Recent Articles

Updated Today
June 29, 2026

New Study Suggests Psilocybin May Significantly Improve Symptoms of Alzheimer’s Disease

Psilocybin—or magic mushrooms—has been used by Indigenous cultures for thousands of years for religious and healing rituals. However, in the West, the hallucinogenic fungi have been largely stigmatized and criminalized throughout much of the 20th century. Research into psychedelics came to an abrupt halt after they were outlawed in the 1960s and ’70s, but recent years have seen renewed interest in their therapeutic potential.

Read Article


June 29, 2026

The Dolores Olmedo Museum, Home to the Largest Collection of Kahlo Paintings, Reopens Its Doors

In the southern outskirts of Mexico City, a treasure trove lies within a beautiful 16th century hacienda. The Dolores Olmedo Museum, which recently reopened after a six-year closure, features 3,000 works of pre-Hispanic art, Mexican folk art, and modern art. But most notably, it boasts the largest collection of paintings by Mexican artists Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera.

Read Article


June 28, 2026

Pharrell Brings the Beach to Paris With a Coastal-Inspired Set for Louis Vuitton Menswear Show

The beaches closest to Paris are in Normandy, located two hours away by train. But for one night only, Pharrell Williams, Men’s Creative Director for Louis Vuitton (LV), changed that. Bringing the ocean breeze to the outskirts of the City of Lights for the fashion house’s Spring-Summer 2027 show, Williams kicked off Paris Men’s Fashion Week with a bang.

Read Article


June 26, 2026

How Estevanico, an Enslaved African Man, Survived a Shipwreck To Cross the U.S. Decades Before European Settlement

In 1528, an enslaved man from Morocco washed ashore on what’s now Texas. He was worse for wear; he had spent a month adrift in the Gulf of Mexico alongside Spanish sailors on a rickety lifeboat. Eventually, the small group landed on an island near present-day Galveston, Texas, where they would be the first people from the Old World (parts of the world known to Europeans) to enter what’s now the United States.

Read Article