A viral trend inspired by Philadelphia rapper Skrilla’s Doot Doot (6 7) has reached UK schools, with students randomly shouting “six-seven” during lessons. Teachers say it’s the latest classroom craze disrupting their routines.
A viral trend inspired by Philadelphia rapper Skrilla’s Doot Doot (6 7) has reached UK schools, with students randomly shouting “six-seven” during lessons. Teachers say it’s the latest classroom craze disrupting their routines.
For Inglewood student Joan Rosas, school was once a place of frustration and failure. But when he picked up a trombone and joined the school band, everything changed — giving him hope, focus, and a reason to stay in school.
Ayurveda’s influence is spreading worldwide, not only through wellness practices but also through growing interest in formal education. Indian institutions report increasing enrolments from abroad, with brands like Patanjali playing a major role in promoting Ayurvedic knowledge globally.
President Trump pardons Binance founder Changpeng Zhao, who served time for failing to prevent criminal use of the crypto platform, amid ties to World Liberty Financial and USD1 stablecoin ventures.
An AWS outage left apps and websites including Snapchat, Spotify, and Netflix offline, highlighting the risks of relying heavily on a few cloud providers that dominate the market.
The CIRB has upheld the federal back-to-work order ending the Canada Post strike, rejecting CUPW’s constitutional challenge while one member dissented, citing workers’ rights concerns.
Air Canada is cutting about 400 management jobs as it expands service from Toronto’s Billy Bishop Airport, adding new U.S. and domestic routes amid rising airline competition.
A B.C. court has blocked billionaire Ruby Liu’s bid to take over former Hudson’s Bay stores, citing concerns about her financial capacity and lease commitments.
Japan’s Okada Museum is auctioning 125 works—including Hokusai’s The Great Wave—to help its founder Kazuo Okada pay a $50 million legal bill tied to his dispute with Steve Wynn.
Amid rising costs and slowing art sales, Art Basel is offering booth-fee discounts—20 percent for first-time galleries and 10 percent for second-timers—to help sustain the fair ecosystem and support emerging exhibitors.