If you think being under quarantine is bad, imagine being stuck in a tin can 254 miles above the earth — with the best view in human history, spacewalks, and advancing the knowledge of the human race. NASA is having a special event right now with a live question and answer session with astronauts aboard the International Space Station.
While most of the world is sheltering in place, some of film's greatest characters have finally found time to get back together. Josh Gad has orchestrated serval of those through his quarantine web series Reunited Apart and in his latest episode, the actor managed to pull together the greatest fellowship in cinematic history, Lord of The Rings. During "One Zoom to Rule Them All," stars Elijah Wood, Ian McKellen, Sean Astin, Viggo Mortensen, Billy Boyd, Dominic Monaghan, Andy Serkis, Sean Bean, and Orlando Bloom along with writer Philippa Boyens and director Peter Jackson return to Middle-earth for a reunion to help supper No Kid Hungry.
In 1930s Los Angeles, attorney and private detective Perry Mason gets an interesting case: An investigation of a high-profile child kidnapping that runs parallel with the LAPD's. Based on the short stories by Erle Stanley Gardner, Perry Mason stars Matthew Rhys, Tatiana Maslany, and John Lithgow.
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.
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.
We're not quite all the way to having anti-gravity hoverboards, but Colin Furze has the next best thing — hoverboarding while wearing Gravity's self-contained jet suit. Furze got the opportunity to brush up on his jet suit skills and got good enough to hover in place with Marty McFly's iconic Back to the Future hoverboard.
Jay Leno got one of the most coveted opportunities on the planet with one of the most hyped cars to come out in years. Elon Musk let Leno drive a Tesla Cybertruck, and not just on the street — they also took a drive one of Musk's Boring Company tunnels underneath LA.
Ben & Jerry's has completed the impossible — kind of. With Netflix's upcoming Space Force, the ice cream company has launched a pint of a new upcoming flavor — Boots On The Moooo'n — to the edge of space at over 109,000 feet.
For over 40 years, one unnamed collector has been stashing away one of the world's greatest collections of automobiles — all without telling a soul or any public display. From ultra-rare Ferraris to classic American muscle cars, there is nothing of worth the automotive world has produced that isn't represented here. Ammo NYC got the chance of a lifetime to give a Bizzarrini P538 its first bath in over 30 years and browse the contents of one of the three buildings.
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.
Augustinus Bader's The Retinol Serum rethinks traditional retinol treatments with a formula designed to deliver visible skin renewal without the irritation that often comes with high-performance vitamin A products. Powered by the brand's proprietary TFC8 technology alongside pure retinol, the lightweight serum targets fine lines, wrinkles, uneven texture, blemishes, and hyperpigmentation while supporting hydration and overall skin balance. The result is a more refined approach to retinol, one engineered to improve clarity, firmness, and smoothness without compromising the skin barrier in the process.
Although the latest Bond film is delayed, Carfection is giving 007 fans something to enjoy in the meantime. In their latest episode, host Henry Catchpole takes viewers on a joyride in the agent's Aston Martin DB5 around Silverstone. Things really start to get exciting when stunt driver Mark Higgins gets behind the wheel and shows what the iconic ride can really do. They also take an in-depth look around four different versions of the car, including three that were used during filming No Time To Die.
In 2015, Vox interviewed Bill Gates about his paranoia of a global pandemic. Gates has seen those fears realized in the current COIVD-19 crisis, and Vox returned to speak with him about what he hopes the world will learn from the experience — according to him.