Wake Up And Smell The Bacon
Literally. If you lack a significant other or roommate who will wake you every morning with the sound and smell of real sizzling bacon, Oscar Mayer has you covered.
Literally. If you lack a significant other or roommate who will wake you every morning with the sound and smell of real sizzling bacon, Oscar Mayer has you covered.
Hitting the slopes in nothing but your MeUndies and a wolf mask. Was all this legal? Absolutely not.
(Sponsored Video)
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.
Frasé Skin is an Australian men's skincare brand built for the guys most products overlook: tradesmen and outdoor workers dealing with sun, dust, and grime all day. The line keeps things simple with five essentials, from a hydrating cleanser and heavy-duty exfoliating scrub to a lightweight moisturizer, body wash for breakouts, and blackhead strips. Formulated with proven ingredients like salicylic acid, hyaluronic acid, and natural exfoliants, it focuses on real results without overcomplicated routines or luxury packaging theater.
Presented by Frasé Skin
Spoiler alert. The mystery of True Detective looks to have been solved with the Yellow King Theory.
Spaghettified, toasted, or scrambled. Those are the three possible ways a black hole could kill you - and the answer could change physics as we know it.
Deep in the woods of Virginia, a retired engineer makes his own guns, ammo - and nuclear fusion reactors.
Jean Claude Van Damme kung fu kicks the innocence right out of our childhood.
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.
Switching wireless carriers has traditionally involved enough friction to keep most people exactly where they are, but T-Mobile is trying to remove that excuse with a streamlined digital process designed to get customers through checkout in 15 minutes or less per line. The experience focuses on speed and simplicity, allowing users to switch online or through the T-Life app while keeping the device they already own. To further lower the barrier, T-Mobile's Keep & Switch program offers up to $800 via virtual prepaid card to help pay off eligible phones when customers make the move, creating a proposition that is equal parts convenience and cost savings.
Presented by T-Mobile.
While swimming off the coast of Mozambique, a diver found himself surrounded by hundreds of hammerhead sharks. Experience the anxiety firsthand with this POV video.
Caleb Slain takes us through the late Phillip Seymour Hoffman's best moments in film - a 'post-script' to a great actor.