On the other hand, the pressure to keep up with what we see online has become a morbid cycle which is destroying lives one click at a time. In particular, men and women have found themselves battling identity issues due to the unrealistic beauty standards set by what they see on social media. ADVERTISEMENT
Many have developed serious mental heath issues, identity issues and even body dysmorphia trying to emulate the beauty standards that are simply unattainable.
The catch came late in a blowout game in which the Steelers already had a huge lead, 26-0. Quarterback TJ Yates lobbed a pass towards the corner of the end zone where Hopkins tipped the ball with one hand, caught the ball with his other hand, and then somehow got both feet inbounds despite landing on and tumbling over the defender before landing out of bounds. NBC's Mike Tirico called it "
Matt Smith, known for playing Doctor Who in the eponymous BBC series and the Duke of Edinburgh in Netflix’s “The Crown” is returning to London’s West End.
Smith will headline an adaptation of Henrik Ibsen‘s 1882 play “An Enemy of the People” at London’s Duke of York’s Theatre. In “An Enemy of the People,” when Dr. Stockmann makes an unbelievable discovery about the healing waters in his local baths, he holds the future of the town in his hands, but those with everything to lose refuse to accept his word.
August 23, 2018 12:41 PM EDT
It may be time to start prepping your résumé for the job of a lifetime: professional vacationer. A hotel and resort company in Mexico is soliciting applications for what it’s calling the “World’s Best Job,” and it’s not hard to see why they’ve chosen that superlative. The lucky job winner will act as an “ambassador” across five resort hotel brands in cities like Puerto Vallarta, Acapulco and Los Cabos — which means “getting pampered” and creating “engaging content” out of the experiences, from breakfast in bed to spa days and nightclub evenings to explorations of local historic sites.
July 18, 2014 3:12 PM EDT
Scientists may have found a way to answer a question so many people have when they’re dating: “Where is this going?” All you have to do, according to researchers at the University of Chicago, is watch a potential partner’s eyes.
A new study found that eye movements could reveal whether a person was in lust or in love. Their results, collected from male and female students at the University of Geneva, showed that participants fixated more on the face when they perceived an image to evoke romantic love but that their gaze shifted to the rest of the body when an image seemed indicative of sexual desire.