Amazon just axed the Prime Household loophole that let you share free shipping with your cousin who still owes you $40 from 2017. Here’s why it matters—and why your family group chat is about to get spicy.
In 2025, job hunting is less “career path” and more “Hunger Games with LinkedIn endorsements.” This satirical essay breaks down the real data behind why landing a job feels harder than getting Taylor Swift tickets—and yes, we brought stats, sarcasm, and a sprinkle of existential dread.
In a fictional twist on immigration enforcement, this satirical essay imagines ICE agents raiding a Hyundai plant in Georgia, confusing South Korean executives with undocumented workers—and K-pop fans with national security threats. A comedic take on bureaucracy, branding, and the chaos of cross-cultural misunderstanding.
From duct-taped engines to pilots powered by caffeine and regret, here’s your definitive guide to the airlines that turned budget cuts into airborne anxiety. Spoiler: your wallet might survive, but your nerves won’t.
In the heart of the DMV, where policy meets platform, tech giants are turning basic security into a luxury item. From Meta’s retreat from fact-checking to Twitter’s pay-to-protect model, this satirical essay explores why safety should be standard—not a subscription.
From cereal boxes that double as wind tunnels to software bundles that include features no one asked for, corporations have mastered the art of packaging inflation. This satirical exposé names names, drops facts, and asks: are we paying for products or just premium cardboard?
When Verizon went down, iPhones across the U.S. panicked harder than a teenager caught with 2% battery and no charger. Welcome to the SOS era—where your phone thinks you’re in danger, but really you’re just in Delaware.
Billionaire short-seller Jim Chanos, who famously predicted Enron’s collapse, now warns that the AI boom is inflating a new fraud bubble—one so sparkly, it’s been upgraded from “golden” to “diamond or platinum.”
In 2025, major corporations like Amazon, Starbucks, Walmart, and Coca-Cola are quietly ditching paper packaging and crawling back to plastic—not because it’s better, but because it’s cheaper. Welcome to the eco-backslide era, where cost-cutting meets greenwashing in a high-stakes game of “Who Can Pretend the Hardest?”