Advertisement

SpaceLife Origin, a start-up, wants you to imagine having a baby in space. Wow. According to this piece in The Atlantic on Wednesday, SpaceLife Origin is looking to make this “dream” a “reality” by trying to send a pregnant woman to space in a capsule to deliver her child and then bring her back.

Advertisement

A Long Day’s Journey Into Night, an art house film by Chinese director Bi Gan that includes a “single-take, hour-long dream sequence” broke records with its improbable $38 million Chinese box office debut, beating out Venom, according to Variety. How did Gan achieve this feat? By marketing the movie as a fun romance.

Advertisement

The first indication that I was in the presence of no mere doctor, but something more akin to a rock star, were the T-shirts. Seven of them hung on the wall behind the reception desk, just like they would in the lobby of a concert venue behind the merch table. They were emblazoned with a variety of slogans: “I’VE GOT

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

MTV’s award-winning documentary series True Life premiered nearly 21 years ago—it’s hard to fathom a world in which formative episodes like 2002's “I’m Getting Plastic Surgery” and 2011's “I Have A Hot Mom” do not exist—and to celebrate, the TV network is revamping the show. True Life becomes True Life/Now tonight,

Advertisement

Advertisement