Gordon Talks Dirty
When edited just right, Gordon Ramsay will teach you more than just how to be a better chef.
When edited just right, Gordon Ramsay will teach you more than just how to be a better chef.
Mother London follows five digital diehards as they go offline for a whole week. Our palms are sweaty just thinking about it.
We've all seen them, we all love them, but how do people create them? While working on his film Into The Atmosphere, photographer Michael Shainblum gives us the ins and outs of producing those mesmerizing time-lapses.
Private Label QR turns ordinary household labels into dynamic digital reference points, using durable QR stickers that link physical objects to editable information accessible from any smartphone camera. Once attached to a box, appliance, container, suitcase, or keepsake, each label can store notes, photos, instructions, contact details, or organizational data that can be updated anytime without replacing the sticker itself. The system feels especially useful for the kind of real-world friction most smart-home products ignore, from labeling moving boxes and organizing pantry goods to leaving appliance instructions for Airbnb guests or preserving the stories tied to family heirlooms. With no app required and built-in controls for private, public, or group visibility, the platform lands somewhere between modern inventory management and a digital memory layer for everyday objects.
Presented by PLQR.
Vita Coco has become the warm-weather essential for a generation constantly on the move, delivering a cleaner, more functional answer to hydration during another brutal summer of record-breaking heat. Packed with naturally occurring electrolytes — including 3.5x more than the leading sports drink — the brand's coconut water helps replenish what long commutes, beach days, workouts, and heat waves quickly drain away, without the artificial colors or overly sweet formulas crowding store shelves. Equal parts refreshing and performance-minded, Vita Coco bridges wellness and lifestyle with an easy-drinking formula that feels just as at home in a gym bag as it does beside a rooftop pool, making it one of the smartest ways to stay cool when temperatures refuse to cooperate.
Presented by Vita Coco.
Watch this bird shred Shaun White-style (over and over again) down a snow-covered rooftop.
Amtrak sets up a remote control piano in a train station and the outcome is nothing short of incredible.
Here's all of the carnage from the 2013 Extreme Barbie Jeep Race.
What we do know about Sriracha is that it is delicious on almost any food item, but the actually history of the sauce remains unknown. In this documentary, filmmaker Griffin Hammond travels the globe to uncover the origin of the world's hottest sauce and reveal the man behind the rooster. Watch it online now.
Duke Cannon's Father's Day lineup leans into the brand's familiar formula of oversized grooming essentials, military-inspired packaging, and unapologetically rugged scent profiles, but beneath the tongue-in-cheek attitude sits a genuinely practical collection of daily-use upgrades. The gift guide ranges from heavyweight Big Ass Bricks of Soap and bourbon-forward beard care to colognes, tactical shower bundles, and shave kits built for dads who prefer utility over luxury-brand vanity. Everything arrives wrapped in Duke Cannon's signature blue-collar aesthetic, balancing humor with legitimately solid formulations made for hard-working skin, dry hands, and low-maintenance routines. It is less about reinventing grooming and more about turning everyday basics into something that feels giftable, durable, and distinctly masculine.
Presented by Duke Cannon.
Bar soap rarely gets an upgrade, but the Duke Cannon Soap Puck rethinks the format with a compact, palm-sized design built for grip, portability, and longevity. Triple-milled for a denser, longer-lasting bar, it delivers a rich lather while holding up better than typical soaps, making it just as suited for daily showers as it is for gym bags and travel kits. Formulated with natural oils and free of phthalates, it cleans without overcomplicating things, while the rounded puck shape feels deliberate in hand. It's a small shift in form that turns a basic essential into something more considered and durable.
Presented by Duke Cannon.
In the film adaptation of the Japanese novel All You Need Is Kill, Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt's bad day just won't seem to end as they get stuck in a never-ending time loop during an alien apocalypse. In theaters June 6, 2014.
MIchael Sutton creates some slow-mo Christmas chaos with some holiday staples and a Phantom Flex camera.