Month: November 2025

Inside Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s “Very Domestic” Home Life: From Coffee Mornings to Game-Night Rituals

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce may dominate headlines as the pop star and NFL superstar duo, but at home, they’ve carved out something surprisingly grounded. A recent feature by Us Magazine describes how they’ve embraced a “very domestic” routine away from the stadium lights and red-carpet cameras. Sources say the couple start their days together, …

From chain-smoking to binge-drinking, Bridget Jones’s habits would have been terrible for her health

Dan Baumgardt takes a clinical look at Bridget Jones’s iconic smoking, drinking and calorie-counting habits, revealing how her chaotic lifestyle would impact real-world health. While fans may laugh at her excesses, the analysis shows why a healthier Bridget in Mad About the Boy is a welcome – and necessary – evolution for the beloved character

What Amazon MGM’s creative control over the James Bond film franchise means for the future of 007

Colin Burnett examines Amazon MGM’s takeover of the James Bond franchise, exploring what creative control really means for 007’s future. With decades of fragmented storytelling across novels, films, and games, Bond’s next chapter may shift toward a unified cinematic universe – but at the cost of his trademark flexibility and mystique.

Trump is changing student loan forgiveness rules – barring some public workers from getting relief, but resuming it for others

Student loan debt has continued to rise in the country over the past few decades.

Jennifer L. Steele explains how the Trump administration’s shifting loan forgiveness policies are reshaping student debt relief. While some income-driven and public service forgiveness programs are resuming, new restrictions on which nonprofit workers qualify and looming 2026 tax changes mean borrowers must navigate a more uncertain, politically charged system.