Making an enemy
I was watching this show on Netflix. I believe you might have heard of it. It’s called Making a Murderer, and it follows the heinous trials, mistrials, and accusations against a man named Steven Avery.
I was watching this show on Netflix. I believe you might have heard of it. It’s called Making a Murderer, and it follows the heinous trials, mistrials, and accusations against a man named Steven Avery.
It’s a scary world out there for single men and women—even for people in relationships—and with trends like #WasteHisTime it appears as though it is only getting worse.
When China enforced the one-child policy in the late ’70s, few foresaw the gender imbalance that resulted from it.
For 70 years, Adolf Hitler’s infamous book of anti-Semitism and hatred, Mein Kampf (My Struggle) had been sitting stagnant in the ownership of Bavaria.
Not only are we at a point where pornography is at the tips of our fingers, we can now be fully immersed in it.
The old way of thinking: Nobody owns a computer because nobody needs one. Take a look at the new Apple 1, which came on sale this summer (July 1976).
Young author George R. R. Martin’s first collection of novellas and short stories, A Song for Lya, is being published this year.
A few years ago, my mother’s side of the family emigrated to Canada, France, and the United States from their home country, which had been torn apart by the Vietnam War, in the hope of starting a new life.
Cheez Whiz, the delightful brand of cheese spread, is getting a lot of press recently as a group of brand loyalists have gathered together—from coast to coast like butter toast—to rise against the blasphemous use of the brand’s name.
Before we get into the debate of whether or not having a fake name on Facebook is justified, we must first understand why people would want to use an alias to begin with.