Debbie Reese

  • 82-year-old Kentucky farmer rejects $26 million AI data center offer
    Horses on a farm. Photo credit: Canva
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    82-year-old Kentucky farmer rejects $26 million AI data center offer

    The incredible story of Ida Huddleston in Mason County.

    Imagine getting a phone call out of the blue from a stranger offering you $26 million for part of your farm.

    For most of us, that would be a life-changing, champagne-popping, are-you-serious-right-now? moment. But for 82-year-old Ida Huddleston of Mason County, Kentucky, it was something else entirely: an insult dressed up in dollar signs.

    Ida’s answer? A hard no, and trust me, she didn’t lose a wink of sleep over it.

    A legacy that can’t be bought

    Ida is a part of the Huddleston family, who have farmed this land for 200 years. That’s two centuries of early mornings, muddy boots, and honest work. Over generations, they’ve raised cattle, grown soybeans, and planted corn on their 1,200-acre property outside Maysville.

    But it’s not just land stewardship. During the Great Depression—when jobs disappeared and families lined up just to get a meal—the Huddlestons grew wheat. They helped keep bread lines operating across America when people had almost nothing left. This land didn’t just feed the family; it fed the nation.

    kentucky, farmer, generation, ida, huddleston
    The Huddleston family has been farming in Kentucky for 200 years.Photo credit: Canva

    So when a representative from an unnamed Fortune 100 tech company offered $60,000 per acre—about ten times the current market rate—Ida’s daughter, Delsia Bare, simply said: “Stay and hold and feed a nation. $26 million doesn’t mean anything.”

    Notice the wording. She didn’t say “nothing.” She said $26 million doesn’t mean anything.

    The tech giant at the door

    The company that offered $26 million for the Huddlestons’ property has never revealed its identity; local officials were required to sign non-disclosure agreements just to learn who was making the offer.

    What we do know: The company planned to convert half of the Huddleston farm into a large “hyperscale” AI data center campus covering 2,000 acres outside Maysville. These facilities are enormous. They devour electricity. And a single ginormous data center can consume up to five million gallons of water per day: roughly what a city of 50,000 people uses.

    However, the company did promise this: 400 permanent jobs in exchange for community support. Ida wasn’t buying it.

    “They call us old, stupid farmers, you know, but we’re not,” she told WKRC-TV. “We know whenever our food is disappearing, our lands are disappearing, and we don’t have any water, and that poison. Well, we know we’ve had it.”

    She called it a scam. And to be honest, the repeated pressure campaigns—multiple offers, persistent calls, and what she described as “mind harassment”—don’t exactly reflect good faith.

    A community that agrees

    Ida isn’t a lone voice in the wilderness here. Since 2017, Mason County has lost one-fifth of its farms. Neighbors throughout the region share her concerns about what an industrial mega-campus would do to their rural way of life: their water, their soil, their sense of home.

    And they’re fighting back.

    A grassroots group called “We Are Mason County” has filed a lawsuit claiming the county’s zoning laws lack a proper legal framework for data centers. Their attorney noted that approving this rezoning would directly conflict with the county’s comprehensive land-use plan.

    In other words, this isn’t over.

    What this land means

    For Ida, the decision was never really about money.

    Her late husband built their house with his own hands. She feels his presence every time she walks the fields. The land holds her family’s past and, she hopes, their future.

    @lex18news

    ‘I’M STAYING PUT’: Ida Huddleston and her daughter, Delsia Bare, have rejected multimillion-dollar offers from developers planning a massive data center project on Big Pond Pike. Huddleston turned down $60,000 per acre for her 71 acres, while Bare declined $48,000 per acre for her 463-acre farm. 💰🚫 Despite promises of hundreds of jobs, the family remains skeptical—and determined to stay. “I’m staying put,” Huddleston said. County leaders are still reviewing the proposal as debate over the project continues. #KentuckyNews #CommunityVoices #datacenter

    ♬ original sound – lex18news – lex18news

    “I said, ‘No, mine is priceless.’ What I’ve got here, I want to pass it down. What God told me to do was to keep it until I was through with it and then pass it on to the next generation,” she told WXIX-TV.

    In an era when everything seems to have a price—and the biggest tech companies in the world have the resources to buy nearly anything—there’s something quietly remarkable about a woman who simply says: no, not this.

