Tools
Change country:
TIME
  1. Biden Calls Japan and India ‘Xenophobic’ Nations That Do Not Welcome Immigrants President Joe Biden has called Japan and India “xenophobic” countries that do not welcome immigrants, lumping the two with adversaries China and Russia.
    time.com
  2. How Photographer Platon Captures the Power of Everyday Heroes The photographer behind more than 25 TIME covers reflects on what he's learned about leadership from his subjects.
    time.com
  3. A Wild Orangutan Used a Medicinal Plant to Treat a Wound, Scientists Say An orangutan appeared to treat a wound with medicine from a tropical plant— the latest example of how some animals attempt to soothe their own ills with remedies found in the wild.
    time.com
  4. Protesters Are Calling on Universities to Divest from Israel. Here’s What That Means What do protesters want? What would divestment from Israel mean in practice? How have schools responded?
    time.com
  5. In Defense of the Ad Stirring Outrage Among NBA Fans When I first saw the "What a Pro Wants" commercial during March Madness, I was delighted
    time.com
  6. ‘I’m in Menopause!’ Halle Berry Seeks to End a Stigma and Win Funding Halle Berry is joining a group of bipartisan senators to push for legislation that would put $275 million toward research and education around menopause.
    time.com
  7. Biden Condemns Campus Unrest Over Israel-Hamas War: ‘None of This Is a Peaceful Protest’ "None of this is a peaceful protest," President Joe Biden said in his first public remarks on this week's campus protests.
    time.com
  8. Sanjay Leela Bhansali on the History That Inspired His Epic Netflix Series Heeramandi The acclaimed Indian director on his epic Netflix series about the courtesans who played a role in India’s struggle for independence.
    time.com
  9. Peloton Cutting About 400 Jobs Worldwide; CEO Stepping Down Peloton is cutting about 400 jobs worldwide as part of a restructuring effort and its CEO Barry McCarthy is stepping down after two years as the company continues to work on turning around its business.
    time.com
  10. ‘This Is a Film About the Women’s Resistance.’ What Bread and Roses Reveals About the Feminist Fight Against the Taliban 'Bread and Roses,' produced by Jennifer Lawrence and Malala Yousafzai, offers a rare look into life for Afghan women under the Taliban.
    time.com
  11. Artists From Universal Music Group Are Heading Back to TikTok as New Deal Is Reached Artists from Universal Music Group, which include Drake, Adele, and Bad Bunny will be returning to TikTok.
    time.com
  12. iPhone Users Are Raising Complaints About This Glitch. Some Think They’ve Solved It Across social media, iPhone users have reported waking up to the scary realization that they had missed their alarm.
    time.com
  13. Death Toll Reaches at Least 48, Search Continues in Southern China Highway Collapse The death toll from a collapsed highway in southeastern China climbed to 48 on Thursday as searchers dug for a second day.
    time.com
  14. The Man Who Made Ronald Reagan ‘See Red’ Is Still in Power Nicaragua once preoccupied the U.S. public. Forty years later, few Americans noticed the return to power of Daniel Ortega.
    time.com
  15. Police Begin Dismantling Pro-Palestinian Demonstrators’ Encampment at UCLA Police removed barricades and began dismantling a pro-Palestinian demonstrators’ fortified encampment early Thursday at UCLA.
    time.com
  16. How We Chose the TIME100 Most Influential People in Health of 2024 The realm of health is in the middle of a golden age of transformation. Read how TIME chose the list of doctors, scientists and more.
    time.com
  17. Alex Oshmyansky Sometimes all it takes is a cold email to start a revolution. Dr. Alex Oshmyansky, a radiologist who had become incensed by the runaway prices of prescription drugs, decided to email billionaire and Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, who famously makes his contact info public. He included a business plan for a small company he…
    time.com
  18. Joel Habener, Dan Drucker, Svetlana Mojsov and Jens Juul Holst Newly powerful weight-loss drugs became the biggest story in health in the past year—and Dr. Jens Juul Holst, Dr. Joel Habener, Svetlana Mojsov, and Dr. Daniel Drucker played pivotal roles in making those medications possible. The scientists conducted the early work, beginning in the 1970s, on glucagon-like peptides, or GLPs, that first transformed the treatment…
    time.com
  19. Melanie Ward The U.K.-based nonprofit Medical Aid for Palestinians was founded 40 years ago to improve health care for all Palestinian people. So when war between Israel and Hamas broke out in the fall of 2023, CEO Melanie Ward knew her group would need to respond. “This is what the organization was built for,” she says. Ward…
    time.com
  20. Ivan Cheung In the pharmaceutical world, where ideas far outnumber marketable products, executives adhere to the motto of “fail often, and fail early,” with the understanding that to do so requires the discipline to know when to cut their losses and say no. But Ivan Cheung followed other advice as CEO of Eisai, Inc. “The opposite is…
    time.com
  21. Stuart Orkin Dr. Stuart Orkin didn’t set out to develop a historic treatment for sickle cell disease 45 years ago when he decided to study how blood cells formed. He became a researcher at Harvard Medical School just as scientists learned how to clone, or make copies of, genes. “Everybody was talking about how we could now…
    time.com
  22. Ronnie Levin In the next decade, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) aims to replace all the country’s lead pipes. Few did more to bring about the change than Ronnie Levin, who published a cost-benefit analysis in 2023 on cutting lead in drinking water, tallying the dollar costs of problems like impaired cognitive function and increased risk…
    time.com
  23. Shahzad Baig Polio eradication has largely been a global vaccination success story. The disease, which can lead to paralysis or death, mostly in children, now circulates only in Afghanistan and Pakistan. On the front lines in the effort to stamp it out is Dr. Shahzad Baig, national coordinator of Pakistan’s polio-eradication program. In 2019, polio disabled or…
    time.com
  24. David Baker Proteins, each with their own unique three-dimensional architecture, are the body’s molecular tools, adapted to perform the specific tasks necessary for maintaining life. For decades, researchers have modified proteins to augment or alter their function. Insulin lispro, for example, is a modified form of naturally occurring insulin that removes sugar from the blood more rapidly…
    time.com
  25. Georg Schett In recent years, the new immune-based therapy CAR T has dramatically improved outcomes for patients with certain blood cancers that involve B cells, like leukemia and lymphoma. Dr. Georg Schett, a rheumatologist at the University Hospital Erlangen in Germany, saw the potential of the treatment for autoimmune diseases like lupus, in which immune B cells…
    time.com
  26. The Story Behind Peacock’s The Tattooist of Auschwitz The tattooist of Auschwitz on Peacock is inspired by a true story.
    time.com
  27. Reducing The Idea of You to Fan Fiction Is Another Example of Dismissing Women’s Art When Robinne Lee wrote The Idea of You, she didn't expect her story about ageism, sexism, and agency to be reduced to 'fluff.'
    time.com
  28. How Kate Middleton is Honoring Princess Charlotte’s Birthday The Prince and Princess of Wales marked their daughter Charlotte's ninth birthday by sharing an image taken by Kate Middleton.
    time.com
  29. New Poll Reveals Real Dividing Line Between Abortion Supporters and Opponents Across all but five states, most Americans support at least some access to abortion.
    time.com
  30. The Growing Epidemic of Elderly Abuse Increasing reports of horrific events that affect the elderly are now commonplace, write Dr.Robert Glatter and Dr. Peter Papadakos.
    time.com