTwenty One Pilots ClancyZach Bryan The Great American Bar SceneFAVORITE ROCK SONGGreen Day “Dilemma”Hozier “Too Sweet”Linkin Park “The Emptiness Machine”Myles Smith “Stargazing”Zach Bryan “Pink Skies”FAVORITE DANCE/ELECTRONIC ARTISTCharli xcxDavid GuettaJohn SummitLady GagaMarshmelloFAVORITE SOUNDTRACKArcane League of Legends: Season 2Hazbin Hotel (Original Soundtrack)Moana 2 (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) • Auliʻi Cravalho, Dwayne Johnson and CastTwisters: The AlbumWicked: The Soundtrack • Cynthia Erivo, Ariana Grande and CastFAVORITE AFROBEATS ARTISTAsakeRemaTemsTylaWizkidFAVORITE K-POP ARTISTATEEZJiminRMROSÉStray Kids
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  • Top 5 Nature-Inspired LEGO Sets That Bring the Outdoors Inside

    As our lives become more intertwined with technology, many of us crave a connection to the natural world, especially in our homes and workspaces. LEGO, the world’s favorite building block, offers a unique way to bring nature indoors with sets that blend the joy of creativity with the calming beauty of plants, flowers, and gardens.
    These nature-inspired LEGO sets aren’t just fun to build; they transform any room into a vibrant, green sanctuary, no watering required. From intricate terrariums to blossoming bouquets, each set is an invitation to relax, create, and celebrate the wonders of the great outdoors—all from the comfort of your table. Here are the top five nature-inspired LEGO sets that let you build your piece of paradise, no green thumb necessary.
    1. LEGO Terrarium Set

    Terrariums have long been a favorite for plant lovers who want to create tiny, self-contained ecosystems. The LEGO Terrarium Set, designed by LEGO builder 44th_brick, elevates this concept to new heights, blending the charm of hand-crafted apothecary bottles with the creativity of LEGO building.
    This three-piece collection features a rustic yet sophisticated design – each terrarium is shaped like a classic corked bottle, complete with jade and gold bases that instantly elevate them from playful craft to tasteful home décor. What truly sets these terrariums apart is the attention to detail inside each glass-like bottle. You’ll find everything from delicate orchids and pink succulents to mushrooms and even a hidden spider, all meticulously rendered in LEGO bricks.
    2. Botanical Garden LEGO Ideas Set

    Step into a world where history, architecture, and nature come together with the LEGO Botanical Garden Ideas Set. Conceived by LEGO user Goannas89, this ambitious set boasts over 3,000 bricks and is a marvel of intricate design. Unlike many plant-themed sets, the Botanical Garden is more than just a collection of greenery—it’s a grand cast-iron greenhouse inspired by the 19th and early 20th centuries, complete with a neoclassical entrance and lush interior spaces teeming with plant life.
    Open the elegant white structure and you’ll find a vibrant garden scene, where banana and palm trees anchor the central atrium and exotics like Anthurium, Bamboo, and Begonia Maculata fill every corner. The set is alive with detail: minifigures stroll through the walkways, exploring the layered foliage and vivid blossoms. The modular design means you can lift the top to admire the interior, making it both a showpiece and an interactive build.
    3. LEGO Succulents Set

    Succulents are beloved for their resilience and sculptural beauty, and LEGO’s Botanical Collection brings them to life in a way that’s both playful and elegant. The LEGO Succulents Set is a scaled, lifelike arrangement of nine distinct plant varieties, from Aloe Vera and Burro’s Tail to a vibrant Moon Cactus and purple Echeveria.
    With 771 pieces, this set gives builders the freedom to customize: display all nine succulents as a group for a stunning centerpiece, or scatter them individually around your home for pops of green in every room. What makes these LEGO succulents truly special is the attention to realism. Each plant is crafted with care, capturing the unique shapes and colors that make real succulents so popular. Each comes with its base, so you can mix, match, and arrange them however you like.
    4. LEGO Chrysanthemum and Plum Blossom

    Nature’s beauty is always in season with the upcoming LEGO Chrysanthemum and Plum Blossom sets. Though not officially released, leaked images have already sparked excitement among LEGO fans. These two additions to the Botanical Collection perfectly capture the vibrant colors and forms of their real-life counterparts.
    The Chrysanthemum set, at 278 pieces and standing 26 cm tall, creates a stunning display with its striking yellow petals, all neatly arranged in a decorative pot and stand. The Plum Blossom is equally eye-catching, with delicate pink and white flowers that evoke the fleeting beauty of spring. Both come with sturdy stands, making them as suitable for a coffee table as for a bookshelf or office desk.
    5. LEGO Cherry Blossoms Set

    Few flowers capture the imagination like cherry blossoms, and the LEGO Cherry Blossoms set lets you bring the magic of spring into your home, no matter the season. Designed for ages 8 and up, this set offers two buildable twigs, each customizable with 438 pieces in shades of pink and white. Each twig can be assembled to your liking—combine colors for a natural gradient or keep them monochrome for a bold look.
    At up to 35 cm long, these cherry branches make an impressive and elegant display on any table or shelf. The twigs can be displayed on their own or combined with other LEGO flower sets, such as the Roses, Wildflower Bouquet, or Botanical Collection, to create a personalized arrangement.The post Top 5 Nature-Inspired LEGO Sets That Bring the Outdoors Inside first appeared on Yanko Design.
    #top #natureinspired #lego #sets #that
    Top 5 Nature-Inspired LEGO Sets That Bring the Outdoors Inside
    As our lives become more intertwined with technology, many of us crave a connection to the natural world, especially in our homes and workspaces. LEGO, the world’s favorite building block, offers a unique way to bring nature indoors with sets that blend the joy of creativity with the calming beauty of plants, flowers, and gardens. These nature-inspired LEGO sets aren’t just fun to build; they transform any room into a vibrant, green sanctuary, no watering required. From intricate terrariums to blossoming bouquets, each set is an invitation to relax, create, and celebrate the wonders of the great outdoors—all from the comfort of your table. Here are the top five nature-inspired LEGO sets that let you build your piece of paradise, no green thumb necessary. 1. LEGO Terrarium Set Terrariums have long been a favorite for plant lovers who want to create tiny, self-contained ecosystems. The LEGO Terrarium Set, designed by LEGO builder 44th_brick, elevates this concept to new heights, blending the charm of hand-crafted apothecary bottles with the creativity of LEGO building. This three-piece collection features a rustic yet sophisticated design – each terrarium is shaped like a classic corked bottle, complete with jade and gold bases that instantly elevate them from playful craft to tasteful home décor. What truly sets these terrariums apart is the attention to detail inside each glass-like bottle. You’ll find everything from delicate orchids and pink succulents to mushrooms and even a hidden spider, all meticulously rendered in LEGO bricks. 2. Botanical Garden LEGO Ideas Set Step into a world where history, architecture, and nature come together with the LEGO Botanical Garden Ideas Set. Conceived by LEGO user Goannas89, this ambitious set boasts over 3,000 bricks and is a marvel of intricate design. Unlike many plant-themed sets, the Botanical Garden is more than just a collection of greenery—it’s a grand cast-iron greenhouse inspired by the 19th and early 20th centuries, complete with a neoclassical entrance and lush interior spaces teeming with plant life. Open the elegant white structure and you’ll find a vibrant garden scene, where banana and palm trees anchor the central atrium and exotics like Anthurium, Bamboo, and Begonia Maculata fill every corner. The set is alive with detail: minifigures stroll through the walkways, exploring the layered foliage and vivid blossoms. The modular design means you can lift the top to admire the interior, making it both a showpiece and an interactive build. 3. LEGO Succulents Set Succulents are beloved for their resilience and sculptural beauty, and LEGO’s Botanical Collection brings them to life in a way that’s both playful and elegant. The LEGO Succulents Set is a scaled, lifelike arrangement of nine distinct plant varieties, from Aloe Vera and Burro’s Tail to a vibrant Moon Cactus and purple Echeveria. With 771 pieces, this set gives builders the freedom to customize: display all nine succulents as a group for a stunning centerpiece, or scatter them individually around your home for pops of green in every room. What makes these LEGO succulents truly special is the attention to realism. Each plant is crafted with care, capturing the unique shapes and colors that make real succulents so popular. Each comes with its base, so you can mix, match, and arrange them however you like. 4. LEGO Chrysanthemum and Plum Blossom Nature’s beauty is always in season with the upcoming LEGO Chrysanthemum and Plum Blossom sets. Though not officially released, leaked images have already sparked excitement among LEGO fans. These two additions to the Botanical Collection perfectly capture the vibrant colors and forms of their real-life counterparts. The Chrysanthemum set, at 278 pieces and standing 26 cm tall, creates a stunning display with its striking yellow petals, all neatly arranged in a decorative pot and stand. The Plum Blossom is equally eye-catching, with delicate pink and white flowers that evoke the fleeting beauty of spring. Both come with sturdy stands, making them as suitable for a coffee table as for a bookshelf or office desk. 5. LEGO Cherry Blossoms Set Few flowers capture the imagination like cherry blossoms, and the LEGO Cherry Blossoms set lets you bring the magic of spring into your home, no matter the season. Designed for ages 8 and up, this set offers two buildable twigs, each customizable with 438 pieces in shades of pink and white. Each twig can be assembled to your liking—combine colors for a natural gradient or keep them monochrome for a bold look. At up to 35 cm long, these cherry branches make an impressive and elegant display on any table or shelf. The twigs can be displayed on their own or combined with other LEGO flower sets, such as the Roses, Wildflower Bouquet, or Botanical Collection, to create a personalized arrangement.The post Top 5 Nature-Inspired LEGO Sets That Bring the Outdoors Inside first appeared on Yanko Design. #top #natureinspired #lego #sets #that
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    Top 5 Nature-Inspired LEGO Sets That Bring the Outdoors Inside
    As our lives become more intertwined with technology, many of us crave a connection to the natural world, especially in our homes and workspaces. LEGO, the world’s favorite building block, offers a unique way to bring nature indoors with sets that blend the joy of creativity with the calming beauty of plants, flowers, and gardens. These nature-inspired LEGO sets aren’t just fun to build; they transform any room into a vibrant, green sanctuary, no watering required. From intricate terrariums to blossoming bouquets, each set is an invitation to relax, create, and celebrate the wonders of the great outdoors—all from the comfort of your table. Here are the top five nature-inspired LEGO sets that let you build your piece of paradise, no green thumb necessary. 1. LEGO Terrarium Set Terrariums have long been a favorite for plant lovers who want to create tiny, self-contained ecosystems. The LEGO Terrarium Set, designed by LEGO builder 44th_brick, elevates this concept to new heights, blending the charm of hand-crafted apothecary bottles with the creativity of LEGO building. This three-piece collection features a rustic yet sophisticated design – each terrarium is shaped like a classic corked bottle, complete with jade and gold bases that instantly elevate them from playful craft to tasteful home décor. What truly sets these terrariums apart is the attention to detail inside each glass-like bottle. You’ll find everything from delicate orchids and pink succulents to mushrooms and even a hidden spider, all meticulously rendered in LEGO bricks. 2. Botanical Garden LEGO Ideas Set Step into a world where history, architecture, and nature come together with the LEGO Botanical Garden Ideas Set. Conceived by LEGO user Goannas89, this ambitious set boasts over 3,000 bricks and is a marvel of intricate design. Unlike many plant-themed sets, the Botanical Garden is more than just a collection of greenery—it’s a grand cast-iron greenhouse inspired by the 19th and early 20th centuries, complete with a neoclassical entrance and lush interior spaces teeming with plant life. Open the elegant white structure and you’ll find a vibrant garden scene, where banana and palm trees anchor the central atrium and exotics like Anthurium, Bamboo, and Begonia Maculata fill every corner. The set is alive with detail: minifigures stroll through the walkways, exploring the layered foliage and vivid blossoms. The modular design means you can lift the top to admire the interior, making it both a showpiece and an interactive build. 3. LEGO Succulents Set Succulents are beloved for their resilience and sculptural beauty, and LEGO’s Botanical Collection brings them to life in a way that’s both playful and elegant. The LEGO Succulents Set is a scaled, lifelike arrangement of nine distinct plant varieties, from Aloe Vera and Burro’s Tail to a vibrant Moon Cactus and purple Echeveria. With 771 pieces, this set gives builders the freedom to customize: display all nine succulents as a group for a stunning centerpiece, or scatter them individually around your home for pops of green in every room. What makes these LEGO succulents truly special is the attention to realism. Each plant is crafted with care, capturing the unique shapes and colors that make real succulents so popular. Each comes with its base, so you can mix, match, and arrange them however you like. 4. LEGO Chrysanthemum and Plum Blossom Nature’s beauty is always in season with the upcoming LEGO Chrysanthemum and Plum Blossom sets. Though not officially released, leaked images have already sparked excitement among LEGO fans. These two additions to the Botanical Collection perfectly capture the vibrant colors and forms of their real-life counterparts. The Chrysanthemum set, at 278 pieces and standing 26 cm tall, creates a stunning display with its striking yellow petals, all neatly arranged in a decorative pot and stand. The Plum Blossom is equally eye-catching, with delicate pink and white flowers that evoke the fleeting beauty of spring. Both come with sturdy stands, making them as suitable for a coffee table as for a bookshelf or office desk. 5. LEGO Cherry Blossoms Set Few flowers capture the imagination like cherry blossoms, and the LEGO Cherry Blossoms set lets you bring the magic of spring into your home, no matter the season. Designed for ages 8 and up, this set offers two buildable twigs, each customizable with 438 pieces in shades of pink and white. Each twig can be assembled to your liking—combine colors for a natural gradient or keep them monochrome for a bold look. At up to 35 cm long, these cherry branches make an impressive and elegant display on any table or shelf. The twigs can be displayed on their own or combined with other LEGO flower sets, such as the Roses, Wildflower Bouquet, or Botanical Collection, to create a personalized arrangement.The post Top 5 Nature-Inspired LEGO Sets That Bring the Outdoors Inside first appeared on Yanko Design.
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  • Is empathy a core strength? Here’s what philosophy says