    Ida says she intends to die on that land, on her own terms, surrounded by 200 years of family history.

    Some things really are priceless.

  • A man who wanted to ‘see music’ paired a piano with bioluminescent algae. It’s magical to watch.
    Bioluminescent algae respond when the piano keys are played.Photo credit: HTX Studio/YouTube

    Music is meant to be heard and not seen, right? Sure, we can watch musicians play instruments, and we can see music notation on paper. But that’s not the same as seeing music itself.

    A young man named He Tongxue from HTX Studio, a team of DIY innovators from Hangzhou, China, wanted to be able to “see music.” He had just started learning piano and felt like the visible dimension was missing. There are plenty of computer programs that create digital visual effects with music, of course. But the goal was to make music visible in real life.

    It took the studio three years, four prototypes, and endless tests to come up with just the right combination of elements. They wanted something that would rise from the piano and light up when the keys were pressed.

    “Our first thought was smoke,” he said. They figured they could line up smoke machines that would be triggered by the piano keys and use lasers to light up the smoke as it rises.

    The studio built a prototype, and at first, it looked pretty cool. But after playing the piano for a few minutes, the cool factor wore off. He later described it as “a disaster.”

    “The smoke drifts everywhere,” he said. “You can’t tell which light matches which note. It feels like a genie is coming out. And after a while, it feels like someone is barbecuing inside the piano.”

    They wanted the smoke to rise in chunks, like solid musical notes, instead of spreading out. That led them to the idea of vortex rings. Essentially, they could make smoke rings that would give the visible “notes” more structure.

    music, smoke, innovation, tech
    A vortex ring of smoke floats through the air. Photo credit: Canva

    A second prototype was made to test out this idea. And it did look really cool…at first. The vortex rings worked, but there was too much extraneous smoke that eventually built up and made it hard to see the rings. The contraptions that made the rings were also too large to make separate ones for all 88 keys of the piano, and making them smaller rendered them unusable.

    Back to the drawing board again.

    Since a vortex ring is essentially rotating fluid, they shifted to different fluids: water and paint. They created yet another piano prototype that would shoot paint vortex rings into water. Yet again, cool at first, but soon the water simply clouded up as the paint rings dissipated. They tried using oil paints, which wouldn’t dissolve in water, but that also disappointed. Oil paint didn’t form rings, but rather broke apart into small spheres in the water.

    Bubbles, water, tech, visual
    When smoke didn’t work, the studio turned to water. Photo credit: Canva

    However, the spheres gave them the idea of simply using droplets. They created a piano that would push up a droplet of colored glycerin into the water tank with each note played. Lights would illuminate them.

    The idea was solid, but the execution left something to be desired. The beauty of the lit-up droplets didn’t extend throughout the tank. The droplets drifted, and attempts to rein them in with glass tubes ruined the magical effect.

    “By this point, the project had dragged on for two years,” he said. “We had tried everything we could think of. I honestly didn’t know what I was to do. We’ve abandoned projects before. But never one that consumed this much time, energy, and effort from almost everyone in the studio.”

    Then disaster struck. One night, the glass tank shattered under the water pressure, destroying the entire system.

    Watch the full story here:

    “If the universe was telling me to stop, this felt like the sign,” he said. But in the midst of significant setbacks and creeping self-doubt, the idea of turning to nature arose. What if they used bioluminescent algae, which light up all on their own?

    “Around the world, you can see this blue glow in coastal waters,” he said. “It’s caused by a reaction between luciferin and luciferase when the algae are stimulated. We didn’t spray algae into water. We filled the entire tank with them, then disturbed them with bubbles so they would glow all the way to the surface.”

    He and his studio mates did it. No AI. No digital effects. Real-life, 3D visible music with an assist from nature. They named it the Blue Tears Piano.

    Here’s German pianist Oskar Roman Jezior playing “Golden Hour” on it:

    You can follow HTX Studio on YouTube for more incredible innovations.

  • Widow trying to keep husband’s memory alive for their kids strikes gold by finding his bucket list
    Leslie Harter-Berg’s late husband left behind a bucket list.Photo credit: Leslie Harter-Berg/TikTok (used with permission)

    Leslie Harter-Berg from Vancouver, Washington, lost her husband, Ryan, in 2019 when he died suddenly after an aneurysm and stroke. The couple was in Palm Springs, California after visiting Disneyland with their two sons, Wit (then 3) and Rory (1), when he passed away. “So I flew back from Cali as a single mom, solo business owner and widow, a term I thought only applied to old ladies,” she told Newsweek.

