Raised online and under constant scrutiny, young adults are leaning into embarrassment as a necessary part of growing up. By Yola Mzizi Kate Glavan was in a rut. Ms. Glavan, 26, had moved to New York ...
Sign up for the best picks from our travel, fashion and lifestyle writers. The fitness craze shows no sign of slowing down and fitness influencers are all too happy ...
Additional reporting by Alexandria Gomez. While there are several dating apps geared toward people searching for a swolemate (Snap Together, Sweatt, etc.), plenty of women still get hit on the ...
Dentists hate it when you don't floss. Bartenders wince when you stumble out the door. Lawyers shake their heads when you represent yourself. After all, they know how bad the outcomes can be. So what ...
We really need to talk about these two moments from this video. Deadlifting in heels is an easy way to dislocate your ankle. You can chalk it up to “Russia,” but this wasn’t on a dashcam, so I have my ...
Keighton is a New York-based, queer, Asian transmedia artist and visual jockey specializing in multimedia production and experience design. As the ...
The new iPods are here, but should you even bother getting one? We’ve got our opinion on the matter, plus one on what Apple should really do to fix its built-in fitness apps. Plus, a bit about why the ...
When Gen Z isn’t busy trolling Millennials for their choice of jeans or carbon footprints, they’re hard at work bending and twisting the meaning of words you thought you once knew well. (Think sheesh ...
Early cringe culture was about empathy and secondhand embarrassment. Today, being “cringe” is a serious infraction. After spending years in that environment, our sense of cringe has been heightened to ...