    In an interview with podcaster Joe Rogan, billionaire and Trump megadonor Elon Musk offered his thoughts about what motivates political progressives to support immigration. In his view, the culprit was empathy, which he called “the fundamental weakness of Western civilization.”

    As shocking as Musk’s views are, however, they are far from unique. On the one hand, there is the familiar and widespread conservative critique of “bleeding heart” liberals as naive or overly emotional. But there is also a broader philosophical critique that raises worries about empathy on quite different and less political grounds, including findings in social science.

    Empathy can make people weaker—both physically and practically, according to social scientists. Consider the phenomenon known as “empathy fatigue,” a major source of burnout among counselors, nurses, and even neurosurgeons. These professionals devote their lives to helping others, yet the empathy they feel for their clients and patients wears them down, making it harder to do their jobs.

    As philosophers, we agree that empathy can take a toll on both individuals and society. However, we believe that, at its core, empathy is a form of mental strength that enables us to better understand the impact of our actions on others, and to make informed choices.

    The philosophical roots of empathy skepticism

    The term “empathy” only entered the English language in the 1890s. But the general idea of being moved by others’ suffering has been a subject of philosophical attention for millennia, under labels such as “pity,” “sympathy,” and “compassion.”

    One of the earliest warnings about pity in Western philosophy comes from the Greek Stoic philosopher Epictetus. In his Discourses, he offers general advice about how to live a good life, centered on inner tranquility and freedom. When it comes to emotions and feelings, he writes: “He is free who lives as he wishes to live . . . and who chooses to live in sorrow, fear, envy, pity, desiring and failing in his desires, attempting to avoid something and falling into it? Not one.”

    Feeling sorry for another person or feeling pity for them compromises our freedom, in Epictetus’s view. Those negative feelings are unpleasant, and nobody would choose them for themselves. Empathy would clearly fall into this same category, keeping us from living the good life.

    A similar objection emerged much later from the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. Nietzsche framed his discussion in terms of mitleid—a German term that can be translated as either “pity” or “compassion.” Like Epictetus, Nietzsche worried that pity or compassion was a burden on the individual, preventing them from living the good life. In his book Daybreak, Nietzsche warns that such feelings could impair the very people who try to help others.

    Epictetus’s and Nietzsche’s worries about pity or compassion carry over to empathy.

    Recall the phenomenon of empathy fatigue. One psychological explanation for why empathic people experience fatigue and even burnout is that empathy involves a kind of mirroring of other people’s mental life, a mirroring that can be physically unpleasant. When someone you love is in pain, you don’t just believe that they are in pain; you may feel as if it is actually happening to you.

    Results from neuroscience and cognitive psychology research indicate that there are different brain mechanisms involved in merely observing another’s pain versus empathizing with it. The latter involves unpleasant sensations of the type we experience when we are in pain. Empathy is thus difficult to bear precisely because being in pain is difficult to bear. And this sharpens the Stoic and Nietzschean worries: Why bother empathizing when it is unpleasant and, perhaps, not even necessary for helping others?

    From understanding knowledge to appreciating empathy

    The answer for why one should see empathy as a strength starts with a key insight from 20th century philosophy about the nature of knowledge.

    That insight is based on a famous thought experiment by the Australian philosopher Frank Jackson. Jackson invites us to imagine a scientist named Mary who has studied colors despite having lived her entire life in a black-and-white room. She knows all the facts about the spectrum distribution of light sources and vision science. She’s read descriptions of the redness of roses and azaleas. But she’s never seen color herself. Does Mary know everything about redness? Many epistemologists—people who study the nature of knowledge—argue that she does not.

    What Mary learns when she sees red for the first time is elusive. If she returns to her black-and-white room, never to see any colored objects again, her knowledge of the colors will likely diminish over time. To have a full, rich understanding of colors, one needs to experience them.

    Thoughts like these led the philosopher and logician Bertrand Russell to argue that experience delivers a special kind of knowledge of things that can’t be reduced to knowledge of facts. Seeing, hearing, tasting, and even feeling delivers what he called “knowledge by acquaintance.”

    We have argued in a book and recent articles that Jackson’s and Russell’s conclusions apply to pain.

    Consider a variation on Jackson’s thought experiment: Suppose Mary knows the facts about pain but hasn’t experienced it. As before, it would seem like her understanding of pain is incomplete. In fact, though Mary is a fictional character, there are real people who report having never experienced pain as an unpleasant sensation—a condition known as “pain asymbolia.”

    In Russell’s terminology, such people haven’t personally experienced how unpleasant pain can be. But even people without pain asymbolia can become less familiar with pain and hardship during times when things are going well for them. All of us can temporarily lose the rich experiential grasp of what it is like to be distressed. So, when we consider the pain and suffering of others in the abstract and without directly feeling it, it is very much like trying to grasp the nature of redness while being personally acquainted only with a field of black and white.

    That, we argue, is where empathy comes in. Through experiential simulation of another’s feelings, empathy affords us a rich grasp of the distress that others feel. The upshot is that empathy isn’t just a subjective sensation. It affords us a more accurate understanding of others’ experiences and emotions.

    Empathy is thus a form of knowledge that can be hard to bear, just as pain can be hard to bear. But that’s precisely why empathy, properly cultivated, is a strength. As one of us has argued, it takes courage to empathically engage with others, just as it takes courage to see and recognize problems around us. Conversely, an unwillingness to empathize can stem from a familiar weakness: a fear of knowledge.

    So, when deciding complex policy questions—say, about immigration—resisting empathy impairs our decision-making. It keeps us from understanding what’s at stake. That is why it is vital to ask ourselves what policies we would favor if we were empathically acquainted with, and so fully informed of, the plight of others.