    In 2022, she found love again with a new man, Sol, and in 2023, they had a son, Rhys. “I feel very blessed and lucky that I was able to find love twice,” she told People. “I can only imagine Ryan telling me not to waste this one life I get.”

    The perfect way to celebrate her husband’s life with her children

    But she still wanted her two oldest sons to understand the amazing man their father was and to experience him in some way. So, every year on his birthday, they would do something Ryan loved, such as watching a classic film or playing with LEGO.

    In 2021, while going through Ryan’s belongings, she found a bucket list he had written in a high school journal. It paints a vivid picture of a young man’s hopes and core beliefs about family, friendship, and adventure. Since the bucket list was discovered, they have done something on it every year on Ryan’s birthday. Here’s the list:

    1. make a list of things to do before I die
    2. Make an independent film
    3. go on a road trip
    4. get a 4.00 GPA
    5. Go skydiving
    6. have a band (good)
    7. play in a concert
    8. Get married
    9. have kids
    10. stage dive
    11. make a website
    12. bungie jump
    13. take piano lessons
    14. learn to ride a unicycle
    15. live in a mansion
    16. play chess in a park
    17. Read the whole bible 5X + ☐ ☐ ☐ ☐
    18. go surfing
    19. learn to draw japanimation
    20. go jetskiing
    21. go snowmobiling
    22. drag race in a car
    23. invent something
    24. run in a marathon
    25. Be the best man at a wedding
    26. go to a public facility dressed as a pirate
    27. go to an art museum and appreciate
    28. ride in a taxi
    29. Build a 3 foot card tower
    30. live a riteous life
    31. learn to spell
    32. own a nice computer
    33. own a comfy couch

    One year, the family accomplished #26 in his life by dressing up as pirates and going out in public, and #16 by playing chess in a park. April 2, 2026 will mark the fifth year that the family has been checking things off his list.

    “My kids look forward to it every year!” she told Newsweek. “Especially as they get older and closer to the age Ryan was when he made it, I think it’s meaningful to get a glimpse into who their dad was.”

    @leslieharterberg

    When my husband died, my kids were 3 and 1. Raising kids while we’re navigating the grief of this wild world is no joke. #griefjourney #grief #parenting

    ♬ original sound – Leslie Harter-Berg

    “He lives on in his quirky little list”

    So far, the kids’ favorite activity on the list has been one of the most challenging.

    “My kids’ favorite was probably building the three-foot-high card tower, which proved almost impossible,” she told Upworthy. “One of my friends was determined, and it took about three hours to finally get the cards to stay in place. We threw a big party and ate Ryan’s favorite snacks.”

    After more than six million people saw her TikTok post about the bucket list, many contacted her to help her family complete it. One said they’d let them borrow their mansion to cross off #15.

    “Someone on Lake Michigan said he’d be in Japan and my kids and I could experience mansion life to cross off Ryan’s ‘live in a mansion’ bucket list item,” she said. “Tempting, but we opted not to take him up on it. It has been so sweet to see how the Internet has rallied to want me to help complete it. A web design firm reached out, offering to build a website, another item on his list. Many people in the comments said they’d want to check off Ryan’s items too, which means so much. He lives on in his quirky little list.”

    To learn more about how she worked to overcome her grief, check out her new memoir, You’re So Strong: On Grief and Letting Go of My Favorite Compliment.

  • Woman catches her dad dealing with a ‘work emergency’ at Disney World, and people are showing respect
    A dad admirably handled a "work emergency" without interrupting his family’s Disney vacation.Photo credit: themouselets/TikTok

    A vacation to Disney World is still considered the gold standard by many when it comes to family getaways. It has everything from good food to thrill rides, childhood nostalgia, and more.

    But all that joy and magic sometimes come at a cost. Not just the financial price tag, but also the hard work it takes to afford those tickets and arrange the trip—work that doesn’t necessarily end when you step foot inside the parks. One family learned this lesson the hard way, firsthand.

