
Benny Blanco
A hitmaking architect of modern pop who crafts chart-topping songs for superstars from behind the studio console.
Voyager 1's images revealed active volcanoes on Jupiter's moon Io, forever altering our understanding of the solar system's geology.
The data arrived as a stream of numbers, a silent transmission across 400 million miles of void. In a control room at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the numbers resolved into grainy shades of grey on a monitor. The image was of Io, a mottled world orbiting Jupiter. The scientists expected a cratered, dead landscape, a fossilized record of impacts. What they saw were plumes.
Eight distinct eruptions were visible, their material rising hundreds of kilometers above the rust-colored surface. The volcanoes were not relics. They were active. The discovery, confirmed on March 8, 1979, immediately rendered textbooks obsolete. Io was not merely a moon; it was the most volcanically active body in our solar system, a status it retains.
The energy for this violence comes not from a radioactive core, but from gravitational friction. Jupiter’s immense pull, countered by the tugs of neighboring moons Europa and Ganymede, kneads Io’s interior like dough, generating tremendous heat. The Voyager images were proof of an alien engine, a celestial mechanism of push and pull made visible as fire and ash. It was a lesson in perspective. We had studied volcanoes as terrestrial phenomena. Io presented them as a fundamental planetary process, possible anywhere the gravitational mathematics aligned. The discovery shifted the search for life, too, suggesting that tidal heating could sustain subsurface oceans on worlds like Europa, far from the sun’s warmth. A single photograph redefined the possible.
President Ronald Reagan's labeling of the Soviet Union as an 'evil empire' was a deliberate rhetorical shift that defined the ideological battle lines of the late Cold War.
The setting was the Annual Convention of the National Association of Evangelicals in Orlando, Florida. The audience expected moral reaffirmation. Ronald Reagan, forty-third president of the United States, provided a geopolitical catechism. His speech, titled "The Agenda for the 1980s," moved from domestic policy to a stark condemnation of the nuclear freeze movement. Then he arrived at his central metaphor.
He cited a writer who called the Soviet Union "the focus of evil in the modern world." He asked the audience to "pray for the salvation of all those who live in that totalitarian darkness." Then he delivered the phrase that would be extracted and amplified: "I urge you to beware the temptation of pride—the temptation to blithely declare yourselves above it all and label both sides equally at fault, to ignore the facts of history and the aggressive impulses of an evil empire."
The term was not accidental. It was a calculated rejection of détente-era ambiguity. For Reagan and his speechwriters, it was a necessary moral clarity. For his critics, it was dangerous, simplistic brinkmanship. The Soviet leadership denounced it as proof of American fanaticism. The power of the phrase lay in its theological weight. An "empire" could be negotiated with. An "evil" one required not diplomacy, but a crusade. It framed the conflict not as a political or economic rivalry, but as a spiritual struggle. This rhetorical move made compromise seem like appeasement. It prepared the ground for the ideological offensive of his second term, justifying a military buildup cast not as aggression, but as a defense of light against darkness. The words were a weapon, and their target was the very idea of moral equivalence.
The iconic limestone arch known as the Azure Window on Gozo collapsed into the sea during a storm, its disappearance felt as a physical loss by the Maltese.
The wind had been howling for hours, a relentless gale driving salt spray inland. On the island of Gozo, at Dwejra Bay, the sea was not blue but a churning, leaden grey. The Azure Window, a 92-foot tall limestone arch that had framed the horizon for centuries, stood against it. Locals knew its sounds: the groan of the wind through its opening, the crash of waves in the cavern below. On that morning, the sounds changed.
Witnesses reported a deep, grinding rumble, a sound felt in the chest as much as heard. It cut through the storm’s white noise. Then came a thunderous crash, distinct and final. Where the arch had stood, there was only sky and a chaos of white water. The collapse was total. The pillar, the lintel, the entire geological structure was gone, shattered into boulders that now littered the seabed.