    Emad H. Atiq is a professor of law and philosophy at Cornell University.

    Colin Marshall is an associate professor of philosophy at the University of Washington.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
    #empathy #core #strength #heres #what
    Is empathy a core strength? Here’s what philosophy says
    In an interview with podcaster Joe Rogan, billionaire and Trump megadonor Elon Musk offered his thoughts about what motivates political progressives to support immigration. In his view, the culprit was empathy, which he called “the fundamental weakness of Western civilization.” As shocking as Musk’s views are, however, they are far from unique. On the one hand, there is the familiar and widespread conservative critique of “bleeding heart” liberals as naive or overly emotional. But there is also a broader philosophical critique that raises worries about empathy on quite different and less political grounds, including findings in social science. Empathy can make people weaker—both physically and practically, according to social scientists. Consider the phenomenon known as “empathy fatigue,” a major source of burnout among counselors, nurses, and even neurosurgeons. These professionals devote their lives to helping others, yet the empathy they feel for their clients and patients wears them down, making it harder to do their jobs. As philosophers, we agree that empathy can take a toll on both individuals and society. However, we believe that, at its core, empathy is a form of mental strength that enables us to better understand the impact of our actions on others, and to make informed choices. The philosophical roots of empathy skepticism The term “empathy” only entered the English language in the 1890s. But the general idea of being moved by others’ suffering has been a subject of philosophical attention for millennia, under labels such as “pity,” “sympathy,” and “compassion.” One of the earliest warnings about pity in Western philosophy comes from the Greek Stoic philosopher Epictetus. In his Discourses, he offers general advice about how to live a good life, centered on inner tranquility and freedom. When it comes to emotions and feelings, he writes: “He is free who lives as he wishes to live . . . and who chooses to live in sorrow, fear, envy, pity, desiring and failing in his desires, attempting to avoid something and falling into it? Not one.” Feeling sorry for another person or feeling pity for them compromises our freedom, in Epictetus’s view. Those negative feelings are unpleasant, and nobody would choose them for themselves. Empathy would clearly fall into this same category, keeping us from living the good life. A similar objection emerged much later from the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. Nietzsche framed his discussion in terms of mitleid—a German term that can be translated as either “pity” or “compassion.” Like Epictetus, Nietzsche worried that pity or compassion was a burden on the individual, preventing them from living the good life. In his book Daybreak, Nietzsche warns that such feelings could impair the very people who try to help others. Epictetus’s and Nietzsche’s worries about pity or compassion carry over to empathy. Recall the phenomenon of empathy fatigue. One psychological explanation for why empathic people experience fatigue and even burnout is that empathy involves a kind of mirroring of other people’s mental life, a mirroring that can be physically unpleasant. When someone you love is in pain, you don’t just believe that they are in pain; you may feel as if it is actually happening to you. Results from neuroscience and cognitive psychology research indicate that there are different brain mechanisms involved in merely observing another’s pain versus empathizing with it. The latter involves unpleasant sensations of the type we experience when we are in pain. Empathy is thus difficult to bear precisely because being in pain is difficult to bear. And this sharpens the Stoic and Nietzschean worries: Why bother empathizing when it is unpleasant and, perhaps, not even necessary for helping others? From understanding knowledge to appreciating empathy The answer for why one should see empathy as a strength starts with a key insight from 20th century philosophy about the nature of knowledge. That insight is based on a famous thought experiment by the Australian philosopher Frank Jackson. Jackson invites us to imagine a scientist named Mary who has studied colors despite having lived her entire life in a black-and-white room. She knows all the facts about the spectrum distribution of light sources and vision science. She’s read descriptions of the redness of roses and azaleas. But she’s never seen color herself. Does Mary know everything about redness? Many epistemologists—people who study the nature of knowledge—argue that she does not. What Mary learns when she sees red for the first time is elusive. If she returns to her black-and-white room, never to see any colored objects again, her knowledge of the colors will likely diminish over time. To have a full, rich understanding of colors, one needs to experience them. Thoughts like these led the philosopher and logician Bertrand Russell to argue that experience delivers a special kind of knowledge of things that can’t be reduced to knowledge of facts. Seeing, hearing, tasting, and even feeling delivers what he called “knowledge by acquaintance.” We have argued in a book and recent articles that Jackson’s and Russell’s conclusions apply to pain. Consider a variation on Jackson’s thought experiment: Suppose Mary knows the facts about pain but hasn’t experienced it. As before, it would seem like her understanding of pain is incomplete. In fact, though Mary is a fictional character, there are real people who report having never experienced pain as an unpleasant sensation—a condition known as “pain asymbolia.” In Russell’s terminology, such people haven’t personally experienced how unpleasant pain can be. But even people without pain asymbolia can become less familiar with pain and hardship during times when things are going well for them. All of us can temporarily lose the rich experiential grasp of what it is like to be distressed. So, when we consider the pain and suffering of others in the abstract and without directly feeling it, it is very much like trying to grasp the nature of redness while being personally acquainted only with a field of black and white. That, we argue, is where empathy comes in. Through experiential simulation of another’s feelings, empathy affords us a rich grasp of the distress that others feel. The upshot is that empathy isn’t just a subjective sensation. It affords us a more accurate understanding of others’ experiences and emotions. Empathy is thus a form of knowledge that can be hard to bear, just as pain can be hard to bear. But that’s precisely why empathy, properly cultivated, is a strength. As one of us has argued, it takes courage to empathically engage with others, just as it takes courage to see and recognize problems around us. Conversely, an unwillingness to empathize can stem from a familiar weakness: a fear of knowledge. So, when deciding complex policy questions—say, about immigration—resisting empathy impairs our decision-making. It keeps us from understanding what’s at stake. That is why it is vital to ask ourselves what policies we would favor if we were empathically acquainted with, and so fully informed of, the plight of others. Emad H. Atiq is a professor of law and philosophy at Cornell University. Colin Marshall is an associate professor of philosophy at the University of Washington. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article. #empathy #core #strength #heres #what
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    Is empathy a core strength? Here’s what philosophy says
    In an interview with podcaster Joe Rogan, billionaire and Trump megadonor Elon Musk offered his thoughts about what motivates political progressives to support immigration. In his view, the culprit was empathy, which he called “the fundamental weakness of Western civilization.” As shocking as Musk’s views are, however, they are far from unique. On the one hand, there is the familiar and widespread conservative critique of “bleeding heart” liberals as naive or overly emotional. But there is also a broader philosophical critique that raises worries about empathy on quite different and less political grounds, including findings in social science. Empathy can make people weaker—both physically and practically, according to social scientists. Consider the phenomenon known as “empathy fatigue,” a major source of burnout among counselors, nurses, and even neurosurgeons. These professionals devote their lives to helping others, yet the empathy they feel for their clients and patients wears them down, making it harder to do their jobs. As philosophers, we agree that empathy can take a toll on both individuals and society. However, we believe that, at its core, empathy is a form of mental strength that enables us to better understand the impact of our actions on others, and to make informed choices. The philosophical roots of empathy skepticism The term “empathy” only entered the English language in the 1890s. But the general idea of being moved by others’ suffering has been a subject of philosophical attention for millennia, under labels such as “pity,” “sympathy,” and “compassion.” One of the earliest warnings about pity in Western philosophy comes from the Greek Stoic philosopher Epictetus. In his Discourses, he offers general advice about how to live a good life, centered on inner tranquility and freedom. When it comes to emotions and feelings, he writes: “He is free who lives as he wishes to live . . . and who chooses to live in sorrow, fear, envy, pity, desiring and failing in his desires, attempting to avoid something and falling into it? Not one.” Feeling sorry for another person or feeling pity for them compromises our freedom, in Epictetus’s view. Those negative feelings are unpleasant, and nobody would choose them for themselves. Empathy would clearly fall into this same category, keeping us from living the good life. A similar objection emerged much later from the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. Nietzsche framed his discussion in terms of mitleid—a German term that can be translated as either “pity” or “compassion.” Like Epictetus, Nietzsche worried that pity or compassion was a burden on the individual, preventing them from living the good life. In his book Daybreak, Nietzsche warns that such feelings could impair the very people who try to help others. Epictetus’s and Nietzsche’s worries about pity or compassion carry over to empathy. Recall the phenomenon of empathy fatigue. One psychological explanation for why empathic people experience fatigue and even burnout is that empathy involves a kind of mirroring of other people’s mental life, a mirroring that can be physically unpleasant. When someone you love is in pain, you don’t just believe that they are in pain; you may feel as if it is actually happening to you. Results from neuroscience and cognitive psychology research indicate that there are different brain mechanisms involved in merely observing another’s pain versus empathizing with it. The latter involves unpleasant sensations of the type we experience when we are in pain. Empathy is thus difficult to bear precisely because being in pain is difficult to bear. And this sharpens the Stoic and Nietzschean worries: Why bother empathizing when it is unpleasant and, perhaps, not even necessary for helping others? From understanding knowledge to appreciating empathy The answer for why one should see empathy as a strength starts with a key insight from 20th century philosophy about the nature of knowledge. That insight is based on a famous thought experiment by the Australian philosopher Frank Jackson. Jackson invites us to imagine a scientist named Mary who has studied colors despite having lived her entire life in a black-and-white room. She knows all the facts about the spectrum distribution of light sources and vision science. She’s read descriptions of the redness of roses and azaleas. But she’s never seen color herself. Does Mary know everything about redness? Many epistemologists—people who study the nature of knowledge—argue that she does not. What Mary learns when she sees red for the first time is elusive. If she returns to her black-and-white room, never to see any colored objects again, her knowledge of the colors will likely diminish over time. To have a full, rich understanding of colors, one needs to experience them. Thoughts like these led the philosopher and logician Bertrand Russell to argue that experience delivers a special kind of knowledge of things that can’t be reduced to knowledge of facts. Seeing, hearing, tasting, and even feeling delivers what he called “knowledge by acquaintance.” We have argued in a book and recent articles that Jackson’s and Russell’s conclusions apply to pain. Consider a variation on Jackson’s thought experiment: Suppose Mary knows the facts about pain but hasn’t experienced it. As before, it would seem like her understanding of pain is incomplete. In fact, though Mary is a fictional character, there are real people who report having never experienced pain as an unpleasant sensation—a condition known as “pain asymbolia.” In Russell’s terminology, such people haven’t personally experienced how unpleasant pain can be. But even people without pain asymbolia can become less familiar with pain and hardship during times when things are going well for them. All of us can temporarily lose the rich experiential grasp of what it is like to be distressed. So, when we consider the pain and suffering of others in the abstract and without directly feeling it, it is very much like trying to grasp the nature of redness while being personally acquainted only with a field of black and white. That, we argue, is where empathy comes in. Through experiential simulation of another’s feelings, empathy affords us a rich grasp of the distress that others feel. The upshot is that empathy isn’t just a subjective sensation. It affords us a more accurate understanding of others’ experiences and emotions. Empathy is thus a form of knowledge that can be hard to bear, just as pain can be hard to bear. But that’s precisely why empathy, properly cultivated, is a strength. As one of us has argued, it takes courage to empathically engage with others, just as it takes courage to see and recognize problems around us. Conversely, an unwillingness to empathize can stem from a familiar weakness: a fear of knowledge. So, when deciding complex policy questions—say, about immigration—resisting empathy impairs our decision-making. It keeps us from understanding what’s at stake. That is why it is vital to ask ourselves what policies we would favor if we were empathically acquainted with, and so fully informed of, the plight of others. Emad H. Atiq is a professor of law and philosophy at Cornell University. Colin Marshall is an associate professor of philosophy at the University of Washington. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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  • Amazon Drops the Popular Throne of Glass Hardcover Book Set to Its Lowest Price Ever

