top of page



The UK Isn’t Fixing Its Justice System — It’s Quietly Redefining Due Process
The United Kingdom is testing the limits of what “due process” actually means, and most people won’t notice until the line has already moved. Under the banner of efficiency and backlog reduction, legal reforms are pushing more criminal cases out of jury trials and deeper into the hands of magistrates, while narrowing appeal options for cases that carry jail sentences of two years or less. The official justification is simple and, at first glance, reasonable: the courts are ov

Alexander Grgat
Dec 28, 20253 min read


Jake Paul Gets His Jaw Broken in Boxing - The Moment Fans Were Waiting
Jake Paul didn’t do anything wrong—except exist in a way that perfectly exposed what modern celebrity culture has become. He didn’t cheat the system. He mastered it. The reason millions of people tuned in this past weekend wasn’t because they suddenly cared about boxing fundamentals, rankings, or legacy. They tuned in because they believed—finally—that this was the moment they had been promised. The moment the spectacle cracked. The moment Jake Paul, the avatar of fame-withou

Alexander Grgat
Dec 26, 20253 min read


Man vs. Machine: The IShowSpeed Robot Lawsuit and the Future of Accountability
Welcome to 2025, where “man versus machine” no longer means dystopian science fiction or Arnold Schwarzenegger blowing things up—it means a Twitch streamer, a prototype robot, and a seven-figure lawsuit. According to early reporting, internet personality IShowSpeed is facing a $1 million civil lawsuit following an on-camera altercation involving a robotic prototype during a filmed content segment. Yes, a robot. Not a person. Not an animal. A machine. And yet the legal langu

Alexander Grgat
Dec 21, 20253 min read


San Francisco Sues Ultra-Processed Food Companies: The First Legal Attack on Corporate Foods
For decades, Americans have been told their declining health is a personal failure. Eat less. Move more. Try harder. San Francisco is now challenging that narrative in court. In a first-of-its-kind lawsuit, the city is suing some of the largest food corporations in the world—Kraft Heinz, Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, Nestlé, General Mills, and others—arguing that ultra-processed foods weren’t just unhealthy choices, but deliberately engineered products designed to exploit human biology

Alexander Grgat
Dec 14, 20254 min read


Netflix Wants to Buy Warner Bros. — And That Should Make Everyone Nervous
Netflix — the company that once mailed DVDs in flimsy red paper sleeves — has locked in a deal to buy Warner Bros. Studios fo r $72 billion in equity (cash and stock) or $82.7 billion in enterprise value (including debt) . Warner Bros. Studios is the studio behind Batman, Harry Potter, The Matrix, DC Comics, and a century of American culture. If the deal goes through, the same platform that brought you Love on the Spectrum could soon control Gotham City and the Wizarding

Alexander Grgat
Dec 13, 20254 min read


Australia Just Banned Social Media for Anyone Under 16 — And the Real Question Is Why America Hasn’t
Australia just dropped one of the boldest tech-related laws of the decade: a nationwide ban on social media for anyone under the age of 16. No TikTok. No Instagram. No Snapchat. No endless, carefully engineered dopamine casino disguised as “content.” At first glance, it sounds extreme — like government overreach with an Australian accent. But the more you look at it, the harder it becomes to argue they’re wrong. Because here’s the uncomfortable truth: the people who built the

Alexander Grgat
Dec 11, 20252 min read


The Supreme Court Is Weighing Whether Companies Can Shut Off Your Internet — And the Implications Are Massive
We have officially hit a new era in digital power struggles — and it’s one where corporations are trying to assert more control over your daily life than even some governments dare to touch. Right now, the Supreme Court is evaluating a case that could give private companies the authority to force your internet provider to shut off your service based on alleged copyright infringement uses. That’s right: you could lose your entire internet connection for your household — not b

Alexander Grgat
Dec 6, 20254 min read


Proposal Photobombed by a Murderer: Only in 2025 Could This Happen
Only in the year 2025 can you drop down on one knee, pull out a ring, and find your once-in-a-lifetime moment interrupted by a man confessing to multiple murders on camera. We’ve officially crossed into a timeline that feels like a writers’ strike filler episode of Black Mirror — except the writers never came back. Watch Here: Here’s the rundown. A couple decided to get engaged at the Cathedral Basilica of Saint Louis — gorgeous architecture, perfect golden light, a proposal

Alexander Grgat
Nov 26, 20252 min read


Suzanne Somers Has an AI Twin — And America Can’t Decide If It’s Beautiful or Terrifying
In a plot twist straight out of a sci-fi drama, Suzanne Somers — the actress, entrepreneur, and wellness icon who passed away in 2023 — is back. Well… sort of. Her husband, Alan Hamel, just introduced what he calls the Suzanne AI Twin , a fully interactive, digitally replicated version of his late wife. According to Hamel, it’s so accurate he “can’t tell the difference.” That one sentence alone is enough to make you start questioning — but the story only gets stranger. How We

Alexander Grgat
Nov 26, 20253 min read


OnlyFans, H1B Visas, and the Slow Collapse of the American Workforce
Once upon a time, America’s economic powerhouses built bridges, mapped microchips, forged steel, and launched satellites. Ford. GE. IBM. Microsoft. The companies that defined innovation, manufacturing, and national progress. But fast-forward to today, and the most profitable company per employee in the country isn’t a tech titan, aerospace innovator, or industrial giant. It’s OnlyFans — a digital marketplace that sells virtual intimacy. That’s the state of the modern America

Alexander Grgat
Nov 24, 20253 min read


The Last Penny Ever Minted: Where It’s Really Going — and What It Says About America’s Economy
America didn’t get flying cars. We didn’t get reliable jetpacks. But we did reach one milestone nobody saw coming: the final U.S. penny has officially rolled off the Mint’s conveyor belt. That’s right — somewhere in a warehouse, under fluorescent lighting, the last little copper-plated coin in American history clicked into existence. Now comes the million-dollar question (or, well… the one-cent question): Who actually gets it? If you ask the Treasury Department, they’ll tell

Alexander Grgat
Nov 24, 20253 min read


The Illusion of Digital Stardom: Balancing Dreams with Reality
In an era dominated by social media, where attention is the most sought-after currency, platforms like TikTok have emerged as powerful...

Alexander Grgat
May 12, 20243 min read


Unraveling Algospeak: The Battle for Language and Meaning in the Digital Age
In the digital landscape of today's world, where social media platforms reign supreme and algorithms dictate the flow of information, a...

Alexander Grgat
May 12, 20242 min read


Navigating Diversity in Media: Authentic Representation vs. Forced Inclusion
In an ever-evolving landscape of media and entertainment, the conversation around diversity and representation has taken center stage....

Alexander Grgat
May 11, 20243 min read


Unveiling the Magical Revolution: Harry Potter's Groundbreaking Audiobook Experience Takes Fans on a Journey Beyond Imagination
There are multiple factors at play in the success of the Harry Potter franchise. Firstly, J.K. Rowling's captivating storytelling in the...

Alexander Grgat
May 11, 20242 min read


Comedy, Censorship, and the Junk Food Ban: Exploring the Intersection of Free Speech and Advertising
In a recent podcast discussion that went viral, a group of comedians delved into the intricacies of censorship, government regulation,...

Alexander Grgat
May 11, 20242 min read
bottom of page




