All Culture
- On this Take Your Child to Work Day, Secret Service and strippers
Take Your Child to Work Day got a bit awkward at a State Department briefing yesterday, with journalists asking about a widening Secret Service scandal involving prostitutes and strippers.
- Toy proliferation: Toy box cleanout and toy rotation are due
Toy proliferation: There's nothing wrong with providing your child with the comforts of a loving home. But too much of a good thing in the toy box may call for a cleanout and toy rotation.
- Screen-Free Week: Turn off that TV and celebrate – not suffer
Screen-Free Week is celebrated – not suffered – April 30 to May 6. Studies show that too much screen time, whether in front of the T.V. or an iPad or computer can hurt development and stifle creativity. So unplug and give your kids the gift of a Screen-Free Week.
- Love the laundry: embracing the daily dilemmas of raising a teen
For parents of teenagers, the idea that you'd ever love the laundry piles your offspring create can seem crazy. But embrace the moments when you can – some day soon you just may miss those daily dilemmas of raising a teen.
- 'American Idol' reaches final 5 by dismissing Elise Testone
The 'American Idol' roster is down to five contestants at the end of this week after they tried to cover part of the 'Queen' songbook.
- Parents’ path to true happiness? Embrace your inner child
Parents sometimes can spend so much time thinking about being adults that they forget the wonders of holding a soft fleece blanket, or creating a castle out of Play-Doh. Perhaps the key to true happiness can be found when you embrace your inner child.
- Arbor Day: 5 reasons to plant the family tree
Arbor Day: The family tree is good for the planet – 5 reasons to plant one, or more
- Top Picks: TEDTalks on Netflix, a family circus on PBS, and more
Martin Scorsese examines the Quiet Beatle, Rani Arbo and Daisy Mayhem supply old-fashioned country music, and more top picks.
- Prime literary real estate
They like to imagine themselves living in grand fictional homes – or even humble ones.
- Verbal EnergyTeasing out the truth about wool and data
A verb with ancient roots turns out to be surprisingly useful to refer to making sense of tangled masses of information.
- Five tips to unplug your kids, get them out into nature
Unplug your kids and get them out into nature this spring with these five tips. From chasing a lightning bug, to splashing through puddles, they'll have fun, and maybe even learn something about our planet.
- New pink LEGOs for girls enforce Disney Princess sterotypes
A new line of pink LEGOs, marketed towards girls, is just another example of the extreme gendering prevalent in children's popular culture, and enforces the Disney Princess stereotypes that have made Disney billions.
- Butter + leeks = delicious: Scallops with melted leeks and egg noodles
Try "melting” leeks by cooking them slowly in butter. They’re a sweet complement to sautéed scallops and pasta.
- NBC shows: Which will be canceled?
'30 Rock,' 'Community,' 'Up All Night' and other NBC favorites face an uncertain future.
- World of Warcraft unites mother, son miles apart
World of Warcraft online role-playing game kept a mother connected to her son – and strengthened their relationship – when he moved 1,00 miles from home. When her son moved 1,200 miles away from home.
- Mother's Day: Consider the life lived in 15-minute increments
Mother's Day: The prosaic detail of a mother's day – lived in 15-minute increments of cereal, pet-minding, chauffeuring, professional duties, homework, and ... bedtime – is part what we thank her for.
- Crime or parenting? Cops called for kids playing alone in park
Parenting styles vary widely, from the helicopter variety to the free range. But a neighbor took the issue into her own hands recently, calling the cops on a dad who left his kids playing alone in a nearby park.
- 'Game of Thrones': Catch up on season 1 Missed the first season, but want to dive in now? Here's what you need to know.
- 'Half the Sky' exhibition hopes to inspire action
Based on the Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn book, the 'Half the Sky' exhibition in L.A. looks at oppression of women around the globe and ways to strengthen and empower them through education and jobs.