    The Throne of Glass hardcover box set is currently available on Amazon at its lowest price ever for its Memorial Day sale. You can pick up Sarah J. Maas' bestselling fantasy saga for just a whopping 60% off. Sarah J. Maas has quickly risen to the top of many fantasy fans' personal Mt. Rushmore of authors with the Throne of Glass series and her A Court of Thorns and Roses series, another fantasy romance saga. According to Forbes, Maas has sold 3.1 million print books in 2024 alone and was given prominence thanks to the "BookTok" TikTok community.Get the Throne of Glass Hardcover Box Set For 60% OffCurrently at its lowest price ever. Throne of Glass Hardcover Box SetThe Throne of Glass series follows a the assassin Calaena Sardothien on a quest to win back her freedom from a cruel king. Check out the official synopsis from the author's website:"When magic has gone from the world, and a vicious king rules from his throne of glass, an assassin comes to the castle. She does not come to kill, but to win her freedom. If she can defeat twenty-three killers, thieves, and warriors in a competition to find the greatest assassin in the land, she will become the king’s champion and earn her freedom. Her name is Celaena Sardothien – beautiful, deadly, and destined for greatness."Here's what you get in the box set:Throne of GlassCrown of MidnightThe Assassin's BladeHeir of FireQueen of ShadowsEmpire of StormsTowers of DawnKingdom of AshFans have debated the reading order for some time, with some starting with the Assassin's Blade before Throne of Glass or reading Empire of Storms and Tower of Dawn concurrently. Bloombury, publisher of Throne of Glass and Maas' other books, recommends reading the series in publication order, starting with Throne of Glass first and then reading the prequel novella the Assassin's Blade third after Crown of Midnight. Maas also pens the A Court of Thorns and Roses series and the adult fantasy books Crescent City, which saw a third entry release in January of 2024. All of these are on sale on Amazon as well, so it's the perfect to experience Sarah J. Maas' entire collected works. More From Sarah J. MaasA Court of Thorns and Roses Paperback Box SetBook 1Crescent City: House of Earth and BloodBook 2Crescent City: House of Sky and BreathBook 3Crescent City: House of Flame and ShadowMyles Obenza is a freelance writer for IGN. Follow him on Bluesky @mylesobenza.bsky.social.
    #amazon #drops #popular #throne #glass
    Amazon Drops the Popular Throne of Glass Hardcover Book Set to Its Lowest Price Ever
    The Throne of Glass hardcover box set is currently available on Amazon at its lowest price ever for its Memorial Day sale. You can pick up Sarah J. Maas' bestselling fantasy saga for just a whopping 60% off. Sarah J. Maas has quickly risen to the top of many fantasy fans' personal Mt. Rushmore of authors with the Throne of Glass series and her A Court of Thorns and Roses series, another fantasy romance saga. According to Forbes, Maas has sold 3.1 million print books in 2024 alone and was given prominence thanks to the "BookTok" TikTok community.Get the Throne of Glass Hardcover Box Set For 60% OffCurrently at its lowest price ever. Throne of Glass Hardcover Box SetThe Throne of Glass series follows a the assassin Calaena Sardothien on a quest to win back her freedom from a cruel king. Check out the official synopsis from the author's website:"When magic has gone from the world, and a vicious king rules from his throne of glass, an assassin comes to the castle. She does not come to kill, but to win her freedom. If she can defeat twenty-three killers, thieves, and warriors in a competition to find the greatest assassin in the land, she will become the king’s champion and earn her freedom. Her name is Celaena Sardothien – beautiful, deadly, and destined for greatness."Here's what you get in the box set:Throne of GlassCrown of MidnightThe Assassin's BladeHeir of FireQueen of ShadowsEmpire of StormsTowers of DawnKingdom of AshFans have debated the reading order for some time, with some starting with the Assassin's Blade before Throne of Glass or reading Empire of Storms and Tower of Dawn concurrently. Bloombury, publisher of Throne of Glass and Maas' other books, recommends reading the series in publication order, starting with Throne of Glass first and then reading the prequel novella the Assassin's Blade third after Crown of Midnight. Maas also pens the A Court of Thorns and Roses series and the adult fantasy books Crescent City, which saw a third entry release in January of 2024. All of these are on sale on Amazon as well, so it's the perfect to experience Sarah J. Maas' entire collected works. More From Sarah J. MaasA Court of Thorns and Roses Paperback Box SetBook 1Crescent City: House of Earth and BloodBook 2Crescent City: House of Sky and BreathBook 3Crescent City: House of Flame and ShadowMyles Obenza is a freelance writer for IGN. Follow him on Bluesky @mylesobenza.bsky.social. #amazon #drops #popular #throne #glass
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    Amazon Drops the Popular Throne of Glass Hardcover Book Set to Its Lowest Price Ever
    The Throne of Glass hardcover box set is currently available on Amazon at its lowest price ever for its Memorial Day sale. You can pick up Sarah J. Maas' bestselling fantasy saga for just $97.92, a whopping 60% off. Sarah J. Maas has quickly risen to the top of many fantasy fans' personal Mt. Rushmore of authors with the Throne of Glass series and her A Court of Thorns and Roses series, another fantasy romance saga. According to Forbes, Maas has sold 3.1 million print books in 2024 alone and was given prominence thanks to the "BookTok" TikTok community.Get the Throne of Glass Hardcover Box Set For 60% OffCurrently at its lowest price ever. Throne of Glass Hardcover Box SetThe Throne of Glass series follows a the assassin Calaena Sardothien on a quest to win back her freedom from a cruel king. Check out the official synopsis from the author's website:"When magic has gone from the world, and a vicious king rules from his throne of glass, an assassin comes to the castle. She does not come to kill, but to win her freedom. If she can defeat twenty-three killers, thieves, and warriors in a competition to find the greatest assassin in the land, she will become the king’s champion and earn her freedom. Her name is Celaena Sardothien – beautiful, deadly, and destined for greatness."Here's what you get in the box set:Throne of GlassCrown of MidnightThe Assassin's BladeHeir of FireQueen of ShadowsEmpire of StormsTowers of DawnKingdom of AshFans have debated the reading order for some time, with some starting with the Assassin's Blade before Throne of Glass or reading Empire of Storms and Tower of Dawn concurrently. Bloombury, publisher of Throne of Glass and Maas' other books, recommends reading the series in publication order, starting with Throne of Glass first and then reading the prequel novella the Assassin's Blade third after Crown of Midnight. Maas also pens the A Court of Thorns and Roses series and the adult fantasy books Crescent City, which saw a third entry release in January of 2024. All of these are on sale on Amazon as well, so it's the perfect to experience Sarah J. Maas' entire collected works. More From Sarah J. MaasA Court of Thorns and Roses Paperback Box SetBook 1Crescent City: House of Earth and BloodBook 2Crescent City: House of Sky and BreathBook 3Crescent City: House of Flame and ShadowMyles Obenza is a freelance writer for IGN. Follow him on Bluesky @mylesobenza.bsky.social.
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  • What's New on Hulu in June 2025

