humor
Workplace witticisms, job jokes and career quips; who says work can't be a laughing matter?
Five Tell-Tale Signs You Are Getting Older
One Sunday morning, I was sitting outside of Church with my grandfather-in-law. As we watched my teenagers make their way out of the building, the conversation moved to how big they had gotten. I turned to him and mentioned how fast things go.
By Matt Reichera day ago in Journal
Deserts of Silence: Bangladeshi Women Trapped in Libya’s Torture Market
By Tuhin Sarwar | March 14, 2026 The arid deserts of Libya and the vast, restless Mediterranean conceal a world of horror where Bangladeshi women are treated as mere commodities. Dreams of Europe fade under the weight of exploitation, with 14-year-old girls facing systematic gang rape, and desperate women forced to trade their bodies for a single glass of clean water. This normalized “business model” of sexual slavery has persisted, unchecked, over the last five years, leaving thousands of lives scarred and countless graves unmarked.
By Tuhin Sarwar3 days ago in Journal
Libya’s Migrant Trap: Sexual Violence, Detention and the Politics of Return
By Tuhin Sarwar | Investigative Journalist । 13 March 2026 । A Journey That Turned into a Prison Marie, a mother from Cameroon, embarked on her journey to Europe with hope and determination. She believed the Sahara Desert would be her greatest challenge. Yet, upon reaching Libya, she encountered a far more harrowing reality: systemic detention, sexual violence, and ransom extortion. Multiple arrests in centres near Tripoli and Zawiya exposed her and her daughter to armed guards and nightly abductions. (Tuhin Sarwar Journalist)
By Tuhin Sarwar4 days ago in Journal
The Empty Locker
I didn’t know his name at first. I only knew the silence. It was a Tuesday in October. The high school hallway buzzed with its usual chaos—backpacks slamming, laughter echoing, sneakers squeaking on linoleum. But one locker stayed shut. No one leaned against it. No one dropped off homework. Just a quiet space where a boy should have been.
By KAMRAN AHMAD14 days ago in Journal
The Suitcase in the Hallway
I didn’t pack lightly. The suitcase sat by the door for three days—half-full, then overflowing, then emptied again. I kept adding things I thought I’d need: my favorite coffee mug, the photo from last summer, the sweater that still smelled like home. Then I’d take them out, convinced they were too heavy, too sentimental, too much.
By KAMRAN AHMAD14 days ago in Journal
The Couple We All Watched Grow Up
I didn’t know them. But I felt like I did. For over a decade, they were part of my life—not as celebrities, but as characters in a story I watched unfold in real time. I saw them at seventeen, awkward and bright-eyed on red carpets, fumbling through interviews, hiding smiles behind their hands. I saw them navigate fame, heartbreak, and the slow, steady work of becoming adults—all while the world watched, judged, and claimed ownership of their journey.
By KAMRAN AHMAD14 days ago in Journal
What a 1968 Mouse Experiment Tells Us About Society
In 1968, while the human world was preoccupied with space races and social revolutions, a behavioral scientist named John B. Calhoun was building a "utopia" in a laboratory in Maryland. This utopia wasn’t for people, but for mice. Known as Universe 25, this experiment would become one of the most famous—and chilling—studies in the history of behavioral science.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun16 days ago in Journal
Scary Movie 6 Leaks Ands All You Need To Know
The horror-comedy genre is officially back in the spotlight, and this time it arrives with a self-aware twist worthy of its legacy. Scary Movie 6 is already generating massive buzz — not only because it marks the long-awaited return of the Wayans creative force, but because Marlon Wayans decided to “bootleg” his own trailer before its official wide release.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun17 days ago in Journal
SpongeBob Review
The episode “Employee of the Month” opens with a sun‑kissed burst of Bikini Bottom’s bustling morning, a kaleidoscope of pastel‑colored storefronts and the gentle hum of sea‑foam traffic that immediately immerses the viewer in the town’s whimsical routine. SpongeBob’s pineapple home, rendered in meticulous detail, glistens with dew‑spattered windows, while the ever‑cheerful glow of the Krusty Krab’s neon sign beckons like a lighthouse for the hungry and the hopeful. The animators employ a palette of saturated blues and bright yellows that echo the episode’s central theme of optimism, and the subtle background gags—such as a nervous sea cucumber nervously clutching a clipboard—layer the scene with a richness that rewards multiple viewings. This opening tableau sets a tone of earnest anticipation, foreshadowing the inevitable clash between genuine enthusiasm and corporate competition that forms the episode’s narrative spine.
By Forest Green19 days ago in Journal









