Find all news, analysis, and special reports dedicated to the theme culture.
How a Grammy-winning sonic empire was built in the rugged isolation of Western Australia, and why Kevin Parker's 2026 homecoming tour is a cultural earthquake.
Cancel your dinner reservations. At 7:00 PM AEDT, the servers in Sydney are going to smoke. Here’s the real story behind the Benedict hype and why this 'Part 2' strategy is Netflix's most calculated gamble yet.
He insulted a director, got snubbed by SNL, and trending for all the wrong reasons. Why are we still obsessed with the man who refuses to follow the redemption script?
You’ve seen the poster. The one with the dancer doing a gravity-defying split in a pastel explosion. It’s on your train carriage, your mailbox, and probably your eyelids when you sleep. But behind the saturation bombing lies a reality that few punters expect when they fork out $200 for a ticket.
Forget the awards for a second. The real legend of Martin Short isn't on the screen—it's in the green room, the after-party, and the terrifyingly precise chaos he unleashes when the red light turns on. Here is why Hollywood's favorite dinner guest is having the last laugh.
It's 2026, and the hottest game in town isn't running on the Switch 2. It's a pixelated GBA classic trading for $150 on eBay. Here’s why Pokémon FireRed became the unexpected bedrock of modern gaming.
When Danika Mason walked down a Las Vegas aisle on live TV, it wasn't just a stunt—it was a collision of personal trauma and broadcast entertainment that rewrote the rules of engagement.
It’s 9:58 AM on a Tuesday. You have three screens open, a lukewarm coffee, and a heart rate that rivals a cardio session. No, you aren’t day-trading crypto. You are thirty-something, and you are fighting for the right to scream 'So Yesterday' in a stadium.
He isn't just the consigliere or the colonel who loves napalm. At 94, Robert Duvall remains the master of the 'invisible art', proving that in a world of screaming stars, the quiet ones echo the longest.
Emerald Fennell's new adaptation starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi has the internet divided. But beyond the controversies, why does Emily Brontë's 1847 nightmare of a novel still hold us in a chokehold? Spoiler: it’s not the romance.
We laughed at the 'Crying Dawson' meme for a decade. Today, the internet isn't laughing. As news breaks of the actor's passing at 48, we look at how a 90s icon turned his final battle into a masterclass on vulnerability.
While the world is still recovering from that Super Bowl halftime show, the real story isn't the choreography—it's how a kid from Vega Baja forced the entire music industry to speak his language. I was backstage, and the vibe wasn't just celebration; it was a hostile takeover.
We were promised a utopia of on-demand freedom. Instead, we got choice paralysis and a nightly battle with three different remote controls. Is the humble schedule really dead, or is it the only thing that can save us?
It was meant to be a lockdown fling, a distraction from the chaos. Five years later, the five-letter grid is the only thing stabilizing our morning coffee. Here’s why the obsession outlived the sourdough starters.
Seventeen years on, and the green-tinted ruins of D.C. still hit harder than a Super Mutant Behemoth. Why does stepping out of Vault 101 feel more 'next-gen' than a galaxy of procedural planets? Let's crack open a Nuka-Cola and find out.
Forget Moira Rose’s wig collection. The real story isn't about comedy anymore—it’s about how a 70-year-old Canadian legend just walked onto HBO's grimmest set and schooled everyone.
Everyone is crying to Shane Boose’s melodies, but in the VIP lounges of LA, the tears are from laughter. Here’s the unvarnished truth about the music industry’s most efficient algorithm hack.
It was supposed to be a victory lap for Damon and Affleck. But the search term 'The Rip Cast' has accidentally reignited a forgotten war between Hollywood's biggest rancher and his star cowboy. Here is what the algorithms are hiding.
It costs less than a latte, smells faintly of sawdust (if you’re lucky), and has somehow dethroned Supreme on the streets of Fitzroy. Here is the true story of the Bunnings cap phenomenon.
It was meant to be a celebration of the Wasteland. Instead, the Magic: The Gathering Fallout drop turned into a digital battle royale where the only winners were scalper bots and eBay flippers. Is this the new normal for collectors?