    FX's highly acclaimed hit series The Bear returns to Hulu in June for its fourth season, picking up right after the events of season three, when Carmy received the Chicago Tribune's review of his fine-dining restaurant. The main cast—Jeremy Allen White, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, and Ayo Edebiri, to name a few—are reprising their roles in pushing The Bear forward. All 10 episodes will drop on June 25. Call Her Alexis a Hulu original docuseries following "Call Her Daddy" podcast host Alex Cooper in preparation for her first tour with a behind-the-scenes look at the events that shaped her journey. Similarly, Barbara Walters Tell Me Everythinguses archival footage to explore Walters' life and career as a journalist and host in a male-dominated industry. On the film side, The Actoris a crime mystery based on Donald E. Westlake's novel "Memory," starring Andre Holland as an actor with memory loss and Gemma Chan as a costume designer in the small town he ends up in. Predator: Killer of Killersis an animated action/adventure and Hulu original set in the Predator universe. Here’s everything else coming toHulu in June. What’s coming to Hulu in June 2025Arriving June 1AdamAlienAlien 3Alien ResurrectionAlien vs. PredatorAlien: CovenantAliensAliens vs. Predator: RequiemBeasts Of The Southern WildBefore MidnightBetsy's WeddingBeverly Hills NinjaBig EdenBig FishThe Big HitBig Mommas: Like Father, Like SonBlue JasmineBoy Meets GirlBreakin' All the RulesThe BronzeBubble BoyBugsyCedar RapidsThe Chronicles Of Narnia: The Voyage Of The Dawn TreaderCold PursuitCyrusDaddy Day CareDeath on the NileDeja VuDelivery ManDude, Where's My Car?Edge of TomorrowElena UndoneFreddy Got FingeredThe Girl Next DoorGrown UpsGrown Ups 2Happy GilmoreThe HeatHitchcockHurricane BiancaIdiocracyIndependence DayThe Joy Luck ClubJust Go With ItKung Fu Panda 3Let's Be CopsLoving AnnabelleMamma Mia: Here We Go Again!Mamma Mia!The MaskMe And Earl And The Dying GirlMirrorsThe NamesakeA Perfect EndingPineapple ExpressPredatorThe PredatorPredator 2PredatorsPride + Prejudice + ZombiesPrometheusReno 911! Miami: The MovieSordid Lives28 Weeks LaterThe War of the RosesWe're The MillersWorking GirlYou Don't Mess With The ZohanArriving June 3I've Somehow Gotten Stronger When I Improved My Farm-Related Skills: Complete Season 1Miss Kobayashi's Dragon Maid: Complete Season 1The Quiz With Balls: Season 2 PremiereSo I'm a Spider, So What?: Complete Season 1Wise Man's Grandchild: Complete Season 1Yuri on Ice: Complete Season 1PresenceArriving June 4The Great House Revival: Complete Season 5Arriving June 5National AnthemArriving June 6Not Her First Rodeo: Complete Season 1 Predator: Killer of Killers: Film PremiereBorat: Cultural Learnings Of America For Make Benefit Glorious Nation …Deuce Bigalow: Male GigoloHot Shots!Hot Shots! Part DeuxShallow HalThe RingerArriving June 7Gypsy's Revenge: Complete Season 1IGot Away With It: Complete Season 3Kids Baking Championship: Complete Season 12Murder in the Heartland: Complete Season 1Naked and Afraid: Last One Standing: Complete Season 1Sister Wives: Complete Season 12Arriving June 8ScreamArriving June 9Beyblade X: Season 1BArriving June 10Call Her Alex: Complete DocuseriesAnd Then We DancedClifford the Big Red DogArriving June 11The Snake: Series PremiereGran TurismoArriving June 12The 1% Club: Season 2 PremiereArriving June 13Atsuko Okatsuka: Father: Special PremiereAbsolutionArriving June 1490 Day Fiance: Complete Season 590 Day Fiance UK: Complete Season 2Guy's Grocery Games: Complete Seasons 32 & 33I'd Kill For You: Complete Season 3Joel McHale: Live from PyongyangArriving June 16My Happy Ending: Complete Season 1Black ChristmasArriving June 17SALLYSkincareArriving June 19The Quiet OnesArriving June 20The Bravest Knight: Season 2BOut Come the WolvesArriving June 23Barbara Walters Tell Me Everything: Documentary PremiereHelck: Complete Season 1My Instant Death Ability is Overpowered: Complete Season 1My Isekai Life : Complete Season 1Arriving June 24SurviveArriving June 25FX's The Bear: Complete Season 4Arriving June 27F*ck Marry KillArriving June 29The Bachelor: Complete Seasons 27 & 28Arriving June 30Boonie Bears: Time TwistTexas True Crime: Complete Season 5The ActorWhat’s leaving Hulu in June 2025Leaving June 1Christmas with the CampbellsLeaving June 2The Amazing MauriceLeaving June 4Intrigo: Dear AgnesLeaving June 8IndemnityLeaving June 10Here BeforeWarhuntLeaving June 11Intrigo: SamariaLeaving June 13The Worst Person in the WorldLeaving June 17Ted KThe LedgeLeaving June 22The Burning SeaLeaving June 24Big Gold BrickGasoline AlleyLeaving June 25The Desperate HourLeaving June 30Transfusion
    #what039s #new #hulu #june
    What's New on Hulu in June 2025
    FX's highly acclaimed hit series The Bear returns to Hulu in June for its fourth season, picking up right after the events of season three, when Carmy received the Chicago Tribune's review of his fine-dining restaurant. The main cast—Jeremy Allen White, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, and Ayo Edebiri, to name a few—are reprising their roles in pushing The Bear forward. All 10 episodes will drop on June 25. Call Her Alexis a Hulu original docuseries following "Call Her Daddy" podcast host Alex Cooper in preparation for her first tour with a behind-the-scenes look at the events that shaped her journey. Similarly, Barbara Walters Tell Me Everythinguses archival footage to explore Walters' life and career as a journalist and host in a male-dominated industry. On the film side, The Actoris a crime mystery based on Donald E. Westlake's novel "Memory," starring Andre Holland as an actor with memory loss and Gemma Chan as a costume designer in the small town he ends up in. Predator: Killer of Killersis an animated action/adventure and Hulu original set in the Predator universe. Here’s everything else coming toHulu in June. What’s coming to Hulu in June 2025Arriving June 1AdamAlienAlien 3Alien ResurrectionAlien vs. PredatorAlien: CovenantAliensAliens vs. Predator: RequiemBeasts Of The Southern WildBefore MidnightBetsy's WeddingBeverly Hills NinjaBig EdenBig FishThe Big HitBig Mommas: Like Father, Like SonBlue JasmineBoy Meets GirlBreakin' All the RulesThe BronzeBubble BoyBugsyCedar RapidsThe Chronicles Of Narnia: The Voyage Of The Dawn TreaderCold PursuitCyrusDaddy Day CareDeath on the NileDeja VuDelivery ManDude, Where's My Car?Edge of TomorrowElena UndoneFreddy Got FingeredThe Girl Next DoorGrown UpsGrown Ups 2Happy GilmoreThe HeatHitchcockHurricane BiancaIdiocracyIndependence DayThe Joy Luck ClubJust Go With ItKung Fu Panda 3Let's Be CopsLoving AnnabelleMamma Mia: Here We Go Again!Mamma Mia!The MaskMe And Earl And The Dying GirlMirrorsThe NamesakeA Perfect EndingPineapple ExpressPredatorThe PredatorPredator 2PredatorsPride + Prejudice + ZombiesPrometheusReno 911! Miami: The MovieSordid Lives28 Weeks LaterThe War of the RosesWe're The MillersWorking GirlYou Don't Mess With The ZohanArriving June 3I've Somehow Gotten Stronger When I Improved My Farm-Related Skills: Complete Season 1Miss Kobayashi's Dragon Maid: Complete Season 1The Quiz With Balls: Season 2 PremiereSo I'm a Spider, So What?: Complete Season 1Wise Man's Grandchild: Complete Season 1Yuri on Ice: Complete Season 1PresenceArriving June 4The Great House Revival: Complete Season 5Arriving June 5National AnthemArriving June 6Not Her First Rodeo: Complete Season 1 Predator: Killer of Killers: Film PremiereBorat: Cultural Learnings Of America For Make Benefit Glorious Nation …Deuce Bigalow: Male GigoloHot Shots!Hot Shots! Part DeuxShallow HalThe RingerArriving June 7Gypsy's Revenge: Complete Season 1IGot Away With It: Complete Season 3Kids Baking Championship: Complete Season 12Murder in the Heartland: Complete Season 1Naked and Afraid: Last One Standing: Complete Season 1Sister Wives: Complete Season 12Arriving June 8ScreamArriving June 9Beyblade X: Season 1BArriving June 10Call Her Alex: Complete DocuseriesAnd Then We DancedClifford the Big Red DogArriving June 11The Snake: Series PremiereGran TurismoArriving June 12The 1% Club: Season 2 PremiereArriving June 13Atsuko Okatsuka: Father: Special PremiereAbsolutionArriving June 1490 Day Fiance: Complete Season 590 Day Fiance UK: Complete Season 2Guy's Grocery Games: Complete Seasons 32 & 33I'd Kill For You: Complete Season 3Joel McHale: Live from PyongyangArriving June 16My Happy Ending: Complete Season 1Black ChristmasArriving June 17SALLYSkincareArriving June 19The Quiet OnesArriving June 20The Bravest Knight: Season 2BOut Come the WolvesArriving June 23Barbara Walters Tell Me Everything: Documentary PremiereHelck: Complete Season 1My Instant Death Ability is Overpowered: Complete Season 1My Isekai Life : Complete Season 1Arriving June 24SurviveArriving June 25FX's The Bear: Complete Season 4Arriving June 27F*ck Marry KillArriving June 29The Bachelor: Complete Seasons 27 & 28Arriving June 30Boonie Bears: Time TwistTexas True Crime: Complete Season 5The ActorWhat’s leaving Hulu in June 2025Leaving June 1Christmas with the CampbellsLeaving June 2The Amazing MauriceLeaving June 4Intrigo: Dear AgnesLeaving June 8IndemnityLeaving June 10Here BeforeWarhuntLeaving June 11Intrigo: SamariaLeaving June 13The Worst Person in the WorldLeaving June 17Ted KThe LedgeLeaving June 22The Burning SeaLeaving June 24Big Gold BrickGasoline AlleyLeaving June 25The Desperate HourLeaving June 30Transfusion #what039s #new #hulu #june
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    What's New on Hulu in June 2025
    FX's highly acclaimed hit series The Bear returns to Hulu in June for its fourth season, picking up right after the events of season three, when Carmy received the Chicago Tribune's review of his fine-dining restaurant. The main cast—Jeremy Allen White, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, and Ayo Edebiri, to name a few—are reprising their roles in pushing The Bear forward. All 10 episodes will drop on June 25. Call Her Alex (June 10) is a Hulu original docuseries following "Call Her Daddy" podcast host Alex Cooper in preparation for her first tour with a behind-the-scenes look at the events that shaped her journey. Similarly, Barbara Walters Tell Me Everything (June 23) uses archival footage to explore Walters' life and career as a journalist and host in a male-dominated industry. On the film side, The Actor (June 30) is a crime mystery based on Donald E. Westlake's novel "Memory," starring Andre Holland as an actor with memory loss and Gemma Chan as a costume designer in the small town he ends up in. Predator: Killer of Killers (June 6) is an animated action/adventure and Hulu original set in the Predator universe. Here’s everything else coming to (and leaving) Hulu in June. What’s coming to Hulu in June 2025Arriving June 1Adam (2019) Alien (1979) Alien 3 (1992) Alien Resurrection (1997)Alien vs. Predator (2004)Alien: Covenant (2017)Aliens (1986) Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem (2007)Beasts Of The Southern Wild (2012)Before Midnight (2013)Betsy's Wedding (1990)Beverly Hills Ninja (1997)Big Eden (2000) Big Fish (2003)The Big Hit (1998)Big Mommas: Like Father, Like Son (2011)Blue Jasmine (2013)Boy Meets Girl (2014) Breakin' All the Rules (2004)The Bronze (2016)Bubble Boy (2001)Bugsy (1991)Cedar Rapids (2011)The Chronicles Of Narnia: The Voyage Of The Dawn Treader (2010)Cold Pursuit (2019)Cyrus (2010)Daddy Day Care (2003)Death on the Nile (2022)Deja Vu (2006)Delivery Man (2013)Dude, Where's My Car? (2000)Edge of Tomorrow (2014)Elena Undone (2010) Freddy Got Fingered (2001)The Girl Next Door (2004)Grown Ups (2010)Grown Ups 2 (2013)Happy Gilmore (1996)The Heat (2013)Hitchcock (2012)Hurricane Bianca (2016) Idiocracy (2006)Independence Day (1996)The Joy Luck Club (1993)Just Go With It (2011)Kung Fu Panda 3 (2016)Let's Be Cops (2014)Loving Annabelle (2006) Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again! (2018)Mamma Mia! (2008)The Mask (1994)Me And Earl And The Dying Girl (2015)Mirrors (2008)The Namesake (2007)A Perfect Ending (2012) Pineapple Express (2008)Predator (1987)The Predator (2018)Predator 2 (1990)Predators (2010)Pride + Prejudice + Zombies (2016)Prometheus (2012)Reno 911! Miami: The Movie (2007)Sordid Lives (2000) 28 Weeks Later (2007)The War of the Roses (1989)We're The Millers (2013)Working Girl (1988)You Don't Mess With The Zohan (2008)Arriving June 3I've Somehow Gotten Stronger When I Improved My Farm-Related Skills: Complete Season 1 (Dubbed & Subbed)Miss Kobayashi's Dragon Maid: Complete Season 1 (Dubbed & Subbed)The Quiz With Balls: Season 2 PremiereSo I'm a Spider, So What?: Complete Season 1 (Dubbed & Subbed)Wise Man's Grandchild: Complete Season 1 (Dubbed & Subbed)Yuri on Ice: Complete Season 1 (Dubbed & Subbed)Presence (2025)Arriving June 4The Great House Revival: Complete Season 5Arriving June 5National Anthem (2023) Arriving June 6Not Her First Rodeo: Complete Season 1 Predator: Killer of Killers: Film PremiereBorat: Cultural Learnings Of America For Make Benefit Glorious Nation … (2006)Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo (1999)Hot Shots! (1991)Hot Shots! Part Deux (1993)Shallow Hal (2001)The Ringer (2005)Arriving June 7Gypsy's Revenge: Complete Season 1I (Almost) Got Away With It: Complete Season 3Kids Baking Championship: Complete Season 12Murder in the Heartland: Complete Season 1Naked and Afraid: Last One Standing: Complete Season 1Sister Wives: Complete Season 12Arriving June 8Scream (2022) Arriving June 9Beyblade X: Season 1BArriving June 10Call Her Alex: Complete DocuseriesAnd Then We Danced (2019)Clifford the Big Red Dog (2021)Arriving June 11The Snake: Series PremiereGran Turismo (2023)Arriving June 12The 1% Club: Season 2 PremiereArriving June 13Atsuko Okatsuka: Father: Special PremiereAbsolution (2024)Arriving June 1490 Day Fiance: Complete Season 590 Day Fiance UK: Complete Season 2Guy's Grocery Games: Complete Seasons 32 & 33I'd Kill For You: Complete Season 3Joel McHale: Live from Pyongyang (2019)Arriving June 16My Happy Ending: Complete Season 1 (Sub)Black Christmas (2019)Arriving June 17SALLY (2025)Skincare (2024)Arriving June 19The Quiet Ones (2024) Arriving June 20The Bravest Knight: Season 2BOut Come the Wolves (2024) Arriving June 23Barbara Walters Tell Me Everything: Documentary PremiereHelck: Complete Season 1 (Dubbed & Subbed)My Instant Death Ability is Overpowered: Complete Season 1 (Dubbed & Subbed)My Isekai Life : Complete Season 1 (Dubbed & Subbed)Arriving June 24Survive (2024)Arriving June 25FX's The Bear: Complete Season 4Arriving June 27F*ck Marry Kill (2024)Arriving June 29The Bachelor: Complete Seasons 27 & 28Arriving June 30Boonie Bears: Time Twist (2024)Texas True Crime: Complete Season 5The Actor (2025)What’s leaving Hulu in June 2025Leaving June 1Christmas with the Campbells (2022)Leaving June 2The Amazing Maurice (2022)Leaving June 4Intrigo: Dear Agnes (2019)Leaving June 8Indemnity (2021)Leaving June 10Here Before (2021)Warhunt (2022)Leaving June 11Intrigo: Samaria (2019)Leaving June 13The Worst Person in the World (2021)Leaving June 17Ted K (2021)The Ledge (2022)Leaving June 22The Burning Sea (2021)Leaving June 24Big Gold Brick (2022)Gasoline Alley (2022)Leaving June 25The Desperate Hour (2022)Leaving June 30Transfusion (2023)
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  • Heybike’s Alpha step-through e-bike is an affordable, all-terrain dreamboat

