Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Interview.
Shotgun Suge Is Having His Breakout Year With Me Personally
Shotgun Suge has spent years commanding respect in the battle rap world, and now 2026 is shaping up to be his breakout year. With the release of his new mixtape Me Personally, the New Jersey rapper is proving that his influence extends far beyond the battle stage. The project has quickly gone viral, and billboards across New Jersey are putting his name in the spotlight, while Heart of Hollywood Magazine has highlighted the mixtape as one of the year’s most talked-about independent releases.
By Michelle Du'Bois2 months ago in Interview
Mike Ruga Is Building His Name the Old-Fashioned Way, One Laugh at a Time
Comedy has always had a strong foothold in New Jersey. The clubs along the shore, the small theaters tucked into downtown streets, and the countless open mics across the state have served as training grounds for generations of performers who learned how to win over tough crowds. Audiences here do not hand out laughs easily. You earn them. That tradition continues today, and one of the comedians steadily earning his place among those ranks is Mike Ruga.
By Michelle Du'Bois2 months ago in Interview
Russian Warship and the Myth of Invincibility. AI-Generated.
I, Thorne Empire, want to talk to you about why I wrote “Russian Warship,” and why this song exists the way it does. It wasn’t born from a marketing plan or a trend. It came from watching a war unfold in real time and feeling that familiar, helpless burn in the chest; the one that says silence would be a kind of surrender.
By Thorne Empire2 months ago in Interview
Muhammad Zain Ul Abideen (Zain Jee). AI-Generated.
Muhammad Zain Ul Abideen, popularly known as Zain Jee, was born on 29th July 2005 in Sahiwal, Pakistan. From a young age, he showed a strong interest in performing arts and digital media. His passion for creativity and content creation laid the foundation for his later ventures into acting, singing, and social media engagement.
By Muhammad Zain2 months ago in Interview
Living in a hemp house. Top Story - January 2026.
Hemp, a multi-purpose crop that delivers fibres, shivs, seeds, and pharmaceuticals is currently used in insulation materials and bio-composites for a more sustainable construction industry. Russ Martin and his wife Karon Korp tell their story as owners of the first hemp house in the U.S.
By Susan Fourtané 2 months ago in Interview
Fumfer Physics 39: Anthropic Principle, Cosmic Scale, and Why We Live in the Middle
Scott Douglas Jacobsen and Rick Rosner explore whether the ratio between the observable universe and the smallest physical scales carries deeper significance. Rosner situates the question within the anthropic principle: observers necessarily arise in regions and eras compatible with simple life. Humans exist near an active star, within the universe’s luminous core, because complex or long-lived civilizations would occupy very different energetic regimes. Rosner extends this reasoning to human history itself, noting that the present era contains the largest concentration of humans who have ever lived, making it statistically unsurprising that we find ourselves “now.” The result is not cosmic centrality, but observational inevitability.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen2 months ago in Interview
Fumfer Physics 38: Information, Quantum Fuzziness, and the Hidden Architecture of the Universe
Scott Douglas Jacobsen revisits a long-standing idea with Rick Rosner, tracing it from an Errol Morris documentary to Rosner’s current thinking about information and cosmology. Rosner reflects on the proton–electron mass ratio as potentially non-arbitrary, speculating that it may encode something fundamental about the universe’s informational structure. He connects quantum fuzziness, mass, curvature, and collapsed matter to a broader picture in which much of the universe’s information is hidden in gravitationally dense regions tied to earlier cosmic eras. Framed explicitly as speculation, Rosner’s view treats particle precision as possibly emergent from the universe’s total informational budget.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen2 months ago in Interview
Why the Porn Industry Is Still One of the Most Misunderstood Businesses
The porn industry is one of the most profitable and widely consumed sectors of the global digital economy—yet it remains among the least understood. Public conversations about adult entertainment are often dominated by moral judgments, sensational headlines, or oversimplified narratives that obscure the industry’s actual structure and functioning. As a result, porn is frequently discussed as a cultural problem rather than examined as a business.
By Dipayan Biswas2 months ago in Interview
Behind the Screens: How Adult Entertainment Reflects Cultural Change
The adult entertainment industry has always existed in tension with mainstream society—widely consumed yet rarely acknowledged, profitable yet stigmatized, influential yet marginalized. Despite this contradiction, it has consistently evolved alongside some of society’s most profound cultural transformations. Behind the screens of adult content lies a detailed record of changing values, technological disruption, shifting labor structures, and ongoing debates around identity, power, and morality.
By Dipayan Biswas2 months ago in Interview
How a Miami Superfan Became the College Football Playoff’s Most Unexpected Star
On a night meant to celebrate college football’s biggest stage, an unexpected figure stole part of the spotlight. As cameras panned across the roaring crowd during the College Football Playoff (CFP), viewers noticed a familiar face in Miami Hurricanes colors—cheering, chanting, and fully immersed in the moment. Within minutes, social media erupted. The woman in the stands was Abella Danger, one of the most recognizable stars in adult entertainment—and, as it turns out, a devoted Miami superfan.
By Dipayan Biswas2 months ago in Interview









