The issue Old things must pass away, and when they do something new emerges where they leave a void. The question then is; does the new have to mirror the
Times Square billboard ignites fat-shaming controversy
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Pop-up experiences based on TV shows are wildly popular as pandemic eases
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May 6, 2021
It’s taken a deadly respiratory virus to teach us to value of our sense of smell. With anosmia being a common symptom of Covid-19, more people are realizing how handicapped we’d be without the ability to detect smells in our environments. Prior to the pandemic, perhaps few would have found it entirely surprising that a majority of youths would rather lose their olfactory sense than give up their tech gadgets.
Smell affects the quality of our lives in profound ways. Apart from known benefits like alerting us to danger or improving our appetites, paying attention to odors, it seems, also can bolster our creativity. Converts say developing our olfaction can make us think differently and even speak and write more vividly.
Douglas House Set For New Short Film
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