Directors Lia Hietala and Hannah Reinikainen say their new doc, premiering at Copenhagen, is about how identity is "shaped, ...
Camila Agustini ('Manas') and Elton de Almeida ('Lov3') have joined the writing team of drag queen boxing drama 'Diamonds Are ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Barbara Hammer’s desire as an artist was to live forever. A new documentary about the pioneering lesbian filmmaker is furthering ...
PFAS, also known as "forever chemicals," are long-lasting chemicals that break down slowly over time. The EPA has established legally enforceable levels for certain PFAS in public drinking water.
Amazingly, today's Nice Price or No Dice Fulvia Safari is claimed to be mostly original and rust-free, despite its many travels and Italian origin. Now, it's offered out of the owner's estate, and we ...
Swiss director revisits Panorama with a genre-blurring study of obsession and belonging set on Tristan da Cunha, the world’s most remote inhabited island. A decade after “Aloys” won the Fipresci Prize ...
Recent tests have detected toxic “forever chemicals” in public drinking water systems serving at least 151 million people, roughly half of all Americans who rely on these utilities to deliver clean ...
Babies born in the early 2000s were exposed in the womb to far more “forever chemicals” than researchers once realized, according to a new study. By using advanced chemical screening on umbilical cord ...
The “forever chemicals” known as PFAS appear to be aging men faster in their 50s and early 60s, a new study found. Called forever chemicals due to the years it takes for them to break down, ...
It's been a half-century since Indiana University posted the last perfect season in NCAA Division I basketball, a 32-0 march through Big Ten games, through non-conference games, through the gauntlet ...
On a crisp fall afternoon in 2015, I came home from school to find my mom sitting at our kitchen table, a postcard shaking in her hands. “You got something,” she ...
Recent tests have detected toxic “forever chemicals” in public drinking water systems serving at least 151 million people, roughly half of all Americans who rely on these utilities to deliver clean ...