
Many professionals struggle with difficult conversations in the workplace, particularly when emotions run high. Your first performance review, for example, was probably uncomfortable. Heres why. What makes these...

AI-generated influencers: A new wave of cultural exploitation
You probably know what an influencer is people with large, highly engaged social media followings who have the power to sway beliefs and purchasing decisions. But you might not have yet heard of virtual influencers. ...

Friday essay: as the legacy media have dumbed down, The New Yorker has dumbed up
Like many, I entered The New Yorker through the cartoon door. The first cartoon I loved, and remember to this day, featured a New Yorker staple two guys sitting in a bar with one saying to the other: I wish just once...

From satire to serious journalism – how The New Yorker has shaped a century of thought
You may briefly regret the environmental impact of all that paper, but once its unwrapped its a source of anticipation. You check out the cover, read Shouts and Murmurs, and flip through the cartoons. You might even tackle...

In 1987, UK researchers lamented how schools were organised around the assumption that the nuclear family is the norm. Families who did not fit this model were either ignored (tactfully) or categorised as abnormal. Several...

Australia wants zero road deaths by 2050 – but there’s a major hurdle
In the past 12 months, more than 1,300 people have died on Australias roads. In January alone, there were 114 road deaths in Australia roughly 20% more than the average for that month over the previous five years. Our new...

5 experts: should pharmacists be able to provide the pill over the counter without a script?
As we head towards a federal election, the Labor government recently announced a funding package worth A$573 million for womens health. The funding includes $100 million to support two national trials for pharmacies to...