Blue Christmas Cover
Elvis is alive and well through the voice of 16-year-old David Thibault. Close your eyes and you'd think you were listening the The King himself.
Elvis is alive and well through the voice of 16-year-old David Thibault. Close your eyes and you'd think you were listening the The King himself.
He is Christmas' reckoning.
Apple makes it okay to embrace your iPhone addiction — as well as your man tears — this holiday season with their new holiday ad.
For those who take late-night calls that turn into early flights, the Lundi Conally 36-Hour Briefcase is the only plus-one you need. Crafted from black canvas and leather with a silhouette as sharp as your pitch deck, it carries the precision of a briefcase and the utility of an overnight bag. Inside, there's a place for everything — laptop, documents, business cards, a change of clothes—because chaos isn't part of your carry-on. Finished with a leather strap, suitcase clip, and clean lines, it's built for long days and global nights.
Presented by Lundi.
reMarkable focuses its Paper Pro Bundle around distraction-free note taking and workflow integration. Designed with a paper-like writing surface, the tablet combines handwritten note taking with digital organization through support for Google and Microsoft workspaces. Handwritten notes can be converted into typed text and shared across platforms including email, Slack, and Miro for easy office communication between teams. The bundle includes the lightweight Marker, featuring a textured finish and integrated eraser designed to replicate the feel of writing on paper, alongside the Sleeve Folio, a suede-covered protective case built for daily transport between meetings, offices, and travel.
Presented by reMarkable.
A group of dolphins in Sweden have been trained to point at a shape with their echolocation beam that corresponds to a type of fish, in effect allowing them to order off the menu. This means it's only a matter of time before they know what wine to order with their seafood.
The best part of your day at 120 frames per second.
Photographer Cy Kuckenbaker gives a mesmerizing color-coded look at San Diego's State Route 163 traffic.
Nike revisits its court heritage with the Tennis Classic RPM, reworking the country club staple through the lens of 1970s tennis culture and modern streetwear. The silhouette retains its low-profile shape while introducing textured uppers inspired by vintage watchbands and luxury accessories, giving the shoe a more layered look across the toe box and side panels. Gold detailing sharpens the contrast against the black full-grain leather construction. Underneath, layered cushioning and a foam midsole provide a responsive ride, while a stitched rubber cupsole and herringbone outsole maintain the traction and durability expected from a court shoe. Equally suited for early mornings at the tennis courts of Santa Monica and late nights through Chicago's streets, balancing classic sport design with an elevated but casual presence.
Presented by Nike.
GNC is rethinking the creatine aisle with a new performance-focused lineup that scales from beginner staples to fully stacked muscle-support systems. The range starts with the straightforward Pro Performance Creatine Monohydrate, delivering the research-backed 5-gram dose athletes have trusted for decades, before moving into more advanced territory with the new Creatine + HMB formula for added recovery support, Beyond Raw's dual-action Creatine MonoPhate, and the flagship AMP Creabolic, a triple-action blend combining creatine, myHMB, and PeptiStrong in one scoop. Across the lineup, the focus stays on transparent formulas, clinically relevant ingredients, and banned-substance-tested performance without the proprietary blends or overbuilt stimulant formulas crowding the category.
Presented by GNC.
Consult a physician before consuming any new supplement or medication. Any health claims made are solely those of the brand and not those of Uncrate.
Instead of spending the ad budget for The Secret Life Of Walter Mitty on fancy equipment and elaborate props to create a promotional video, Casey Neistat took the entire $25,000 to the Philippines and spent it on helping victims of the recent typhoon.
Prankster Greg Benson gives the annoyning cell phone users of the world a taste of their own medicine.