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The Lighter Side

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2026 Sees the Most Right Whale Calves Born in One Season Since 2009
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2026 Sees the Most Right Whale Calves Born in One Season Since 2009

This year’s calving season along the southeast coastline of America has documented the most North Atlantic right whale calves since 2009. Additionally, trends in calf births seem to indicate a normalization of breeding and birthing among the animals that could accelerate population recovery. GNN has lately devoted many column inches to the North Atlantic right […] The post 2026 Sees the Most Right Whale Calves Born in One Season Since 2009 appeared first on Good News Network.

How PFAS regulation cut toxic chemical levels in Canadian wildlife
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How PFAS regulation cut toxic chemical levels in Canadian wildlife

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Levels of some of the most toxic PFAS compounds have fallen sharply in Canadian seabird eggs, and the reason isn’t complicated. Regulation worked. A peer-reviewed study tracked PFAS concentrations in the eggs of northern gannets on Bonaventure Island, in the St. Lawrence Seaway basin, over 55 years. PFOS, one of the most common and toxic PFAS compounds, peaked at 100 parts per billion in the eggs, then dropped to 26 parts per billion by 2024, a 74 percent decline. PFHxS, another toxic compound, fell from 0.69 to 0.19 parts per billion, a 72 percent reduction. “We see this incredible rise to a peak where concentrations seem to be higher than toxicological threshold for those birds, then it really decreases in a nice way,” says Raphael Lavoie, a co-author and ecotoxicologist with Environment and Climate Change Canada. “The regulations are having a good effect.” What drove the decline The timeline matches the regulatory record. Under pressure from governments, chemical giant 3M, one of the largest PFAS producers, began moving away from PFOS in the early 2000s. By 2015, major manufacturers agreed with the US Environmental Protection Agency to phase out both PFOS and PFOA. The United Nations targeted PFOS separately, and it was listed under the 2009 Stockholm Convention, which requires member countries to restrict its production and use. Militaries and other heavy users of firefighting foam switched to PFAS-free products or stopped using the chemicals in training, removing a major source of runoff into waterways. The gannets were especially exposed. The St. Lawrence Seaway collects runoff from manufacturing centers across the Great Lakes region, and by the late 1990s, PFAS had built up in the birds’ eggs at concentrations that posed genuine ecotoxicological risk. The caveats PFOA is down about 40 percent overall but has edged back up in recent years, a reminder that progress isn’t linear. The larger concern: when regulations squeezed the most problematic PFAS, chemical makers shifted to a newer generation of smaller compounds. These carry their own risks but are harder to detect in wildlife because they don’t accumulate in tissue the same way. Their levels have likely increased, and the study found early evidence of the shift. PFOS also doesn’t go away. It stays in the environment and in animals’ bodies for decades, meaning contamination continues well after production stops. The study’s authors say this “emphasizes the importance of maintaining scientific and regulatory vigilance.” Read: don’t stop watching. Why the gannet data matters PFAS are a class of at least 16,000 chemicals used to resist water, stains, and heat. They don’t break down naturally, which is where the “forever chemicals” label comes from, and they’re linked to cancer, thyroid disease, kidney problems, and immune disruption. The 55-year gannet record is unusual: it captures the full arc, from the pre-regulatory buildup through the peak and back down. The 74 percent drop in PFOS didn’t happen on its own. It followed bans, phase-outs, international agreements, and purchasing decisions by militaries. The question now is whether governments will do the same with the compounds that replaced PFOS, before those accumulation curves get 55 years to tell their own story. Source study: Journal of Applied Toxicology— Half a century of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances in northern gannet eggs: impact of regulations     Did this solution stand out? Share it with a friend or support our mission by becoming an Emissary.The post How PFAS regulation cut toxic chemical levels in Canadian wildlife first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

Why immersive reading is taking over BookTok in 2026
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Why immersive reading is taking over BookTok in 2026

