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Media & Entertainment

Before algorithms curated attention, newspapers and books quietly connected strangers

There is something irresistibly human about a person lost in a printed book or newspaper. Long before scrolling and swiping took over our lives, print created conversations, curiosity, romance, and memory. In an age of streaming, social media, and endless notifications, perhaps the humble printed page still offers something the digital world cannot replicate: attention, intimacy, and trust.

The $100 Popcorn: Why the Family Movie Night Is Becoming a Luxury Gala

Remember when a movie night was the “cheap” plan? Between $50 tickets and gold-plated nachos, going to the cinema now costs more than a small Caribbean cruise. Here’s why the average moviegoer is feeling the squeeze.

Star Trek vs Battlestar Galactica: Why I’m Rooting for BSG

While Star Trek imagined a polished future where humanity thrives, Battlestar Galactica throws us into chaos where survival is never guaranteed. This is a personal take on why one feels inspiring—and the other feels real.

Hollywood Isn’t Ending — It’s Drifting Away

Hollywood isn’t collapsing in flames—it’s quietly dissolving. As streaming giants, global production hubs, and AI reshape the economics of entertainment, Los Angeles is losing its grip on an industry it once defined. What replaces it may be more efficient—but also less human.