From Spider-Man to Sanrio, fans can snag a surprise at Booth No. 1829. The post NYCC: Try Your Luck at YuMe Toys’ Mystery Box Smart Machines appeared first on The Pop Insider.| The Pop Insider
Fans can find limited-edition comics and meet amazing creators. The post NYCC: Ignition Press Debuts with Comics and Creators Signings appeared first on The Pop Insider.| The Pop Insider
The interactive outdoor trail invites fans to step into the iconic forest, cast spells, and sip Butterbeer. The post Harry Potter: A Forbidden Forest Experience Brings Wizarding Magic to Chicago appeared first on The Pop Insider.| The Pop Insider
DC Comics and Marvel Comics will release a new Superman/Spider-Man series in 2026. The post ‘Superman vs. The Amazing Spider-Man’ Is Coming Back to a Comic Store Near You appeared first on The Pop Insider.| The Pop Insider
The tribe has been without a land base for more than 200 years.| Bay Nature
“What happens when love meets the limits of the body?” That’s the quietly devastating question at the center of “A Woman’s Body,” the new short film from writer-director Tiffany Tenille.| Cinema Femme
NECA’s Garfield x TMNT action figures were a hit at Comic-Con International: San Diego. Now, you can finally get your paws on them.| The Pop Insider
Darwin saw them ballooning. Without any wind. Eventually some scientists figured out their electric secret. The post How Spiders Fly appeared first on Bay Nature.| Bay Nature
These bold insects live in complex underground matriarchies that are seriously metal.| Bay Nature
Nitro is a simple, tiny but flexible init system. It is under heavy development currently.| It's FOSS News
Between ambitions and amphibians, an ecologist mediates.| Bay Nature
After a decade of carnage, we finally know what’s devastating sea stars along North America’s West Coast. Does that mean scientists can save them? The post Unmasking the Sea Star Killer appeared first on Bay Nature.| Bay Nature
All 12 Bay Area “critical habitat” groves in a proposed federal threatened listing include eucalyptus. How do we protect a native that now depends on a non-native to survive?| Bay Nature
Combine LEGO bricks and Aardman's stop motion to create unique animations.| The Pop Insider
Olympia oysters, whose native range runs from Baja California to southern Alaska, are being enlisted as ecological engineers in nearly 40 “living shoreline” projects in the US alone. The post A Living Shoreline, Built One Oyster at a Time appeared first on Bay Nature.| Bay Nature
“Long-term monitoring isn’t sexy,” says one source. But this data is how we know what is happening to the planet.| Bay Nature
Donna Graves couldn’t believe it when she heard that the LGBTQ+ exhibit she created at the Rosie the Riveter/WWII Home Front National Historic Park in Richmond, California, was in jeopardy. The post The Trump Administration Is Asking Park Rangers to Rewrite History appeared first on Bay Nature.| Bay Nature
Bay Area sport fish sampled in a study were overwhelmingly tainted with PFAS. “It’s more widespread than we really thought,” says a scientist. But it’s not so easy to persuade anglers to eat less fish. The post The People Will Keep Fishing, Despite Forever Chemicals in the Fish appeared first on Bay Nature.| Bay Nature
A coalition of advocates and loyal supporters has staved off the closure of a unique marine research center on the San Francisco Bay — at least for another six months. The post Backed by Supporters, SF State’s Marine Research Lab Delays Closure appeared first on Bay Nature.| Bay Nature
A soundscape recordist is an escape artist.| Bay Nature
Baseball fans collect souvenirs like squirrels collect acorns. There are the official ones: home run balls, foul balls, baseball cards (and the quest to get them autographed), commemorative pins, bobbleheads, hat-shaped ice cream bowls. Grown men and women exchange hard-earned … Read more The post We’ve Lost the A’s, But At Least We Still Have This Invasive Succulent appeared first on Bay Nature.| Bay Nature
Sea-level rise is threatening San Francisco’s shores. In February, the city began vegetating the sand dunes as part of its answer.| Bay Nature
Climate change is already costing us a bundle. Proponents say this measure will save money in the long run. Opponents call it a ‘hodgepodge.’| Bay Nature
It was the middle of a triple-digit heat wave in the hottest July ever recorded in Bakersfield, California. Bat biologist Erika Noel stepped beneath a freeway overpass along State Route 178, and the air felt like an oven. Forty feet above, clustered among five joints of the bridge, were thousands of Mexican free-tailed bats emitting their trademark musk—an odor laced with the smell of ammonia and corn chips.| Bay Nature
For the past several years, wildlife photographer Sarah Killingsworth has shadowed biologist Matt Lau’s work helping the western snowies at Point Reyes National Seashore. But tricky ravens have become a problem of late.| Bay Nature
Local mycologists suspect death caps—huge and abundant in the Bay Area—may be competing with chanterelles underground.| Bay Nature