News You Do Not Need

Russia's 268-Drone Spam Attack: When Your Neighbor Goes Full Unhinged at 3am ft Exploding Mosquitoes

1 min · 3. touko 2026
jakson Russia's 268-Drone Spam Attack: When Your Neighbor Goes Full Unhinged at 3am ft Exploding Mosquitoes kansikuva

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jakson Tasered Lettuce and Therapy Kale: Scientists Are Literally Shocking Your Salad Into Being Healthier kansikuva

Tasered Lettuce and Therapy Kale: Scientists Are Literally Shocking Your Salad Into Being Healthier

This is your News You do not Need podcast Picture this: scientists in Italy have just proven that even your salad might secretly be stress-eating. Yes, while the rest of the world was watching elections, wars, and markets, a team of very serious researchers woke up and decided, “What if we gave lettuce a massage… but with electricity?” So they did. They took heads of lettuce and blasted them with a mild electric current to see if the leaves would pump out more antioxidants and vitamins. Because apparently, the phrase “don’t tase me, bro” does not apply to vegetables. According to their report, the zapped lettuce didn’t die, didn’t go up in flames, didn’t turn into a Marvel character. It actually got healthier. The stress from the electricity triggered a kind of leafy fight-or-flight response, and the plants responded by making more beneficial compounds. Humans get anxiety; lettuce gets nutritious. Now, somewhere right now, a farmer is thinking, “So you’re telling me my job is now part agriculture, part electrician?” Imagine the new labels at the supermarket: “Organic, non-GMO, free-range, emotionally distressed lettuce.” Or “Kale, now with 30 percent more panic.” This is where we are as a species. There are global crises, and somebody’s grant money just went to inventing the salad equivalent of a shock collar. And it worked. Which is the most annoying part, because you just know a wellness influencer is already rehearsing this: “I only eat bio-electrically optimized romaine that has processed its trauma.” They tested different voltages, of course. Low voltage: the lettuce is mildly concerned. Medium voltage: the lettuce calls its therapist. High voltage: you’ve invented popcorn salad. Somewhere in the data, there is a chart that essentially says, “Here is the exact moment the arugula started to freak out… and get super healthy.” And there’s a philosophical question buried in here. Is it still vegan if your lunch has had a worse day than you? You’re not just eating greens anymore; you’re consuming the concentrated essence of vegetable stress. “How was your meal?” “Tasted like unresolved issues and vitamin C.” The best part is, this is technically good news. If this becomes a thing, future grocery stores might have a special aisle: “Enhanced by mild suffering.” Next to the pre-washed bagged salad, you’ll have “pre-traumatized spring mix.” A little sticker on the front: “No plants were harmed, but they were definitely rattled.” Meanwhile, someone had to explain this experiment to an ethics committee. “We will be applying electricity to lettuce.” Not mice. Not monkeys. Lettuce. And a room full of adults went, “Approved.” So now you know: somewhere, in a lab full of blinking machines and people with PhDs, there is a tray of lettuce living its most stressful life so that you, a person who still forgets to drink enough water, can have a slightly more nutritious Caesar salad. Did you need to know any of this? Absolutely not. You could have gone your entire life blissfully unaware that scientists are out here emotionally ambushing iceberg. But the next time you order a salad and it looks a little droopy, just remember: maybe it hasn’t been electro-shocked into excellence yet. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

Eilen3 min
jakson Your Uber Driver Has Been Waiting for 8 Minutes and Other Texts That Haunt Us


or


Why Does Outside Feel Like a Threat: A Modern Phone Anxiety Investigation kansikuva

Your Uber Driver Has Been Waiting for 8 Minutes and Other Texts That Haunt Us or Why Does Outside Feel Like a Threat: A Modern Phone Anxiety Investigation

This is your News You do not Need podcast A bizarre little slice of modern life surfaced recently in the ongoing courtship between humans and their screens: people are now apparently paying to hear strangers narrate absurdly specific nonsense as if it were urgent public interest, because apparently the final frontier of civilization is “your Uber is outside” and we are all expected to care. One podcast episode built around that exact premise, Ain’t Your Uber Outside??, exists as proof that the culture has reached the point where even a title can sound like a nervous text from a friend who has already given up on you. The whole thing is funny for a reason that is also slightly alarming: it takes a phrase nobody needed preserved for posterity and turns it into a broadcast experience, like the internet looked at daily chaos and said, “Yes, but make it conversational.” The broader podcast world keeps rewarding this kind of exquisitely unnecessary storytelling, because audiences seem to enjoy wild truths, unfiltered riffs, and stories that are less about information and more about the strange pleasure of hearing someone confidently unpack something gloriously trivial. In that sense, the real news is not the joke itself, but the fact that our species has become sophisticated enough to build an entire audio economy around the feeling of being mildly cornered by reality. If you have ever opened your phone to discover a message that simply says “outside,” then congratulations, you already understand the modern condition: the drama is tiny, the timing is bad, and somehow there is a microphone nearby. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

21. kesä 20261 min
jakson When Democracy Gets the Bird: The Mister Quackers Town Hall Takeover kansikuva

