Thirty-four states accused the concert giant of suffocating competition and driving up ticket prices. The company denies being anything but big. By Ben Sisario “Robbing them blind.” “Velvet hammer.” ...
Shrishty is a decade-old journalist covering a variety of beats between politics to pop culture, but movies are her first love, which led her to study Film and TV Development at UCLAx. She lives and ...
One Nation’s unprecedented surge in the polls raises important questions about whether a party built on grievance can present coherent policies to voters. While a Pauline Hanson-led federal government ...
Two new – otherworldly – government-operated website domains created this week have caused a stir. Alien.gov and Aliens.gov were both registered by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency ...
AHS is often caused by brain injury or neurodegenerative illnesses, but there is not enough research to determine any consistent cause or why it occurs. “Alien hand is little investigated because it ...
The first real look at Exodus gameplay is here, and it's giving Mass Effect. It's giving so much Mass Effect. Exodus is set 40,000 years in the future, where humans have escaped a dying Earth and ...
OLYMPIA, Wash. — State and local offices across Washington are being directed to remove the word “alien” from state statutes and replace it with “noncitizen” under a new law aimed at modernizing legal ...
Live Nation ticketing employees called its customers "so stupid" and discussed "robbing them blind" on parking in internal messages, according to newly released court filings. The Slack message ...
The Live Nation antitrust case will continue with a consortium of states taking over the trial after the federal government settled with the live-entertainment giant earlier this week. The trial will ...
Incendiary internal messages in which a Live Nation employee mocks customers as “so stupid” and says the company is “robbing them blind, baby” have been made public as over two dozen states weigh ...
Solar winds and coronal mass ejections may scatter narrow signals, making them harder for Earth-based telescopes to detect. The SETI Institute uses radio telescopes to search for signs of intelligent ...