    I’ve tested out a number of e-bikes in my time here at TechCrunch. And I’ve never been so tempted to hang onto one as I have with Heybike’s new Alpha.
    This sturdy, fat-tire, all-terrain e-bike is worth the price tag. The Alpha ticked a whole lot of my boxes, including ones I didn’t even know I had. For instance, I knew I’d like an e-bike with pedal assist and a throttle, but I didn’t know that I would love an e-bike with pedal assist, a throttle, and a manual shifter. Perhaps the dreamiest part of riding the Alpha was the mid-drive motor with torque sensor, which led to a more natural riding feel. That, and the battery life that seemed to last forever. 
    It wasn’t all roses and rainbows. I have a few complaints about the app, setting up the bike, and the outsized horn. But generally, this is an excellent all around e-bike,  whether you want to take it on off-road adventures or use it in the city to do your weekly Trader Joe’s shopping.
    And then there is the question of how long this bike will remain affordable. Heybike is Chinese manufacturer and its bikes are made in China. With tariffs, even at the recently lowered rate, these bikes are likely to get more expensive for U.S. consumers.An affordable mid-drive e-bike
    The ALPHA is Heybike’s first model to use its Galaxy eDrive system. Image Credits:Rebecca Bellan
    The Alpha is Heybike’s first with its made-in-house Galaxy eDrive system, which uses a 500W Mivice mid-drive motor alongside a 680Wh battery, which provides a smooth ride. 
    Most other e-bikes I’ve tried are built with motors mounted in the wheel hub, which makes for a simpler, more affordable design. A mid-drive motor is located near the pedals, and if you can get a bike like that at a decent price? Take it. Because not everyone wants to buy a Bafang conversion kit and build their own cheap mid-drive. 
    Even at the fifth and highest level of pedal assist, the Alpha is smooth and easy to control, making you feel like you’re pedaling a traditional push bike. There’s nothing jerky about the acceleration.
    There are downsides to the mid-drive, though. If you’re the type of rider who likes to lean heavy on the throttle, then Heybike’s Alpha is probably not for you. A company spokesperson told me Heybike doesn’t encourage sole throttle use, especially at the start of a ride, because it could damage the motor and drive train.

