Analysis
World's Most Expensive Party
The world’s most expensive and extravagant party broke every record of extravagance. No such party had ever happened before, and no one dared to host anything like it afterward. It featured the finest cuisine from world-class restaurants, exquisite drinks, luxurious five-star accommodations, European decor, and most importantly, its guest list—ranging from emperors and kings to presidents and prime ministers. Heads of state from 65 countries attended.
By Jehanzeb Khan6 months ago in History
The Google Pixel 10 phone Launch
A Date to Mark: August 20, 2025 Google officially announced the date of its hardware showcase earlier this month. The event kicks off at 10 AM Pacific (1 PM Eastern), at a familiar venue in NYC, with press, influencers, and industry insiders in attendance. The company will also livestream the keynote on YouTube and its own website, ensuring that anyone with an internet connection can tune in.
By Tariq jamil6 months ago in History
How an Enslaved Man Helped Jack Daniel Develop His Famous Whiskey
Jack Daniel’s stands as one of the most iconic American brands and most popular spirits in the world. Yet while the whiskey and its eponymous founder have become dominant names in American liquor lore, the person perhaps most responsible for its success—an enslaved man named Nathan “Nearest” Green, who taught Jack Daniel the art of whiskey distillation—went unacknowledged for more than 150 years.
By Kristen Orkoshneli6 months ago in History
Vasco da Gama. AI-Generated.
The morning of July 8, 1497, dawned cool and foggy over Lisbon’s Tagus River. Vasco da Gama, a provincial noble from the coastal town of Sines, surveyed his armada: four vessels—the elegant São Gabriel, her sister São Rafael, the nimble Berrio, and a stout store ship—carrying nearly 170 souls and Portugal’s boldest ambition
By Muhammad Saeed6 months ago in History
Counselor in Training Immersive Cultural Experience with the Latin/x Community
Part I: Research Hispanic/Latin Americans are eclectic, as they are comprised of people from many countries. Hispanics are any people who have ancestry from Spain or Spanish-speaking countries of Latin America (twenty different countries), which includes people from Mexico, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Central and South America, and other Spanish-speaking regions. “As of 2022, Hispanic people constituted approximately 63.7 million or 19% of the US population representing a 77% growth rate since 1980 (14.5 million)” (Borrell, 2024). Emerging multicultural counselors must take the time to research and learn about the rich history, attributes, and customs of Latin Americans, as the percentage of people within America is rising quickly.
By Rowan Finley 6 months ago in History
Sekhmet: The Lioness of Flame and Fury
In the burning deserts of ancient Egypt, where the sun scorches the sands and life clings to the Nile, there roared a goddess of fire and blood: Sekhmet, the lion-headed warrior deity whose power could both destroy and heal. She was not a gentle goddess of grain or love—Sekhmet was born of wrath, her breath the desert wind, her eyes burning with the heat of Ra himself. She was feared and revered, invoked in both war and plague, and her name—meaning “The Powerful One”—echoed through the temples like a growl from the divine.
By Kristen Orkoshneli6 months ago in History
Hekate: Guardian of the Threshold, Goddess of Shadows and Sorcery
In the flickering light of ancient torches, standing at the crossroads where choices are made and fates are sealed, Hekate waits. Neither wholly light nor dark, she is the Greek goddess of magic, the moon, necromancy, and transitions. Revered and feared in equal measure, Hekate is a guardian of liminal spaces—the in-between realms of dusk and dawn, life and death, body and spirit.
By Kristen Orkoshneli6 months ago in History











