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New Poster for Christopher Nolan's 'Interstellar' Released

May 6, 2014 3:43 PM EDT A new poster teasing Christopher Nolan’s highly anticipated Insterstellar was released Tuesday. Although plot details are still sparse, the poster does reveal a tagline: “Mankind was born on earth. It was never meant to die here.” The film — the director’s first film since The Dark Knight Rises — is set to premiere Nov. 7. It boasts an all-star cast, including Matthew McConaughey, Jessica Chastain, Anne Hathaway, Michael Caine, John Lithgow and Casey Affleck, to name but a few.

Olivia Rodrigo and the Impossible Pressure to Stay a Prodigy

I avoided most of the critical coverage leading up to the September release of Olivia Rodrigo’s sophomore album Guts, in part because I found it preemptively exhausting. I could already predict the shape of the discourse. Would she live up to expectations? Was “Driver’s License” a singular, unrepeatable moment of viral success? Would anything come close to the hilarious and addictively singable “Good 4 U?” When would her affect of exaggerated teenage angst get tiresome?

P-Square release two new singles 'Jaiye (Ihe Geme) and 'Find Somebody'

Song Title: Jaiye (Ihe Geme), Find Somebody Genre: Afro-fusion, Afropop Date of Release: July 22, 2022 ADVERTISEMENT Producer: UNKNOWN Length: (Jaiye (Ihe Geme) 3 minutes 33 seconds, (Find Somebody) 3 minutes 27 seconds Features: NONE ADVERTISEMENT Label: Square Root Entertainment / MAD Solutions Details/Takeaway: Afrobeats legends has made a powerful comeback with two sizzling singles that rolls back the years.

Patrick Mahomes and Jalen Hurts Make Super Bowl History

When Doug Williams—the first Black quarterback to win a Super Bowl—saw the Kansas City Chiefs win the AFC Championship game two weeks ago, he grew emotional. “Tears didn’t come down my eyes,” Williams tells TIME. “But they were in my eyes.” Williams, who led Washington to a 42-10 Super Bowl victory over Denver in 1988, knew that for the first time in NFL history, two Black quarterbacks would be starting in the title game.

People Are Less Stressed Now Than They Were Before the Pandemic

How are we feeling? As a world, that is. The global polling organization Gallup Inc. has been asking that question for the past 18 years with its Global Emotions poll—and this year, the answer is a little less bleak than you might think. Gallup researchers surveyed more than 146,000 people aged 15 years or older in 142 countries about their positive and negative experiences over the previous 24 hours. They then gave each country four scores on a scale of zero to 100: two scores for how present or lacking their positive experiences were, and two more corresponding to the prevalence of their negative experiences.