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Something happens when you follow a physical book with its audiobook running in your ears at the same time. The distractions fall away, and you’re inside the story. The technique has a name now: immersive reading. TikTok’s own data shows it spread fast in early 2026, with searches rising nearly 10 times between January and May compared to the four months before, and up 13 times year over year. It’s also, for the record, not new. It’s arguably as old as storytelling. The oral tradition, remembered When Briggitte Suastegui, 29, set out to read The Iliad ahead of Christopher Nolan’s upcoming film adaptation of The Odyssey, a friend made a point she hadn’t considered: epic poems weren’t originally read. They were performed, memorized, passed from person to person by voice. So she tried reading the text while listening to the audiobook at the same time. “And that got me through the book,” she said. “I was super engrossed in it.” Carol Feldman came at it from a different angle. A retired nurse in Durham, North Carolina, she found the approach while looking for a way to read faster. Audiobooks alone didn’t work for her. “Just listening to an audiobook, I can’t concentrate,” said Feldman, who is 80. “My mind just goes a million different ways and I totally lose track of the story. Reading the words themselves as the book is being read to me allows me to focus on the story.” Why it works for distracted readers What both describe is an attention lock of sorts. When eyes and ears are on the same text, there’s no gap for your phone or your mental to-do list to slip into. “I did find that I was definitely zoned in more for longer periods of time,” Suastegui said. “Because I couldn’t really use my phone for anything else, I couldn’t really stop.” Educators have used this strategy for years, particularly with students who have dyslexia or ADHD, where audio-plus-text tends to improve both engagement and comprehension. BookTok has landed in similar territory on its own, with readers swapping recommendations for titles that work especially well this way. Andy Weir’s Project Hail Mary and Stephen King’s It come up often. The comparison most people reach for: watching a film with subtitles. Two inputs doing the same job at once. A note of caution from cognitive science Maryanne Wolf, a cognitive neuroscientist at UCLA who directs the Center for Dyslexia, Diverse Learners and Social Justice, isn’t entirely on board. She draws a distinction between immersive reading and what she calls deep reading, the kind that builds critical thinking, empathy, and the ability to sit with difficulty. Her argument is that the friction of reading, the slight effort of parsing words on a page, is part of what develops those capacities. Audio, even alongside print, may take some of that friction away. “When I look at audio, whether it’s audio with or without print mediums, the reality is that the print reading medium in and of itself gives more time, more attention to the development and maintenance of these deep reading processes,” she said. That said, Wolf isn’t telling anyone to put their headphones away. With leisure reading declining, she’d rather people read any way they can. “With a decline of reading for leisure, for heaven’s sake, do whatever we can to get our young and old to say ‘this is a return to this experience of being immersed in other worlds with other people,’” she said. There’s something almost funny about it: the fix for not being able to focus on a book in 2026 turns out to be the same way people experienced stories before books existed.     Did this solution stand out? Share it with a friend or support our mission by becoming an Emissary.The post Why immersive reading is taking over BookTok in 2026 first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

21-year-old audience member steps up and joins ‘La La Land’ orchestra concert after pianist falls ill mid-show
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21-year-old audience member steps up and joins ‘La La Land’ orchestra concert after pianist falls ill mid-show

It’s the stuff of dreams… and maybe for others, nightmares. You sit in a crowded theater audience. Suddenly, a voice asks for a volunteer over the microphone to step onstage and replace their ailing keyboardist. After all, the show must go on. Does this make you break out into a cold sweat? Or would you be brave enough to play your heart out? For 21-year-old student and musician Sterling Nasa, that daydream fantasy became a reality during a live concert performance in Sydney, Australia. Everything was going great during the first half of a La La Land in Concert presentation at ICC’s Darling Harbour theatre. Twenty-five hundred movie and music fans were gathered to watch the film on screen as a live orchestra played the score underneath. At intermission is when things got out of sync. The keyboardist suddenly fell ill and could not continue with the performance. A panic broke out backstage as musicians frantically messaged nearby friends and colleagues, looking for anyone with the required advanced skills who could step in quickly. Meanwhile, what was meant to be a ten-minute intermission stretched out to an increasingly anxious 40-minute delay. Raise your jazz hands With no backup musicians close enough to make it to the theater on time, the show was on the verge of being canceled. This is when Justin Hurwitz, the film’s Oscar-winning composer and the orchestra’s conductor, decided to make a wild, last-minute plea: Was there a pianist in the house who could sight-read a highly complex score on the fly? The University of Sydney politics and international studies student, Nasa, initially hesitated. Sterling had plenty of confidence in his piano and organ skills—he even tutors students learning the bagpipes. But just walking onstage and syncing up with an entire orchestra to play complex, jazz-infused music blind? That was daunting to say the least. Sterling’s friend Scarlett took the initiative; she was the one who raised his hand. Moments later, he stepped out of the crowd and into the spotlight. A Woollahra man has had the concert experience of a lifetime after answering an urgent call to fill in for a sick member of the orchestra.Sterling Nasa was in his seat ready to watch La La Land but soon found himself centre stage. pic.twitter.com/RitcctiHTg— 7NEWS Sydney (@7NewsSydney) June 1, 2026 It’s one thing to sit behind a keyboard and play along to an intricate film score unrehearsed. It’s quite another to attempt the incredibly technical, fast-paced synthesizer solo featured in John Legend’s piece from La La Land, entitled ‘Start a Fire.’ If you don’t remember it, the song features a significant solo from Ryan Gosling’s jazz-pianist character, Sebastian. Hurwitz and the other musicians in the orchestra were nervous for Nasa—with good reason. Even a seasoned professional might struggle to sight-read such a complex sequence. Instead of trying to get it perfect on the first try, he took a leap of faith and improvised instead. The show must go on… so he did When the moment came, Sebastian Nasa bet on himself, and the gamble paid off. He crafted a brilliant solo, all on-the-fly. Not just in the correct key and scale, but in the spirit of the film. This clutch performance completely wowed Hurwitz and prompted the 2,500-strong audience to erupt into applause. Speaking later to The Guardian, Hurwitz marveled at the 21-year-old’s incredible keyboard skills. “To be able to play a really cool solo… with no rehearsal—it was remarkable.” In the aftermath, the tour’s production team is now finding more permanent replacements for the remaining stops. Nasa, meanwhile, has returned to its regularly scheduled university lectures. He may not decide to pursue music full-time as a career, but for one unforgettable night, his performance rose to the occasion. One that would be sure to get an iconic Ryan Gosling appreciation nod. The post 21-year-old audience member steps up and joins ‘La La Land’ orchestra concert after pianist falls ill mid-show appeared first on Upworthy.

