The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side

The Lighter Side

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Girl Power Anthem Turns 30 and Fans Can’t Believe It
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Girl Power Anthem Turns 30 and Fans Can’t Believe It

The summer of 1996 saw a second British invasion. This time they came equipped with platform tennis shoes and extra-thick highlights in their hair. The Spice Girls changed the world that summer with the release of their hit song Wannabe. We quickly learned the words and all we could about Melanie Brown, Melanie Chisholm, Emma Bunton, Geri Halliwell, and Victoria Beckham. But we knew them as Scary Spice, Sporty Spice, Baby Spice, Ginger Spice, and Posh Spice. They released Wannabe on July 8, 1996, and the whole world wanted to be their lover. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Spice Girls (@spicegirls) The Spice Girls Shared an Ode to the Iconic Tune The Spice Girls helped a generation of women understand the power of friendship through thick and thin. Even three decades later, the song’s message still stands and gives us the warm, fuzzy feelings from our younger days. “30 years of Wannabe! Happy birthday to the song that changed our lives forever. Thank you for making it part of your lives for the past three decades,” the Spice Girls shared on Instagram. The accompanying video is a tribute to girl power and what’s really important. Fans loved seeing the celebration and the throwback moment. “The best girl group of all time! They set a precedent, spreading a message of love, peace, and respect for everyone—something not often seen today,” a fan wrote. “I really hope you can go on a world tour—you want it, and so do we! Let’s make it happen!” This fan agreed, writing, “Changing our lives forever since 1996 you girls are everything.” Some hope this means that a Spice Girls reunion is right around the corner. “So when is the big announcement coming ? After all it is a huge milestone … I am sure you have planned big things,” a fan asked. This story’s featured image is by Tim Roney/Getty Images

Pringles Announces Second Pop Dog Buns Drop
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Pringles Announces Second Pop Dog Buns Drop

The special-edition Pringles Pop Dog Buns that launched on July 8, 2026, sold out before many people even knew they existed. But not to worry. You’ll have another chance to try the new buns, but you’ve got to be quick. According to a news release, the “first-of-its-kind line of potato-based buns” come in Sour Cream & Onion, BBQ, and Honey Mustard flavors. Pringles will have a second Pop Dog Buns release on July 15. The buns will be available for free “with the purchase of a PringlesThree-Pack — featuring Pringles Sour Cream & Onion, Pringles Honey Mustard and Pringles BBQ crisps — for $6.97 on OnceYouPopMarket.com and Pringles‘ Instagram and Facebook Shops, while supplies last,” per the release. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Pringles (@pringles) Hot Dogs and Pringles Go Together Like Summer and Sunshine According to Pringles, the new Pop Dog Buns will help elevate the hot dog to the next level. Summer is the perfect time to debut the new buns as families gather for endless fun in the sun and a few dogs on the grill. “This summer we’re bringing the ‘Once You Pop’ experience to the center of the plate! We wanted to take something everyone knows and completely flip it into an exciting new snackable experience,” Mauricio Jenkins, Salty Snacks Brand & Content Lead, Mars Snacking North America, shared in a news release. “With our new ‘Once You Pop’ campaign, our mission is to continually deliver the unexpected to our fans, which is why we’re reimagining ordinary, bland buns and transforming them into an extraordinarily flavorful experience fit for our iconic cans. Trust me, that extra Pringles flavor truly makes these buns pop because… Once You Pop, The Pop Dogs Don’t Stop.” The next release takes place at 12 p.m. ET on July 15. Don’t miss it! This story’s featured image is by Patrick T. Fallon / AFP via Getty Images

How the soccer cleat evolved from hardware nails to engineered fabric
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How the soccer cleat evolved from hardware nails to engineered fabric

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Nobody watches the World Cup to think about footwear. But the shoes on the pitch at the 2026 tournament are the end result of about 500 years of iteration, and the story is stranger than you’d expect. It involves a family feud, kangaroo leather, and at one point, someone trying to understand the molecular structure of mud. They started as actual work boots Modern soccer took shape between the 18th and 19th centuries, played by middle- and lower-class workers for leisure. No professional leagues, no formal teams. People played in whatever they had, which usually meant factory boots: heavy, high-cut leather, the kind worn on shop floors. The name “football boots” stuck for obvious reasons. Those first shoes were indistinguishable from work boots because they were work boots. Players figured out fast that leather soles on wet British turf were nearly useless. The fix: hammer nails into the bottom. Hardware store nails, sharp ones, which presumably made tackling more complicated than it is today. Anyone on the wrong end of a nail-studded boot wasn’t necessarily getting back up. In 1886, the Football Association published guidelines making shoes mandatory and banning uncovered metal nails. A standard settled: all-leather, lace-up, six studs across the sole. That layout is the distant ancestor of every cleat pattern worn today. The brothers behind Adidas and Puma The cleat’s real transformation began in Herzogenaurach, a small German town. Rudolf and Adolf Dassler started the first company to specialize in athletic shoe design. Through a chain of circumstances that included the 1936 Berlin Olympics and Jesse Owens’s performance there, they became the most recognized name in athletic footwear. Then, the siblings had a disagreement that they couldn’t reconcile. The falling-out produced Puma and Adidas. Both companies are still in Herzogenaurach more than 80 years later. Their rivalry drove most of what followed: interchangeable studs, lower-cut designs that let players move faster, and eventually the 1979 Copa Mundial made with kangaroo leather, which became one of the best-selling shoes ever made. K-leather, as it came to be called, was lightweight, soft, and durable. ESPN estimated the global kangaroo product industry at $200 million in 2021, much of it tied to athletic footwear. In 2023, both Puma and Nike announced they’d stop making kangaroo leather products, following proposed US legislation and as synthetic alternatives had gotten good enough to make the switch worth taking. From television to sock-shoes As soccer’s global viewership expanded through the 1990s and 2000s, cleat design moved faster. Adidas’s 1994 Predator added rubber strips to the toe for grip and spin. Nike’s Mercurial in 1998 was among the first major models built on synthetic leather. By 2014, the Nike Magista was a single piece of fabric, worn more like a sock than a shoe. In 2015, Adidas made the first cleat to weigh under 100 grams. About the same as four AA batteries. Engineering meets mud science Making a soccer cleat now means engineers and 3D models, not cobblers. Nike uses Finite Element Analysis to test plate positioning digitally before anything gets physically built. That’s how the company landed on chevron-shaped studs: the data showed they outperformed blade-shaped ones for propulsion and multidirectional movement. Getting mud not to stick turned out to require understanding mud at a molecular level. Nike’s Anti-Clogging Technology uses an adaptive polymer and a hydrophobic solution to keep plates clean during a match. The company also built adaptive traction technology where pegs adjust automatically based on the ground, going deeper into soft turf and sitting flatter on harder surfaces. The psychology of hot pink The most visible change at this year’s World Cup has nothing to do with polymers. It’s the colors. Cleats were black or white for most of soccer’s history. Now they’re neon green, electric blue, and a lot of hot pink. Some of that is practical: bright colors read better on television. But there’s also a psychological case for it. “What we’ve been hearing consistently from the athlete and the consumer, especially when it comes to big moments, is that bright colors give them confidence,” said Odinga Nimako, Nike’s Global Footwear Product Line Manager. From a factory worker’s nailed-up boot to a computer-designed, sub-100-gram piece of hydrophobic fabric: the cleat has traveled far. Worth a glance down at the pitch the next time someone takes a free kick.     Did this solution stand out? Share it with a friend or support our mission by becoming an Emissary.The post How the soccer cleat evolved from hardware nails to engineered fabric first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

