TV presenter Richard Osman said screens had become 'the great bogeyman', arguing that they can increase children's knowledge, happiness and even sociability.
On a glorious summer day, a preschooler named Roger teetered on rocks dotting a creek in eastern Orange County, unsure if he ...
My problems were too complex and modern to explain. So I skated across parking lots, breezeways, and sidewalks, I listened to ...
Brent Venables pulled the trigger on inserting Michael Hawkins in place of Jackson Arnold at QB vs. Tennessee. Though Hawkins ...
The legendary British rock band, headed by Chris Martin, will be performing live in Mumbai on January 18 and 19, 2025 ...
Kenyan saxophonist, recording artiste, and lawyer Analo Kanga is on a mission to reimagine Afro jazz in a format that is ...
Jeopardy! fans could not keep their eyes off their screens. On the Friday, September 20 episode of the ABC trivia game show, ...
A man died after neglect by two nurses who glued his head and sent him home after he was brutally attacked by his ...
It’s no surprise advertisers are jumping on Pause ads since they offer a way to boost revenue. This works out great for ...
Matthew Charnock, 35, died in hospital three days after he was smashed over the head with a wheel brace by Steven Cotterill.
So, you’re facing a Netflix menu that’s basically a stress test, and every platform out there wants you glued to the screen.
Dr Dean Burnett, who has spent years studying the brain and how it works, he has written a new book delivering some news that ...