Doctor’s alcohol tip that ‘could save your life’ goes viral on TikTok
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Doctor’s alcohol tip that ‘could save your life’ goes viral on TikTok

Holiday parties are often nights filled with celebratory shots and champagne toasts. One doctor is gently reminding folks the importance of partying responsibly, during the holidays and all year round. Dr. Brian Hoeflinger, an Ohio based neurosurgeon with over two decades of experience, has a TikTok channel filled with educational videos and lifestyle tips. In late 2022, smack-dab in the middle of the holiday season, Dr. Hoeflinger shared a clip explaining just how long it takes our bodies to break down alcohol, and it went viral. In the video, which was shared on Christmas Eve of that year, Dr. Hoeflinger sets the scene of a party where “a lot of drinks are going down” by setting up a bunch of shot glasses filled with water. “Say you’re having five drinks in the first hour,” he says, taking five water-filled shots. “As you’re taking them, that alcohol is building up in your system fast. [It] goes to your brain within five minutes and starts to affect you.” The same can’t be said for other parts of the body. As Dr. Hoeflinger noted, “Your liver only metabolizes one ounce of alcohol per hour.” And according to Northwestern Medicine, that process only begins 20 minutes after consumption. Hoeflinger continues, “I’ve got five ounces of liquor in my system right now, and at the end of the hour I’m only going to burn off an ounce…so I’m going to have [four] ounces left in my bloodstream.” @doctorhoeflinger Knowing this about drinking could save your life! #fyp #party #drinking #alcohol #foryou #holiday #christmas ♬ Storytelling – Adriel Here’s what’s actually happening in your body Of course, there are different factors (such as body mass, hormones, medications, etc.) that affect someone’s rate of absorption. And yes, we might be able to form a functional tolerance where behaviorally, we show no signs of intoxication. However, even with all these variables, for the most part all bodies are affected by alcohol similarly. In other words, your blood alcohol level will be more or less the same, and the risks will remain even if you don’t “feel drunk.” Hoeflinger continues, saying, “The party’s rockin’, so we’re gonna have some more,” while taking three more shots and reminding viewers that he still has only burned off one ounce of liquor during the hour that’s passed. Now he’s had a total of eight ounces of alcohol in two hours. He’s burned off two, but still has six ounces left in his system, meaning that in this scenario, it will take another six hours to completely burn off. Shots. Photo credit: Canva In hour three, Hoeflinger takes one shot since the party is “winding down.” This brings him up to a total of nine ounces of alcohol over three hours. His liver has metabolized three ounces, leaving him (still) with six ounces of liquor left in his bloodstream. “You’re going to be drunk well into the wee hours of the morning; it doesn’t wear off,” he warns, noting the common misconception people have that “they stop drinking an hour or two and can hop in the car and drive.” But in reality, “You can’t do that as you’re still drunk five, six hours down,” he explains. Dr. Hoeflinger concludes his video by saying: “For this holiday season the whole point is I really want to tell people that’s how alcohol can stack up in your system easily when you’re drunk and you won’t know it and it won’t wear off for hours and hours down the road.” This is followed by an urge for people to take an Uber or Lyft home to avoid potentially taking their own or another’s life. The informative clip, which has since been viewed tens of millions of times, received a flood of praise from viewers online, especially from parents with kids of a drinking age. “This is the first time I have ever had anyone explain this in this way. I am forwarding this to my son,” wrote one parent. It also resonated among designated drivers. One person commented, “thank you for caring and educating. I’m the sober ride. I’ve seen the devastation from drinking and driving.” Why this doctor takes it so personally The topic hits Dr. Hoeflinger on a personal level as well. He lost his 18-year-old son more than a decade ago from drunk driving. Coming from a medical professional, the plea to not drink and drive is important to hear. But as a parent, it hits different. As he shared in the clip, “Losing somebody you love is one of the worst experiences you can have in your life.” Though Hoeflinger focused on the effect of liquor in his party example, the principle applies to wine and beer as well. Healthline recommends only having one large glass of wine every three hours, and one pint of beer every two hours. What experts say you should actually do It also gives some best practices to avoid intoxication, including: Eat at least one hour before drinking. Sip your drinks slowly. Avoid shots, which you’re likely to down rather than sip. Don’t drink more than one standard drink per hour. Alternate between alcohol and nonalcoholic drinks, preferably water. Limit or avoid carbonated drinks, like champagne, sparkling wine, and cocktails mixed with soda. Sit down when drinking, since doing it while standing tends to make people drink faster. And of course, don’t be afraid to get another ride home. For the holiday season (and beyond), feel free to kick back and have fun. But let’s look out for one another by doing it safely. This article originally appeared four years ago. It has been updated. The post Doctor’s alcohol tip that ‘could save your life’ goes viral on TikTok appeared first on Upworthy.