- Add these US beaches to your must-see list
. Daily Edition • July 10, 2025 SUPPORTED BY The Denver Zoo has a tiny new addition and wants your help naming her. Last month, a female African pancake tortoise became the first of its species to hatch at the zoo, joining her mom, Waffles, and three males named Short-Stack, Denny, and Flapjack. Keeping with the breakfast theme, the four baby name options are: Griddle, Syrup, Maple, and Flip. Submit your vote — and see how your favorite stacks up to the rest. Must Reads If you sit a lot…Read more
- One of the world’s oldest cat doors
Wake up to good news. Supported by Sunday • February 25, 2024 As animal lovers, we at Nice News appreciate learning about all creatures great and small — and it turns out small is actually quite an understatement for some of Earth’s inhabitants. From a chameleon that fits on the surface of a human thumb to a hummingbird that weighs as much as a paperclip, scientists recently shared a few of the planet’s most minuscule insects, birds, mammals, and more with The Guardian. See photos of the tiny...
- Ice skating goes wild in Alaska
Wake up to good news. Supported by Saturday • February 24, 2024 You’ve heard of isometric exercises and cozy cardio, but what about somatic workouts? Simply put, somatics emphasize the mind-body connection and movement for the sake of movement, so there’s no right or wrong way to do it. “Somatic exercises are used to increase awareness from the inside out ... [and] they can help someone process and move stuck tension, memories, and emotions,” Scott Lyons, a psychologist and body-based trauma...
- The world’s best beaches
Wake up to good news. Supported by Friday • February 23, 2024 If you spend much of your workday hunched over a computer, tablet, or smartphone — as many of us do — you might have “tech neck.” The term refers to the neck pain, soreness, and poor posture that can come from having our heads bent over devices. Orthopedic physical therapist Devin Trachman told Popular Science that turning your head down at a 45-degree angle puts nearly 50 pounds of force on your spine, so it’s easy to see how that...