- Are you singing enough?
Sunday Edition • November 9, 2025 SUPPORTED BY Did you know that it’s Go to an Art Museum Day? If you don’t have plans this afternoon, consider visiting a local gallery or museum to participate in this unofficial holiday. Besides allowing us to marvel at and learn about artistic works, going to art museums may also help us be more attentive, according to a recent report by CBS Evening News: The institutions “ask us to be intentional about what we’re looking at, how we respond, why we…Read more
- Ice bucket challenge, mental health edition
. Daily Edition • April 23, 2025 SUPPORTED BY Dick Van Dyke might be nearing his centennial birthday, but the performer is still able to delight fans with renditions of his most iconic tunes — including the tongue-twisting “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious.” Over the weekend, 99-year-old Van Dyke sang the beloved Mary Poppins song at an event raising money for the Los Angeles Emergency Preparedness Foundation. And he didn’t miss a beat: Watch a video of the performance. Must Reads Ireland’s...
- Happy Earth Day! 🌎
Daily Edition • April 22, 2025 SUPPORTED BY Today is Earth Day! We urge everyone to take a moment to acknowledge your gratitude for the planet we share, and use that gratitude as fuel for protecting it. As we’ve done for the past three years, Nice News is celebrating Earth Day with a trio of environment-focused features that hopefully inspire and empower you. We’re also sharing our Spring Cause of the Season — Re:wild. The nonprofit works with hundreds of partners in 80 countries to carry out...
- A never-before-seen color
Daily Edition • April 21, 2025 SUPPORTED BY From the fish doorbell to hatching eaglets, there’s been a proliferation of nature-focused “slow TV” programming in recent years. The latest show gripping millions? The Great Moose Migration, or Den stora älgvandringen in Swedish. Since 2019, Sweden’s national broadcaster SVT has livestreamed the animals’ annual spring migration, which is currently underway. The stream is on 24/7 for nearly three weeks; most of the time there are no moose in sight —...