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    And with the Alpha, you actually can’t start a ride with the throttle. You have to pedal first and build up to at least 5 miles per hour before the throttle will engage. When you do use the throttle, the speed adjusts based on what pedal assist level you’re on. Though even at the highest level, the top speed while using the throttle only reaches 20 miles per hour. That said, you can push it up to 28 miles per hour while pedaling. 
    I didn’t find the throttle constraints to be too much of a problem. Of course, there were those occasional moments while riding through the chaotic streets of New York City when I wanted the quick getaway that a sensitive throttle would provide. Still, I found the pedal assist was responsive enough. 
    And with 105 N m of torque, it was also powerful. I rarely found myself needing to take it off the first level. The addition of the Shimano Altus 8-gear shifter helped augment that power. The shifter let me kick it up to a higher gear on flat terrain and bring it back down to a low gear when climbing hills; this meant I could keep the pedal assist at 1 to save on battery power. 
    And while I’m on the subject of hills, it’s worth noting that the Alpha handled inclines like an absolute champ, once again due to the mid-drive motor. 
    Long live the Alpha battery
    Image Credits:Rebecca Bellan
    The Alpha’s UL certified batteries allow for up to 60 miles of range on a single charge, though I wouldn’t be surprised if they surpassed that. After removing the battery to charge it once, I took the bike on several trips around the neighborhood and up various hills, probably riding for a total of 22 miles. The battery life on the LCD mid-mounted screen somehow didn’t drop below 100%. 
    That could have something to do with the Galaxy eDrive, which seemed to have a regenerative braking system that provided power back to the battery whenever I braked. Heybike says its Galaxy system provides more than 8% of additional range compared to batteries of the same capacity.
    More notes on sturdiness
    The ALPHA’s front light was bright and its rear rack sturdy for picnic supplies. Image Credits:Rebecca Bellan
    The Alpha could probably double as a cargo bike for delivery riders. It comes with a rear rack that was more than sufficient to strap three packed bags of groceries, though I could have just as easily attached one of those large food delivery boxes. 
    It also has a total payload of 400 pounds. That’s the same amount as the Pedego cargo bike I tested last year, which is twice the price and also twice as heavy. Heybike’s Alpha isn’t exactly a small bike that can be tucked away easily in a NYC apartment, but with its aluminum alloy frame, it wasn’t too heavy or clunky at 71 pounds. 
    And while the 26 X 4 inch fat tires are great for traipsing over gravel and tree roots, they’re just as good at handling the potholes and uneven road surfaces of NYC. Not only the tires, but the bouncy hydraulic front fork suspension took most of the blows from some of those roads and made it easy for me to hop on and off sidewalks. 
    The cons: set up, quality concerns, and wow, what a horn
    Image Credits:Rebecca Bellan
    The Alpha was not without its challenges. For one, there was a decent amount of setup involved when the bike was delivered, which required careful squinting at a QR-code instruction manual.
    If you’re not in the habit of putting bike parts together, you’re liable to get a few things wrong. I had the help of two lovely colleagues at my office, but when I hit the road something still felt off. I took it to a bike shop where the mechanic shook his head empathetically and made some tweaks, including to the handlebars which I hadn’t installed in the correct position.
    I also struggled with removing the battery cover from the down tube. It just wouldn’t come off! I tried looking up an instructional video on YouTube, but all I could find was an annoying 16-second remove and install battery ASMR video from Heybike. In the end, I had to jimmy the cover open, and found that someone appeared to have screwed that latch the wrong way, hindering the release of the metal cover. I screwed it back on the right way so it could be clicked in properly.
    But then, more battery cover drama. After a few rides, the cover started popping off half-way mid-ride. I’d clip it back in, hit a bump, and there it went again. Figuring that I likely messed something up while fiddling with the battery cover, I taped it in place and called it a day.
    Another downvote for the Alpha was the horn. My god, it was loud. Imagine trying to annoy someone by yelling “HOOOONNNKKK” at them loudly. That’s what the horn sounded like. It was so aggressive that I was embarrassed to use it to alert pedestrians or other riders when I was passing, lest I scare the crap out of them. It did come in handy when I wanted to symbolically flip off cars that entered the bike lane, though. 
    The app was also unimpressive. It could turn the bike off, but it couldn’t turn it on, because the bike needed to be on already to connect to the app via bluetooth. The app could also turn on and off the front headlight, as well as record and share any trip data. Personally, I think e-bike apps are only worth using if they give you live tracking, anti-theft, and alarms.   
    There aren’t many colors to choose from. In fact, if you want a step-through, you’re getting it in white. And if you want a step-over frame, you’d better be happy with black.
    A final note on the addition of turn signals: they worked fine, but I almost never remembered to use them. 
    Heybike Alpha: Best if you’re handy, still good if not
    All in all, I thought the Heybike Alpha was a solid ride, particularly for the price point. Usually a bike with the Alpha’s specs will run you anywhere from to so it’s a pretty good deal. Though that issue with the battery cover did raise some red flags about quality issues, and if I had ridden it longer, I wonder what other issues might have arisen. 
    The affordable price tag could be based on poor customer service, based on reviews online, though I couldn’t personally speak to that. All I know is that it was one of the smoothest, easiest fat-tire e-bikes I’ve had the pleasure of riding. 
    #heybikes #alpha #stepthrough #ebike #affordable
    Heybike’s Alpha step-through e-bike is an affordable, all-terrain dreamboat
    I’ve tested out a number of e-bikes in my time here at TechCrunch. And I’ve never been so tempted to hang onto one as I have with Heybike’s new Alpha. This sturdy, fat-tire, all-terrain e-bike is worth the price tag. The Alpha ticked a whole lot of my boxes, including ones I didn’t even know I had. For instance, I knew I’d like an e-bike with pedal assist and a throttle, but I didn’t know that I would love an e-bike with pedal assist, a throttle, and a manual shifter. Perhaps the dreamiest part of riding the Alpha was the mid-drive motor with torque sensor, which led to a more natural riding feel. That, and the battery life that seemed to last forever.  It wasn’t all roses and rainbows. I have a few complaints about the app, setting up the bike, and the outsized horn. But generally, this is an excellent all around e-bike,  whether you want to take it on off-road adventures or use it in the city to do your weekly Trader Joe’s shopping. And then there is the question of how long this bike will remain affordable. Heybike is Chinese manufacturer and its bikes are made in China. With tariffs, even at the recently lowered rate, these bikes are likely to get more expensive for U.S. consumers.An affordable mid-drive e-bike The ALPHA is Heybike’s first model to use its Galaxy eDrive system. Image Credits:Rebecca Bellan The Alpha is Heybike’s first with its made-in-house Galaxy eDrive system, which uses a 500W Mivice mid-drive motor alongside a 680Wh battery, which provides a smooth ride.  Most other e-bikes I’ve tried are built with motors mounted in the wheel hub, which makes for a simpler, more affordable design. A mid-drive motor is located near the pedals, and if you can get a bike like that at a decent price? Take it. Because not everyone wants to buy a Bafang conversion kit and build their own cheap mid-drive.  Even at the fifth and highest level of pedal assist, the Alpha is smooth and easy to control, making you feel like you’re pedaling a traditional push bike. There’s nothing jerky about the acceleration. There are downsides to the mid-drive, though. If you’re the type of rider who likes to lean heavy on the throttle, then Heybike’s Alpha is probably not for you. A company spokesperson told me Heybike doesn’t encourage sole throttle use, especially at the start of a ride, because it could damage the motor and drive train. Techcrunch event Join us at TechCrunch Sessions: AI Secure your spot for our leading AI industry event with speakers from OpenAI, Anthropic, and Cohere. For a limited time, tickets are just for an entire day of expert talks, workshops, and potent networking. Exhibit at TechCrunch Sessions: AI Secure your spot at TC Sessions: AI and show 1,200+ decision-makers what you’ve built — without the big spend. Available through May 9 or while tables last. Berkeley, CA | June 5 REGISTER NOW And with the Alpha, you actually can’t start a ride with the throttle. You have to pedal first and build up to at least 5 miles per hour before the throttle will engage. When you do use the throttle, the speed adjusts based on what pedal assist level you’re on. Though even at the highest level, the top speed while using the throttle only reaches 20 miles per hour. That said, you can push it up to 28 miles per hour while pedaling.  I didn’t find the throttle constraints to be too much of a problem. Of course, there were those occasional moments while riding through the chaotic streets of New York City when I wanted the quick getaway that a sensitive throttle would provide. Still, I found the pedal assist was responsive enough.  And with 105 N m of torque, it was also powerful. I rarely found myself needing to take it off the first level. The addition of the Shimano Altus 8-gear shifter helped augment that power. The shifter let me kick it up to a higher gear on flat terrain and bring it back down to a low gear when climbing hills; this meant I could keep the pedal assist at 1 to save on battery power.  And while I’m on the subject of hills, it’s worth noting that the Alpha handled inclines like an absolute champ, once again due to the mid-drive motor.  Long live the Alpha battery Image Credits:Rebecca Bellan The Alpha’s UL certified batteries allow for up to 60 miles of range on a single charge, though I wouldn’t be surprised if they surpassed that. After removing the battery to charge it once, I took the bike on several trips around the neighborhood and up various hills, probably riding for a total of 22 miles. The battery life on the LCD mid-mounted screen somehow didn’t drop below 100%.  That could have something to do with the Galaxy eDrive, which seemed to have a regenerative braking system that provided power back to the battery whenever I braked. Heybike says its Galaxy system provides more than 8% of additional range compared to batteries of the same capacity. More notes on sturdiness The ALPHA’s front light was bright and its rear rack sturdy for picnic supplies. Image Credits:Rebecca Bellan The Alpha could probably double as a cargo bike for delivery riders. It comes with a rear rack that was more than sufficient to strap three packed bags of groceries, though I could have just as easily attached one of those large food delivery boxes.  It also has a total payload of 400 pounds. That’s the same amount as the Pedego cargo bike I tested last year, which is twice the price and also twice as heavy. Heybike’s Alpha isn’t exactly a small bike that can be tucked away easily in a NYC apartment, but with its aluminum alloy frame, it wasn’t too heavy or clunky at 71 pounds.  And while the 26 X 4 inch fat tires are great for traipsing over gravel and tree roots, they’re just as good at handling the potholes and uneven road surfaces of NYC. Not only the tires, but the bouncy hydraulic front fork suspension took most of the blows from some of those roads and made it easy for me to hop on and off sidewalks.  