The bill that brings green hydrogen into California’s clean energy grid
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The bill that brings green hydrogen into California’s clean energy grid

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM California just closed a gap that’s been undermining its clean energy numbers for years. Governor Newsom signed SB 1350 into law, qualifying green hydrogen electricity as a renewable source under the state’s Renewables Portfolio Standard. Power plants that use it now earn financial incentives. Worth paying attention to. What green hydrogen does Roughly 60 percent of California’s electricity comes from renewables, per a 2024 California Energy Commission report. That sounds solid until you look at when the other 40 percent shows up: overnight, in winter, when solar goes dark and stored wind power runs thin. Fossil fuels fill that window. Green hydrogen is a storage fix. You use solar or wind to split water into hydrogen and oxygen, store the hydrogen, and convert it back through fuel cells or combustion turbines when you need it. Energy generated at noon on a clear day is still available at 2 am in January. What SB 1350 does To qualify under the new law, a facility has to meet three requirements: hydrogen from state-certified renewable sources, at least 20 percent green hydrogen in its fuel blend, and certified air pollution reduction from that use. Qualifying facilities earn credits under California’s Renewables Portfolio Standard, which requires utilities to hit 60 percent clean electricity by 2030. Those credits can be sold to non-qualifying facilities, so the financial case goes beyond compliance. The bill passed unanimously in both chambers. Sen. Jerry McNerney, D-Stockton, introduced it; the Green Hydrogen Coalition and the State Building and Construction Trades Council of California co-sponsored. What comes next The Lodi Energy Center, 15 miles north of Stockton, already plans to run on green hydrogen. The Lancaster Clean Energy Center in Southern California, from Element Resources, opens in 2028 as the largest green hydrogen facility in the country. “Governor Newsom’s signing of SB 1350 is a landmark step toward securing California’s clean energy future,” said Janice Lin, founder and president of the Green Hydrogen Coalition. “This legislation gives utilities, developers and investors the confidence to move forward with the next generation of dispatchable clean power.”   This solution is highlighted by The World Business Academy, the umbrella organization producing The Optimist Daily. To learn more, please visit our website.The post The bill that brings green hydrogen into California’s clean energy grid first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.

Los Angeles Firefighters Save Wes Craven and Luke Wilson from Scary Situation
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Los Angeles Firefighters Save Wes Craven and Luke Wilson from Scary Situation

We’ve all probably been in an elevator a time or two and wondered what would happen if it got stuck. Academy Award-winning director Wes Anderson and actor Luke Wilson experienced the scary scenario on July 6, 2026. According to video obtained by TMZ, the pair got stuck in an elevator at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures. In a video shared on Instagram by production assistant Carolynn Dunn, we see Wes Anderson, Luke Wilson, James L. Brooks, and at least three others being freed from the elevator by the Los Angeles Fire Department. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Carolyn Dunn (@csdunn75) Wes Anderson Asked the Crew What Happened As the firefighters worked to free the passengers, Wes Anderson asked what happened. Evidently, the elevator was overloaded. LAFD confirmed to TMZ that the elevator was stuck for less than an hour. Wes, Luke, James, and the others were at the Academy Museum for the 30th anniversary screening of Wes Anderson’s debut feature, Bottle Rocket, which also starred Luke and his brother, Owen Wilson. Multiple people commented on the video and think Wes Anderson just might have found the plot for his next hit movie. “No doubt the character asking if they know what was wrong with it would be played by Owen Wilson,” someone joked. “Guarantee you this gave Wes an idea for his next project,” another person wrote. “That might be in a movie,” a follower added. This person noticed one of the firefighters and thinks he might have just gotten his big break in Hollywood and he might not have even realized it. “That handsome fireman just got discovered by top industry powerhouses. Bet we’ll be seeing him in the movies soon,” they wrote. This story’s featured image can be found here