    The Mouselets are three siblings who’ve teamed up, using their shared love of all things Disney, to run social media accounts and podcasts where they share their favorite tips and secrets about the parks.

    Recently, they arranged to take their parents to Disney World, and the excitement was palpable:

    @themouselets

    the Mouselet fam is going back to Disney in May with a stay at the Grand Floridian!! (we’re renting points with @David’s Vacation Club Rentals ) #disneyvacation #disneyworld #grandfloridian #disneyparks

    ♬ Blame It On the Boogie (John Luongo Disco Mix) – The Jacksons

    Day at Disney World doesn’t go as planned

    But the trip quickly went off the rails when their dad had to deal with a “work emergency.”

    One of the siblings captured a hilarious video of their dad taking an urgent, serious call…while aboard the Magic Carpet ride.

    “My dad might be the only person in the world to take a work call WHILE RIDING THE MAGIC CARPETS,” they wrote in the caption.

    Unfortunately, the work didn’t end there for their poor dad. In other clips shared by The Mouselets, he’s forced to whip out his laptop at lunch, tap away at his phone while waiting for a show to begin, and even take another urgent call while dressed in full Mike Wazowski garb, of Monsters, Inc. fame.

    Their dad even brought an entire multi-monitor setup to their room at the Grand Floridian Resort to bang out a few spreadsheets (or something like that).

    The siblings edited it all into a brilliant, horror movie–inspired supercut:

    Video draws a huge response

    Even though they have well over a million followers on social media, The Mouselets could never have predicted how popular the video of their dad would become. To date, it’s received nearly five million views on TikTok and Instagram.

    Overwhelmingly, people are showing respect for their dad’s hustle:

    “Someone’s gotta pay for y’all’s vacation”

    “Taking the call is what pays for those trips.”

    “Disney doesn’t pay for its self”

    “I respect this man. The family appreciates his hard work.”

    In another post, The Mouselets clarified that they were the ones who arranged and paid for the trip, not their dad. Still, the video serves as a bittersweet reminder of what it must have taken to bring three kids to Disney World and instill in them a lifelong love—one that would later inspire them to start a business like The Mouselets.

    Put another way, their dad knew he had work to do but simply couldn’t pass up the chance to spend time with his kids. So, like many parents, he decided to “do it all.”

    “Work-life balance” and vacation, or time off, have become messy concepts

    Gen Zers are pushing back hard against hustle culture, but a lot of modern companies still expect employees to go the extra mile, work well beyond 40 hours per week, and stay digitally connected even during personal and vacation time.

    There’s something sad about watching Papa Mouselet miss out on what should be quality time, but apparently he’s not the only one. Commenters chimed in with their own “life goes on, even at Disney” moments:

    “me taking my college exam while in line for guardians”

    “i was in a meeting on the skyliner”

    “I have a park photo from the ride of my husband taking a work call on Haunted Mansion. Dad had to pay for the next Disney trip somehow”

    “Have done a full on Zoom on people mover”

    “I had a job interview on the dumbo flying elephants”

    “He’s not [alone], my husband does this too”

    Disney magic is powerful stuff, but it doesn’t come out of nowhere. The hard work and planning it takes often go unseen and unnoticed. Other times, unfortunately, the work refuses to wait until you get home. But that doesn’t mean you can’t still have a great trip.

    It all worked out for the whole family

    As for Mr. Mouselet, viewers were relieved to know he did, in fact, have a wonderful vacation—once he’d handled his business, that is.

    And not only that, but their dad now has a legion of fans who admire his work ethic and devotion to his family. Not a bad vacation, all in all.

  • Strangers answer a mysterious red telephone on a bridge
    A beautiful art project has strangers answering an old-fashioned telephone and saying whatever’s on their minds.Photo credit: aview.fromabridge/Instagram
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    Strangers answer a mysterious red telephone on a bridge

    “The action of holding the phone to your ear is powerful.”

    Viral “street interviews” are a relatively new form of content. They’ve popped up in the last couple of years and often involve random social media creators sticking a microphone in someone’s face on the street and asking personal, funny, or sometimes invasive questions about sex, relationships, and money.

    In many big cities, these interviewers are everywhere. Though the clips are sometimes entertaining, many have pointed out problems with the format. Namely, that (often drunk) people can go viral for embarrassing moments and wind up humiliated on an international stage. Or famous. Either way, there’s little recourse for regretful participants, and even less substance in the interviews.

