The holidays are notorious for being hard on the waistline. It's easy to pack on the pounds at holiday parties and festive dinners.
To avoid the holiday heft, Renee Steinberg and her friends Carla Goldworm and Roberta Bogen share their tips for staying fit and healthy without sacrificing their social lives throughout the holiday season.
Goldworm says that going to spin class every morning is key to her health. Bogen and Steinberg give viewers a look at the foods they eat to help curb their appetite and keep them from chowing down on holiday party food. They also share their top tips for hosting and attending holiday parties.
Because podcasting has a lower barrier to entry for production compared to other forms of media, it may be a way for different kinds of people to enter the industry.
Jill and Carlo get you prepped for the Big Day. What to watch tonight, what not to expect tonight, and other news. Plus, Carlo gets emotional talking about what's at stake.
The driver of a metro train in the Netherlands escaped injury when the front carriage rammed through a stop barrier and was caught by a sculpture of a whale’s tail near the port city of Rotterdam.
For some historically Black colleges and universities, the impact of coronavirus is hitting especially hard and compounding existing financial woes.
Jill and Carlo prep for Election Day: what the latest polls are saying, unrest in the streets, the pandemic surging and the legal battles that await.
While snapping a selfie with a sealed envelope is perfectly legal, memorializing your marked ballot with a photo can be against the law in some states.
With the truly frightening surge in coronavirus cases ongoing, some Halloween revelers have invented creepy contraptions for one-way trick-or-treating and spreading holiday cheer.
Citi is partnering with Mastercard on an initiative to allow transgender and non-binary people to use their chosen names on credit cards. Carla Hassan, chief marketing officer, joined Cheddar to discuss.
San Francisco has a population of over 883,000 residents, but it only has two cemeteries for the entire city. But neither of them perform active burials. So why are bodies showing up under the city?
Hudson Hale, a 17-year-old from Portland, Oregon, found himself sick in September, leading to developing his charitable product: COVID Candies.
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