The cons: set up, quality concerns, and wow, what a horn Image Credits:Rebecca Bellan The Alpha was not without its challenges. For one, there was a decent amount of setup involved when the bike was delivered, which required careful squinting at a QR-code instruction manual. If you’re not in the habit of putting bike parts together, you’re liable to get a few things wrong. I had the help of two lovely colleagues at my office, but when I hit the road something still felt off. I took it to a bike shop where the mechanic shook his head empathetically and made some tweaks, including to the handlebars which I hadn’t installed in the correct position. I also struggled with removing the battery cover from the down tube. It just wouldn’t come off! I tried looking up an instructional video on YouTube, but all I could find was an annoying 16-second remove and install battery ASMR video from Heybike. In the end, I had to jimmy the cover open, and found that someone appeared to have screwed that latch the wrong way, hindering the release of the metal cover. I screwed it back on the right way so it could be clicked in properly. But then, more battery cover drama. After a few rides, the cover started popping off half-way mid-ride. I’d clip it back in, hit a bump, and there it went again. Figuring that I likely messed something up while fiddling with the battery cover, I taped it in place and called it a day. Another downvote for the Alpha was the horn. My god, it was loud. Imagine trying to annoy someone by yelling “HOOOONNNKKK” at them loudly. That’s what the horn sounded like. It was so aggressive that I was embarrassed to use it to alert pedestrians or other riders when I was passing, lest I scare the crap out of them. It did come in handy when I wanted to symbolically flip off cars that entered the bike lane, though.  The app was also unimpressive. It could turn the bike off, but it couldn’t turn it on, because the bike needed to be on already to connect to the app via bluetooth. The app could also turn on and off the front headlight, as well as record and share any trip data. Personally, I think e-bike apps are only worth using if they give you live tracking, anti-theft, and alarms.    There aren’t many colors to choose from. In fact, if you want a step-through, you’re getting it in white. And if you want a step-over frame, you’d better be happy with black. A final note on the addition of turn signals: they worked fine, but I almost never remembered to use them.  Heybike Alpha: Best if you’re handy, still good if not All in all, I thought the Heybike Alpha was a solid ride, particularly for the price point. Usually a bike with the Alpha’s specs will run you anywhere from to so it’s a pretty good deal. Though that issue with the battery cover did raise some red flags about quality issues, and if I had ridden it longer, I wonder what other issues might have arisen.  The affordable price tag could be based on poor customer service, based on reviews online, though I couldn’t personally speak to that. All I know is that it was one of the smoothest, easiest fat-tire e-bikes I’ve had the pleasure of riding.  #heybikes #alpha #stepthrough #ebike #affordable
    TECHCRUNCH.COM
    Heybike’s Alpha step-through e-bike is an affordable, all-terrain dreamboat
    I’ve tested out a number of e-bikes in my time here at TechCrunch. And I’ve never been so tempted to hang onto one as I have with Heybike’s new Alpha. This sturdy, fat-tire, all-terrain e-bike is worth the $1,699 price tag. The Alpha ticked a whole lot of my boxes, including ones I didn’t even know I had. For instance, I knew I’d like an e-bike with pedal assist and a throttle, but I didn’t know that I would love an e-bike with pedal assist, a throttle, and a manual shifter. Perhaps the dreamiest part of riding the Alpha was the mid-drive motor with torque sensor, which led to a more natural riding feel. That, and the battery life that seemed to last forever.  It wasn’t all roses and rainbows. I have a few complaints about the app, setting up the bike, and the outsized horn. But generally, this is an excellent all around e-bike,  whether you want to take it on off-road adventures or use it in the city to do your weekly Trader Joe’s shopping. And then there is the question of how long this bike will remain affordable. Heybike is Chinese manufacturer and its bikes are made in China. With tariffs, even at the recently lowered rate, these bikes are likely to get more expensive for U.S. consumers.An affordable mid-drive e-bike The ALPHA is Heybike’s first model to use its Galaxy eDrive system. Image Credits:Rebecca Bellan The Alpha is Heybike’s first with its made-in-house Galaxy eDrive system, which uses a 500W Mivice mid-drive motor alongside a 680Wh battery, which provides a smooth ride.  Most other e-bikes I’ve tried are built with motors mounted in the wheel hub, which makes for a simpler, more affordable design. A mid-drive motor is located near the pedals, and if you can get a bike like that at a decent price? Take it. Because not everyone wants to buy a Bafang conversion kit and build their own cheap mid-drive.  Even at the fifth and highest level of pedal assist, the Alpha is smooth and easy to control, making you feel like you’re pedaling a traditional push bike. There’s nothing jerky about the acceleration. There are downsides to the mid-drive, though. If you’re the type of rider who likes to lean heavy on the throttle, then Heybike’s Alpha is probably not for you. A company spokesperson told me Heybike doesn’t encourage sole throttle use, especially at the start of a ride, because it could damage the motor and drive train. Techcrunch event Join us at TechCrunch Sessions: AI Secure your spot for our leading AI industry event with speakers from OpenAI, Anthropic, and Cohere. For a limited time, tickets are just $292 for an entire day of expert talks, workshops, and potent networking. Exhibit at TechCrunch Sessions: AI Secure your spot at TC Sessions: AI and show 1,200+ decision-makers what you’ve built — without the big spend. Available through May 9 or while tables last. Berkeley, CA | June 5 REGISTER NOW And with the Alpha, you actually can’t start a ride with the throttle. You have to pedal first and build up to at least 5 miles per hour before the throttle will engage. When you do use the throttle, the speed adjusts based on what pedal assist level you’re on. Though even at the highest level, the top speed while using the throttle only reaches 20 miles per hour. That said, you can push it up to 28 miles per hour while pedaling.  I didn’t find the throttle constraints to be too much of a problem. Of course, there were those occasional moments while riding through the chaotic streets of New York City when I wanted the quick getaway that a sensitive throttle would provide. Still, I found the pedal assist was responsive enough.  And with 105 N m of torque, it was also powerful. I rarely found myself needing to take it off the first level. The addition of the Shimano Altus 8-gear shifter helped augment that power. The shifter let me kick it up to a higher gear on flat terrain and bring it back down to a low gear when climbing hills; this meant I could keep the pedal assist at 1 to save on battery power.  And while I’m on the subject of hills, it’s worth noting that the Alpha handled inclines like an absolute champ, once again due to the mid-drive motor.  Long live the Alpha battery Image Credits:Rebecca Bellan The Alpha’s UL certified batteries allow for up to 60 miles of range on a single charge, though I wouldn’t be surprised if they surpassed that. After removing the battery to charge it once (which ended up being an ordeal that I’ll describe below), I took the bike on several trips around the neighborhood and up various hills, probably riding for a total of 22 miles. The battery life on the LCD mid-mounted screen somehow didn’t drop below 100%.  That could have something to do with the Galaxy eDrive, which seemed to have a regenerative braking system that provided power back to the battery whenever I braked. Heybike says its Galaxy system provides more than 8% of additional range compared to batteries of the same capacity. More notes on sturdiness The ALPHA’s front light was bright and its rear rack sturdy for picnic supplies. Image Credits:Rebecca Bellan The Alpha could probably double as a cargo bike for delivery riders. It comes with a rear rack that was more than sufficient to strap three packed bags of groceries, though I could have just as easily attached one of those large food delivery boxes.  It also has a total payload of 400 pounds. That’s the same amount as the Pedego cargo bike I tested last year, which is twice the price and also twice as heavy. Heybike’s Alpha isn’t exactly a small bike that can be tucked away easily in a NYC apartment, but with its aluminum alloy frame, it wasn’t too heavy or clunky at 71 pounds.  And while the 26 X 4 inch fat tires are great for traipsing over gravel and tree roots, they’re just as good at handling the potholes and uneven road surfaces of NYC. Not only the tires, but the bouncy hydraulic front fork suspension took most of the blows from some of those roads and made it easy for me to hop on and off sidewalks.  The cons: set up, quality concerns, and wow, what a horn Image Credits:Rebecca Bellan The Alpha was not without its challenges. For one, there was a decent amount of setup involved when the bike was delivered, which required careful squinting at a QR-code instruction manual. If you’re not in the habit of putting bike parts together (which I am not), you’re liable to get a few things wrong. I had the help of two lovely colleagues at my office, but when I hit the road something still felt off. I took it to a bike shop where the mechanic shook his head empathetically and made some tweaks, including to the handlebars which I hadn’t installed in the correct position. I also struggled with removing the battery cover from the down tube. It just wouldn’t come off! I tried looking up an instructional video on YouTube, but all I could find was an annoying 16-second remove and install battery ASMR video from Heybike. In the end, I had to jimmy the cover open, and found that someone appeared to have screwed that latch the wrong way, hindering the release of the metal cover. I screwed it back on the right way so it could be clicked in properly. But then, more battery cover drama. After a few rides, the cover started popping off half-way mid-ride. I’d clip it back in, hit a bump, and there it went again. Figuring that I likely messed something up while fiddling with the battery cover, I taped it in place and called it a day. Another downvote for the Alpha was the horn. My god, it was loud. Imagine trying to annoy someone by yelling “HOOOONNNKKK” at them loudly. That’s what the horn sounded like. It was so aggressive that I was embarrassed to use it to alert pedestrians or other riders when I was passing, lest I scare the crap out of them. It did come in handy when I wanted to symbolically flip off cars that entered the bike lane, though.  The app was also unimpressive. It could turn the bike off, but it couldn’t turn it on, because the bike needed to be on already to connect to the app via bluetooth. The app could also turn on and off the front headlight (which was very bright, by the way), as well as record and share any trip data. Personally, I think e-bike apps are only worth using if they give you live tracking, anti-theft, and alarms.    There aren’t many colors to choose from. In fact, if you want a step-through, you’re getting it in white. And if you want a step-over frame, you’d better be happy with black. A final note on the addition of turn signals: they worked fine, but I almost never remembered to use them.  Heybike Alpha: Best if you’re handy, still good if not All in all, I thought the Heybike Alpha was a solid ride, particularly for the price point. Usually a bike with the Alpha’s specs will run you anywhere from $2,000 to $4,500, so it’s a pretty good deal. Though that issue with the battery cover did raise some red flags about quality issues, and if I had ridden it longer, I wonder what other issues might have arisen.  The affordable price tag could be based on poor customer service, based on reviews online, though I couldn’t personally speak to that. All I know is that it was one of the smoothest, easiest fat-tire e-bikes I’ve had the pleasure of riding. 
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