    Artist Joe Bloom wanted to reimagine the street interview

    “Interviewing strangers is such a beautiful art form but it’s been made so tacky,” Bloom told The Guardian in 2024. “You get some knobhead on the street running up to someone with a microphone asking them about their trauma. It feels awful. The AI-generated subtitles don’t even match up. It’s contrived and rushed. They just don’t care.”

    He came up with what he thought was a better idea. Inspired by the early optimism of Internet projects like “Humans of New York,” he wanted to find a way to share people’s real stories, not just farm viral clips about embarrassing topics.

    Immediately, he harkened back to his nostalgia for the telephone. No, not the iPhone, not texting, but the classic landline handset.

    “You see it in movies: it’s always this nostalgic and almost glamorous thing, holding a phone up to your ear and talking into this object,” he said.

    telephone, analogue, phone, call
    There’s just something about an old-fashioned telephone. Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons

    “A View from a Bridge” project is born

    The project, called “A View from a Bridge,” launched in 2023 and saw Bloom place old-fashioned handset telephones on random bridges in London. When strangers would pass by and if they picked up, he’d be on the other end ready to chat.

    What he found was that, surprisingly, people were willing to talk. Not just that, but they were more than willing to bare their souls.

    There was the kid who had deep thoughts about the body after learning he was more than just a skeleton with a heart inside.

    “What’s the point in not knowing who are you?” the wise boy said of his mission to devour all the books he could about anatomy.

    @aviewfromabridge

    Leon’s View From A Bridge Filmed, interviewed + edited by @Joe Bloom Production assistant’s @Hossam Fazulla @Counterpoints🧡 Original music @lolly2popp . #reading #london #humanbody #humans #aviewfromabridge #facts #windy #kite

    ♬ original sound – A View From A Bridge

    Another young man opened up about all the time he spent chatting and connecting with people all over the world during COVID via virtual reality chat:

    “A lot of people tend to think that history as it was has ended. … Things can never be how they once were. I don’t think things have changed that much in terms of people wanting each other and needing each other.”

    @aviewfromabridge

    “I don’t think things have changed much, in terms of people wanting each other and needing each other” – Cameron’s View From A Bridge @Cameron Winter . Filmed, interviewed + edited @Joe Bloom Original music @Ross Woodhead #geese #vr #virtualreality #Love #connection

    ♬ original sound – A View From A Bridge

    The power of the format

    Bloom’s project brings down people’s guard in a natural, organic way. As the interviewer, he stands far away. Typically, the subject can’t even see him at all. It gives the subject a sense of safety in the anonymity and lack of face-to-face eye contact.

    And then there’s the phone itself.

    “It creates an openness for the person being interviewed,” Bloom said of the format. “The action of holding the phone to your ear is powerful. It’s quite a calming thing.”

    Who doesn’t remember long nights spent talking on the phone as a teenager, pouring out your deepest fears and dreams to friends and crushes? Research has found that in intimate, trusting relationships, we prefer to open up face to face. However, with people we don’t yet trust or are just getting to know, we’re often more forthcoming online or over the phone.

    Bloom uses this phenomenon to get stranger interviewees to open up in ways the “street interview” creators could never dream of.

    And the results are far more powerful and human. In each story, thousands of viewers see themselves and find ways to connect with the subjects—with their fears, pain, or even just funny observations. The videos are ultimately helping millions of people feel less alone.

    That’s exactly the kind of optimism and connection Bloom was going for, and it’s something sorely lacking in most corners of the Internet.

  • The surprisingly genius design of common zippers and why so many have ‘YKK’ on the pull tab
    Zipper design is genuinely genius.Photo credit: Canva

    Between clothing, outerwear, handbags, and cushion covers, most of us have no shortage of zippers in our households. They’re so ubiquitous that we probably don’t give them much thought (until one of them stops working properly, of course).

    But zippers are surprisingly fascinating, from their storied history to their truly genius design. Veritasium created a video explaining how zippers work, how they were invented, and why so many have the letters “YKK” on them, which you can watch here:

    Host Gregor Čavlović starts us off with a remarkable fact: “We’ve made more zippers than there are stars in the Milky Way.” Wow. But how did we get here?

