What is Independence Day without music? To help you celebrate the birth of our nation from picnic to party to personal reflection to fireworks, we offer these four perfect July 4 playlists.
Revenge - The Case for and Against: Would anyone still be talking about "The Princess Bride" if instead of saying "My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die," he had said "My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to be forgiven"?
Unsure about a vasectomy? If so, watch “The Vasectomist,” which follows Florida urologist Doug Stein, M.D., around the world on his quest to “save the planet one vasectomy at a time.” Dr. Stein has performed more than 45,000 vasectomies in his career.
Woke advertising is out of hand and has gone too far...
Once children’s books taught courage and resilience. In the age of PC, they celebrate victimization. Smart parents know to seek out the classics.
Even though I’m a dad myself, I don’t know much...but I do know...no collection of dad songs should include anything by John Mayer.
The crazy-but-true story of Hollywood veteran Greg Ellis is the harrowing tale of how a father can be removed from his home...
At the risk of sounding a little syrupy, I have to say one of the great rewards of being the father of daughters is hearing them giggle together late into the night.
I want to find out how many guys get tears in their eyes every time they hear Harry Chapin’s “Cat’s In The Cradle.” Even Chapin himself had mixed feelings about it, relative to his relationship with his own son: “Frankly, this song scares me to death.”
A great mom builds a relationship with her boys in such a way that she represents all women. If you’re a boy and treat a girl badly, it’s like you just treated Mom badly. It should fill you with shame and disgust to even think of treating Mom badly.
Feminist filmmaker Cassie Jaye set out to expose the Men’s Rights Movement as “ground zero in the war on women.” She instead decided a lot of its positions made sense—then came the blowback from the sisterhood.
Few books stand the test of time. George Gilder’s “Sexual Suicide” is one of them.