When Democracy Gets the Bird: The Mister Quackers Town Hall Takeover

This is your News You do not Need podcast So, you know how the internet will give you the exact thing you never needed to know, right when your brain was finally calm? That’s how I ended up learning about the world’s most aggressively pointless news story of the day: a small-town council meeting derailed by a single escaped emotional support duck. This was a real council meeting. Serious stuff on the agenda. Zoning. Budgets. Potholes. Democracy in beige. Everyone’s doing their best “I care about municipal drainage” face, when the back door swings open and in waddles chaos in a feathery tuxedo. The duck, whose actual legal name is Mister Quackers, belongs to a resident who apparently brings him everywhere as an emotional support animal. Most people bring a dog. Maybe a cat. This person looked at a pond and thought, “Therapy. But louder.” Mister Quackers does not make a quiet entrance. He storms in, quacking like he’s filibustering. Someone is at the microphone saying, “We need to address traffic congestion,” and the duck is in the aisle going, “QUACK,” which, to be fair, might be the most honest thing anyone said at that meeting. Naturally, the live stream is running, because government transparency. So now you’ve got this official camera angle that was meant for sober civic engagement, and instead you’re watching a council member trying to maintain eye contact with a spreadsheet while a duck is menacing their shoelaces. One councilor tries to keep going, reading from a report like, “The proposed amendment to section 4B…” and then Mister Quackers just lets out this extended quack that sounds exactly like he’s voting no. Honestly, if more public hearings had waterfowl commentary, I might actually tune in on purpose. Security shows up, which is a sentence I never expected to finish with “for a duck.” They attempt a gentle, diplomatic removal, and that duck says absolutely not. He dodges left, flaps right, slides under a folding chair. At one point he ends up on the little raised platform where the council sits, like he’s just been elected and no one got the memo. The owner finally rushes in, mortified, scoops up Mister Quackers, apologizing to the council, the audience, the internet, probably the concept of democracy. The chair of the meeting, trying to be professional, says, “Let the record reflect that the disruptive party has been removed from the chamber.” Which is a very polite way of saying, “We were briefly held hostage by a bird.” And that is how a town that desperately needed to talk about sidewalks instead spent fifteen minutes starring in a viral clip titled something like “Emotional Support Duck Crashes Government.” No crimes. No disasters. Just poultry-based policy interruption. You did not need to know any of this. Your life would have continued perfectly fine without the mental image of a duck being escorted out of a council chamber like a tiny, screaming lobbyist. But now it lives in your head, rent free, forever. Somewhere out there, a very serious set of official minutes now includes an unexplained gap where business was paused due to “avian interference,” and honestly, that might be the most relatable thing government has done in years. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

17. kesä 20263 min
jakson Antarctica's Secret Basement Pool: Scientists Spend Millions to Confirm There's Water Under Ice and We Can't Stop Thinking About It kansikuva

Antarctica's Secret Basement Pool: Scientists Spend Millions to Confirm There's Water Under Ice and We Can't Stop Thinking About It

This is your News You do not Need podcast So, you know how there’s important news, like elections, wars, and the stock market crashing? Today, I proudly bring you the exact opposite of that. Somewhere in Antarctica, a group of very serious scientists has just announced that they’ve found a big stash of hidden meltwater sloshing around deep in the coastal ocean, which, translated into normal-person language, means: the planet is secretly sweating under the ice sheet. Not dripping, not leaking – sweating. Like the ice just ran a marathon and is too polite to tell us it’s not okay. Now, this is the kind of news no one asked for, because you can’t do anything practical with it. You can’t text a friend, “Sorry, can’t hang out, there’s clandestine Antarctic meltwater.” You can’t put it in a dating profile: “Pros: loyal, funny. Cons: constantly thinking about covert polar puddles.” There is no emergency button on your phone for “glacial moisture discovered.” But the details are bizarrely specific. Scientists went all the way to the bottom of the world, spent who knows how many millions of dollars, poked holes through ice that absolutely did not want to be poked, and then basically said, “Guys, you won’t believe this, there’s water under the ice.” Which, if we’re honest, sounds like the wettest possible plot twist. They didn’t just find a puddle, either. Oh no. It’s “hidden meltwater deep in coastal waters,” which implies this ocean has a secret basement level. The regular ocean apparently wasn’t enough. Now we have DLC: Ocean, Submerged Anxiety Pack. Meanwhile, the rest of the planet is like, “Cool story, Antarctica, I’m just trying to remember where I put my keys.” Because there’s no scenario where your day is improved by knowing that down in the frozen south, water is quietly pooling in places we didn’t expect, changing currents, and subtly rewriting the script for future climate chaos, while you’re just trying to microwave leftovers without them coming out part lava, part glacier. Imagine being on the research team. Your family asks, “So, what did you do today?” and you have to answer, “I confirmed that there is, in fact, more water in the ocean, but in a different spot than we thought.” And they nod politely, then go back to scrolling videos of raccoons washing cotton candy in a puddle. And yet, this is big news in science world. Hidden meltwater means the ice is melting in sneaky ways, which could mess with sea levels and ocean circulation. So the ocean is basically that one coworker who seems chill but has a very complicated backstory and might snap at any moment, except instead of snapping, it casually rearranges coastlines over the next few decades. Still, it’s not like you’re going to wake up tomorrow and think, “I must seize the day, for the Antarctic coastal meltwater reservoir has been characterized.” You’re mostly going to think, “Did I remember to switch the laundry?” and “Why does my knee hurt when I stand up?” The secret water will remain secret, and yet, somehow, you now know about it, forever, occupying brain space you could’ve used to remember your email password. So here we are: somewhere on Earth, people are discovering clandestine underwater melt zones beneath an ice sheet the size of a continent, and you’re listening to a podcast about it, even though, by every normal standard, this is information you absolutely did not need and will never use. But take comfort in this: while life feels chaotic and unpredictable, at least one thing is consistent. No matter how busy, stressed, or tired you are, the universe will always find a way to deliver one extra piece of deeply bizarre, totally unnecessary news. Today, that news is that Antarctica has a hidden watery side quest. And now, you’re involved. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

5. kesä 20264 min