    It all began with a not-so-great inventor who knew how to sell an idea

    In the late 1800s, American engineer Whitcomb Judson decided that fastening buttons and hooks one by one was entirely too tedious. He came up with a zipper-like device for shoes that would automatically connect hook-and-eye fasteners. He received a patent, but the device didn’t work very well. Still, he didn’t let that minor detail deter him.

    “In 1893 at the Chicago World’s Fair, he presented this fastening device as the next big thing, claiming that in no time at all, this would replace buttons and laces,” says Čavlović. “And not just on shoes, but on all sorts of garments. A few wealthy investors actually believed it. So with their backing, the Universal Fastener Company was born.”

    Whitcomb Judson and his patent for his clasp locker device that came before the modern zipper
    Whitcomb Judson’s clasp locker device was a precursor to the modern zipper. Photo credit: Images in the public domain

    But it would take another decade for a usable zipper-like product to come from Judson’s company. They had made an automatic fastener for women’s skirts, but even that was a bust. The device jammed constantly and couldn’t be washed with the garment, meaning it had to be removed before each wash and sewn back in afterward. The company struggled to retain customers and fell into debt.

    How a manager’s “gorgeous” daughter played a major role in the invention of the modern zipper

    In 1906, 25-year-old Swedish engineer Gideon Sundback joined Judson’s floundering company. Sundback may or may not have had a particular affinity for fasteners, but he did have an affinity for Elvira, the “absolutely drop-dead gorgeous” daughter of one of the company’s managers.

    Sundback took the job to get closer to Elvira, and it worked. They fell in love and married, and in the meantime, Sundback made minor improvements to Judson’s fastener design. Tragically, Elvira fell ill and died soon after giving birth to their daughter. Sundback was devastated.

    To deal with his grief, he threw himself into his work. He eventually tossed Judson’s fastener idea completely and came up with a “separable fastener” design of his own. Patented in 1914, Sundback’s design is nearly identical to zippers today.

    Gideon Sundback and his patent for his zipper design
    Gideon Sundback and his zipper patent. Photo credit: Images in the public domain

    How a zipper (aka “the hookless hooker”) actually works

    Sundback’s design was fairly simple, but ingenious—so ingenious, in fact, that manufacturing capabilities at the time were no match for it. He also had to design the machinery to produce the zipper.

    (You really have to watch the video to see how the machine was designed and how a zipper works. The folks at Veritasium even created a large-scale model to make the mechanism easier to see.)

    Finally, the Universal Fastener Company had created a commercially viable product. They initially called it a “hookless hooker,” which, thankfully, lasted only a blip. They ultimately went with a less eyebrow-raising name: the “hookless fastener.”

    The word “zipper” actually came from B.F. Goodrich Company (yes, the tire company), after it used the fastener in rubber boots it manufactured. It called them Zipper boots, after the “zip” sound they made when used. The boots were a hit, and the name stuck—eventually becoming the common term for the hookless fastener.

    What’s the deal with “YKK” being on so many zipper pulls?

    If you check the zippers in your home, there’s a good chance you’ll find the letters “YKK” on many of the pull tabs. Why?

    YKK stands for Yoshida Kōgyō Kabushikikaisha, the Japanese company that manufactures more zippers than any other in the world—close to 10 billion each year. YKK is the undisputed G.O.A.T. of zippers.

    That story began in 1933 with Tadao Yoshida, a salesman in Japan whose company had gone under. He found a pile of unsold zippers among the company’s leftover inventory, bought them, and started his own zipper business.

    His goal was to make zippers that never failed. That foresight into how frustrating an unreliable zipper is for a consumer proved invaluable. After some setbacks that could have ended his business ambitions, Yoshida became the leading manufacturer of zippers in the world. And he kept on honing the quality and efficiency of the manufacturing process, eventually bringing every part of the process in-house.

    Red sweater with a YKK zipper closeup
    YKK zippers are seen all over the world. Photo credit: Cornischong/Wikimedia Commons

    Yoshida had created a zipper juggernaut. Today, YKK makes over 7,000 types of zippers and dominates the global zipper market. It also operates under an endearing philosophy referred to as “The Cycle of Goodness,” which basically boils down to: “No one prospers without rendering benefit to others.”

    Who knew the basic zipper had such a fascinating history?