The loss was visceral. This was not a distant monument behind a rope. It was a place people climbed, swam beneath, and photographed at sunset. Its image was on postcards, in films, on travel blogs. Its absence created a strange void in the landscape, a missing tooth in the coastline’s smile. In the days that followed, people gathered silently at the cliff edge, not to see the Window, but to confirm it was gone. They smelled the wet stone and churned sediment. They heard the waves, now unimpeded, hitting the cliff face with a new, hollow rhythm. The Azure Window had always been eroding. Everyone knew it would fall one day. But knowing and hearing the final rumble are different things. The map had to be redrawn, and a piece of collective memory had turned, in an instant, from a place into a story.
The first Aurat March in Karachi reclaimed public space and a fundamental truth with the slogan 'Mera Jism Meri Marzi,' a demand for bodily autonomy that resonated across Pakistan.
Most discussions of the first Aurat March in Karachi begin with its novelty. A feminist march on International Women’s Day in Pakistan. The surprise, however, lies in the slogan’s blunt obviousness. "Mera Jism Meri Marzi." My body, my choice. It is not a complex philosophical treatise. It is a statement of jurisdiction, as basic as claiming ownership of one’s shoes. That such a declaration could be revolutionary, could be chanted in the streets as an act of defiance, reveals everything about the world it sought to change.
The march on March 8, 2018, was not massive. A few hundred women, and some men, gathered at Frere Hall. They carried placards that addressed harassment, inheritance laws, and wage gaps. But the slogan about the body cut through. It was accused of being vulgar, Western, and anti-cultural. Its critics revealed the core of the issue: they argued that a woman’s body was not hers alone to govern. It was subject to family honor, religious interpretation, and state law. The slogan rejected that delegation of authority.
Its power was in its foundational simplicity. Before arguing for equal pay or safe streets, one must first establish the premise of self-ownership. The phrase did not originate that day; it had circulated in feminist circles. But the march launched it into the national lexicon, making it a rallying cry and a lightning rod. It was a line in the sand. The subsequent annual marches, and the violent backlash they often attract, prove the line remains contested. The slogan’s genius is its resistance to negotiation. You cannot compromise on a sentence that is already a complete fact.
TNA Wrestling's failed attempt to challenge WWE by moving its show to Monday nights became a brief, surreal footnote in the history of televised spectacle.
In the grand narrative of professional wrestling, wars are fought over nights of the week. For decades, Monday night was the territory of WWE’s "Raw." On March 8, 2010, a challenger arrived. TNA Wrestling, a smaller promotion, moved its flagship show "Impact!" to Monday. They went live. They hired aging legends like Hulk Hogan and Ric Flair. The event was dubbed "The March to Glory." It was less a march than a brief, expensive apparition.
What does it mean for an entity to assert its significance and fail? The effort was a spectacular miscalculation of scale and nostalgia. The audience did not materialize in sufficient numbers. The production felt like an echo of a past era, not a new standard. Within weeks, TNA retreated back to its original Thursday slot. The Monday Night War, which had defined the industry in the 1990s, would not be reignited.
The event now exists as a curious phantom limb in wrestling history. It speaks to the allure of direct confrontation, the belief that occupying the same temporal space as a giant confers equivalent stature. It was a performance that misunderstood its own stage. The wrestlers performed their scripted conflicts, the crowd in the arena reacted, but the larger audience—the millions needed to justify the gamble—remained watching the other channel, or perhaps nothing at all. The attempt raises a quiet question about spectacle itself: when does ambition become a public rehearsal for obscurity? The ring was real, the bodies were solid, the falls were painful. Yet the whole endeavor passed through the culture like a signal through a dead wire, leaving no trace but a lesson in the physics of attention.
Marshall Brodien
Marshall Brodien, American actor (born 1934)
John of God
Christian feast day: John of God
Cedrick Hardman
Cedrick Hardman, American football player and actor (born 1948)
Apollonius and Philemon
Christian feast day: Philemon the actor