
- HealthHuffPost Life
Study Says Women Use 4 Specific Techniques To Up Their Pleasure During Sex
The research offers women new language that empowers them to make vaginal penetration more satisfying.
- CelebrityIn The Know
Woman allegedly used devious trick to catch her boyfriend cheating on her: 'This is genius'
This TIkTok user's technique belongs in the hall of fame.
- LifestyleThe Takeout
Here’s a list of free stuff you can get with your COVID-19 vaccine card
Everyone loves free stuff, right? It’s why people stand in line for hours just to score a sandwich or a cookie or something. As a sign of the times, there are brands and chains out there that are encouraging you to get vaccinated, and as a carrot on a stick (or hot dog, in this case), there are freebies to be had once you get that sweet, sweet, jab. Today has a list of places you can snag some free stuff. Hop on and let’s get some beer.
- LifestyleMarketWatch
My wife makes $200K a year, but gives us $700 a month, and $3,000 to her brother and mother ‘to keep them in the good life’
What I did not know is that my mother-in-law also uses emotional guilt to get my wife to work 150-hour weeks to keep her and her son in the good life. It is a complex system where people follow rules, adopt moral beliefs and, yes, can give up their own agency without question.
- U.S.Associated Press
Texas' longest serving death row inmate has sentence tossed
An appeals court has overturned the sentence of Texas’ longest serving death row inmate, whose attorneys say has languished in prison for more than 45 years because he's too mentally ill to be executed. Raymond Riles’ “death sentence can no longer stand” because the 70-year-old inmate’s history of mental illness was not properly considered by jurors, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals ruled Wednesday. When Riles was tried, state law did not expect jurors to consider mitigating evidence such as mental illness when deciding whether someone should be sentenced to death.