    You can follow Veritasium on YouTube for more fascinating insights into innovation and ideas.

  • Guy shares the simple setting change to get studio-level sound quality on Spotify
    A man listening to music on headphones.Photo credit: Canva

    Ever since digital music entered the picture, it’s just sort of been a given that we’ve traded quality for quantity. Nothing might sound as crisp as a record, but hey, we now have bajillions of songs at our fingertips. ‘Tis the price of modern convenience. 

    But for those who do want to enhance their listening experience, content creator Mike Sheffer (@mike.sheffer) can help. He claims Spotify users can make a simple setting tweak that’s apparently like switching from “240p” to “4K,” only for sound. 

    So, what is the secret to this magical sound setting? Lossless audio.

    Streaming services automatically compress files to make them take up less storage space and play more reliably. However, with lossless audio, all the original data is preserved, offering something much more faithful to a studio recording. While other apps have offered a lossless audio option, it’s a relatively new feature that Spotify rolled out in September 2025.

    @mike.sheffer

    How to fix your life in under 60 seconds #spotify #audioquality

    ♬ original sound – Mike Sheffer

    “It’s a night-and-day difference,” says Sheffer. “Drums will sound better, singers will sound better, you’ll hear background stuff, you’ll hear little ear candy that maybe you weren’t picking up on before. The instruments are always going to be better. No downside.”

    He even added that this shift can be heard whether you’re listening via headphones, speakers, or car audio systems.

    Enabling lossless audio on Spotify

    As Sheffer explains, after going to the home screen and tapping on the circle with your picture on it, you’ll click on “Settings and Privacy.”

    Next, tap “Media Quality,” and choose lossless audio for Wi-Fi, cellular, or downloads. 

    One caveat: Spotify warns that higher-quality audio files are larger and may require stronger connections or compatible devices.

    music, hack, tech
    A band recording in a studio. Photo credit: Canva

    In addition to lossless audio, Sheffer suggested incorporating other settings like “gapless playback,” which removes pauses between songs, as well as turning off “volume normalization,” which adjusts volume levels across tracks and can compromise sound quality. Both can be found in the “Settings” section. 

    Of course, even small upgrades like this come with a familiar tradeoff. As mentioned, higher-quality audio uses more data, demands stronger connections, and may not be noticeable to every listener, especially in everyday environments. For some, the convenience of seamless streaming will always outweigh the pursuit of perfect sound.

    spotify, music, streaming
    A laptop showing sheet music with headphones attached. Photo credit: Canva

    As streaming services have expanded—whether for music, movies, or television—we’ve gained unprecedented access to vast libraries of content, often at the expense of the meticulous quality that once defined physical formats. The result has been an ongoing push and pull between having more and having better. While convenience still reigns, it is nice that options like lossless audio are increasingly available for those who want to fine-tune their experience. 

  • Self-made millionaire read 997 personal finance books. Here are the 5 he says actually changed his life.
    A man reading a book and the cover of "The 48 Laws of Power" by Robert Greene.Photo credit: Canva

    Mark Tilbury left school at sixteen with no qualifications and a bunch of haters telling him he wouldn’t amount to much.

    He didn’t listen to them. Instead, he did something quite remarkable: he read. And read. And read. Nearly a thousand books on personal finance, investing, mindset, and business strategy—not because it was easy, but because he believed that if he could just understand how money and success really worked, he could build a different kind of life.

    Guess what? He was right. Today, Tilbury celebrates life as a self-made millionaire with multiple businesses and a social media following of millions who tune in for exactly that kind of hard-won wisdom.

    He’s also dropping nuggets of wisdom on his channels, particularly about those books: out of 997 that he read, only five truly moved the needle for him.

    Who is Mark Tilbury, exactly?

    Tilbury had a different upbringing than many of today’s millionaires—not a rich kid with trust funds and endless connections. He started from scratch with humble beginnings. What he lacked in monetary assets, he made up for in curiosity, grit, and an almost obsessive belief that knowledge is the great equalizer.

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    Mark credits his knowledge and wisdom for his success. Photo credit: Canva

    That’s what makes his reading list so compelling. These aren’t recommendations from someone who got lucky or was born into the right family with the right name. They’re the books that genuinely shaped how he thinks: about people, power, money, and himself.

