Tuesday February 24, 2026


Billy Zane - Videos - Filmography


We'd all like to live in an area untouched by environmental collapse, but that is no longer possible



More Birthdays and News




The Blizzard of 2026 - Monday 2/23/26


February 2026 North American Blizzard   Wikipedia


7:00 AM from Ellie's Living Room



The Bigger Picture. Pretty to look at but oh so dangerous.


10:00 AM - I live just around the bend from the Statue of Liberty. A blizzard always takes me to The Day After Tomorrow.



12:00 PM - A fallen tree in Greenpoint, Brooklyn



2:00 PM - My daughter Zsia's backyard in New Jersey looking like a snow sculpture.



3:00 PM - Parents and children sledding down a snow hill as the Verrazano Bridge provided a backdrop to complete the narrative.



4:00 PM - Meet Duke, my daughter Nikki's Great Pyrenees, surveying the backyard after the blizzard.


Duke finds himself a little befuddled wading through the deep snow in Connecticut. Sometimes you just have to blend in!




The Day after the Blizzard of 2026


Rooftops dripped in melting snow - like icing on a bundt cake as the temperature starts to climb and we slowly get back to normal.


Snow totals from Winter Storm Hernando - as the Weather Channel dubbed it - broke records in many areas of the northeast with interesting videos and images splashed cross social media and the news. Brooklyn picked up 16-22 inches of whirling, twirling, blowing snow by the time it ended Monday afternoon.


The storm was also referred to as a hurricane, a Nor'easter, a blizzard (depending on wind speed) and a bomb cyclone - setting records along the way - and affecting businesses, schools, transportation, and just about everything in its path.


Daily life paused as nature staged a full-scale winter spectacle - fierce, cinematic, and unforgettable - carving its name into the record books and human memory as another historic storm in a year ending in "6".






Planet Earth In the News


Planet Earth Index


As the Planet Warms Nature's Engine Is Grinding to a Halt


Melting Antarctic Ice Disrupted Earth’s Global Ocean Conveyor Belt


Huge Giant 400-Year-Old Black Coral Stuns Marine Researchers in New Zealand


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Time and Emotions


In less than two weeks - on March 8 - many states return to to Daylight Saving Time. This should lighten your mood if you suffer from Seasonal Affective Disorder - a.k.a. SAD - part of the 'depression umbrella'.


We all know that reality and the 'human experiment in emotions' is a journey of self-searching and self-worth. Feelings make everything real but also cause confusion. Should you love yourself? Shouldn't you love yourself? Are you worthy? If you understand the simulation - and that we are all programmed to everything we do - then you'll never wonder - you'll just live it.


Your soul is forever influenced by the many aspects of itself experiencing in places you don't even know exist - along with your programming in this little speck of reality. Location: Physical Earth. Timeline: 21st Century - as humans are taught to mark events with their timepieces.


If you're feeling lost and confused about what to do next - never forget that your destiny "is" set in stone (programmed), therefore the next part of your journey will be shown to you no matter what.


The one thing we all have in common is that a final destiny in this simulation, narrative, story of reality, is unfolding, and therefore all roads are going to lead you to that end. Tick Tock!




Astronomy in the News


Astronomy Index


Auroras on Ganymede and Earth share striking similarities


Jupiter's Galilean moons may have gained life's building blocks at birth


Surprise solar eruptions on sun's far side validate new forecasting method


Astronomers inspect ultraluminous X-ray pulsar's magnetic field evolution in the Whale galaxy


6 planets will parade across the night sky at the end of February


Ancient Dusty Galaxies Discovered at the Edge of the Universe Rewrite Cosmic History


Mars' Missing Water Mystery Takes an Unexpected Turn


The Moon Is Still Shrinking and Scientists Just Found New Moonquake Zones


Changes to One of The Largest Known Stars May Signal Destruction


Why the outer solar system is filled with giant cosmic 'snowmen'





Physics in the News


Physics


Spinning Plasma Solves a Long-Standing Fusion Reactor Mystery


Diamond owl swoops in with new method to keep electronics cool





Chemistry in the News


Chemistry


A Flash of Light Can Build and Erase Crystals Instantly


After nearly 50 years of failed attempts and scientific speculation, chemists at Saarland University have achieved what many thought might be impossible: creating a long-sought silicon-based aromatic molecule.
Tiny Bubbles Unlock a Powerful New Source of Blue Energy





Technology in the News


Artificial Intelligence


7,000 GPUs Simulate Quantum Microchip in Unprecedented Detail


Scientists Create Chip That Generates Brand-New Colors of Light, Cracking a Decades-Old Nonlinear Optics Challenge


Scientists Build Tiny Light Racetracks That Could Revolutionize Sensors





Brain in the News


Brain Index


Why your brain has to work harder in an open-plan office than private offices


Autism and ADHD May Share a Hidden Brain-Gene Signature






Health in the News


Health Files ~ Alternative Healing


Scientists create universal nasal spray vaccine that protects against COVID, flu, and pneumonia


Is Your Child a Picky Eater? Here's One Thing to Try


Scientists Reverse Blood Stem Cell Aging by Rewiring the Cell's Recycling System


Scientists Discover DNA Is Already Organized Before Life Switches On


Obesity is linked to 1 in 10 deaths from infection worldwide - and scientists are still learning why


Simple blood test can forecast Alzheimer's years before memory loss


Stanford Scientists Cure Type 1 Diabetes in Mice Without Insulin or Immune Suppression





Archaeology in the News


Archaeology


40,000-year-old Stone Age symbols may have paved the way for writing, long before Mesopotamia


14,000-year-old ivory tools found in Alaska hint at how Clovis ancestors first arrived in the New World


These 40,000-Year-Old Marks May Be a Precursor to Writing


Lost for 80 Years: WWII B-17 Bomber Discovered in the Baltic Sea


Ancient DNA Reveals Europe's Last Hunter-Gatherers Survived Thousands of Years Longer Than Expected


Archaeologists Uncover 1,000-Year-Old Gold-Filled Tomb on the Central American Isthmus


After Six Decades Underwater, A Diver Finally Locates the 66-Meter Shipwreck Lost in Storm





Paleontology in the News


Paleontology Index


Astonishing Spinosaur Unearthed in The Sahara Is Unlike Any Seen Before