    The 5 books that changed everything

    1. Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert B. Cialdini

    Here’s a slightly uncomfortable truth: every financial interaction you’ve ever had—every negotiation, every sale, every ask for a raise—is also a persuasive event, whether you knew it or not.

    Robert Cialdini spent years undercover on sales floors, in fundraising groups, and in advertising agencies to discover why people say “yes.” He identified seven universal psychological principles that quietly influence most decisions, including:

    • Reciprocity (we feel a strong urge to return favors)
    • Scarcity (we desire what we might lose)
    • Social proof (we follow others when we’re unsure)

    What does this book have to do with wealth? Two aspects to consider: First, understanding these triggers makes you a dramatically better negotiator and communicator. That’s key in the world of personal finance. Second, when you’re able to recognize these tactics in the wild, you won’t be the one who gets played. Knowing the psychology of persuasion is both an offensive and defensive playbook for the financial world.

    2. The 48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene

    Robert Greene spent years studying three thousand years of history—from Niccolò Machiavelli to P. T. Barnum—to map out how power actually operates in human systems. Not how we wish it did, but how it does. Some of his laws are blunt (“Never outshine the master”). Some feel counterintuitive. All are grounded in real historical examples of people who won, and those who lost, based on whether they understood the dynamics at play.

    For anyone building wealth in the real world, the book’s core gift is this: look around and finally recognize the game that’s always been playing out around you. Once you see it, you can play it—or at least stop being blindsided by it.

    3. Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order by Ray Dalio

    Ray Dalio built the world’s largest hedge fund by doing something most investors never do: he studied history instead of chasing trends.

    His detailed insights in this book reveal that events shocking to most investors—such as market crashes, currency devaluations, and geopolitical upheavals—are not surprises, but patterns. The same cycles that brought down the Dutch and British empires are still active today. Recognizing these patterns doesn’t lead to pessimism; it equips you to be prepared.

    For Tilbury and millions of readers, the key lesson is a radically different way to protect wealth: diversify not only among stocks and bonds, but also across asset classes, currencies, and regions. History favors those who see the bigger picture.

    4. Psycho-Cybernetics by Maxwell Maltz

    Maxwell Maltz was a plastic surgeon who noticed something troubling: many of his patients remained stuck and unhappy even after successful procedures. Their faces had changed, but their self-image hadn’t. That observation launched one of the most important books ever written about the relationship between the mind and success.

    Maltz’s central idea is that your self-image functions like a thermostat: it sets the ceiling on your performance, your income, and your ambition. The “Success Mechanism” in your brain is always working—the question is, what target have you programmed it to hit? Through visualization, mental rehearsal, and the deliberate reprogramming of that inner narrative, you can raise the ceiling on your abilities.

    Thirty million copies later, his core message still lands: the biggest limits on your wealth aren’t external—they’re the stories you carry about what you deserve.

    5. Zero to One: Notes on Startups, or How to Build the Future by Peter Thiel

    Peter Thiel co-founded PayPal, made the first outside investment in Facebook, and has supported some of the most influential companies of the last twenty years. So, when he writes about how wealth is really built on a large scale, it’s worth paying attention.

    His central argument is deceptively simple: real wealth comes from creating something truly new—”going from zero to one”—rather than copying what already works. And the counterintuitive kicker? Competition is actually the enemy of wealth. “All happy companies are different,” he writes. “Each one earns a monopoly by solving a unique problem.” The businesses that generate lasting fortunes aren’t the ones that compete best; they’re the ones that make competition irrelevant.

    For anyone building a business or identifying investments, this reframe alone is worth the price of the hardback.

    The bigger picture

    The striking thing about Tilbury’s reading list? These books have a lot in common: none of them is actually about money in the traditional sense. There are no budgeting tips or compound interest charts. Instead, they’re about something deeper: how the world actually works—how people are persuaded, how power moves, how history cycles, how minds are wired, and how genuine value gets created.

    Tilbury’s thesis, after 997 books, seems to be this: financial success is less a matter of hard skills and more a matter of understanding. Understand people, and you can influence them. Understand power, and you can navigate it. Understand history, and you can anticipate it. Understand your own mind, and you can finally get out of your own way. Understand innovation, and you can build something that lasts.

    That’s the real reading list. And lucky for you, it’s only five books long.

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