Stunning Yet Haunting: Whale Rescue Photo Takes Home Photography Award

Tauhi, Miesa Grobbelaar’s award-winning photo

Miesa Grobbelaar/TNC 2025 Oceania Photo Contest

Shortly after capturing the moment an endangered humpback whale was freed from its restraints, Miesa Grobbelaar remarked that the whale paused and gazed at them, seemingly grateful. The photos documenting the rescue were taken off the coast of Ha’apai, Tonga. For more, visit the Nature Conservancy’s 2025 Oceania Photo Contest.

Grobbelaar and the rescue team answered a distress signal regarding an entangled humpback whale. Upon arrival, they found a heavy, rusted chain embedded deep in its tail, as Grobbelaar shared upon receiving her award. They approached carefully and quietly to untangle her, and eventually succeeded in breaking the chains.

While humpback whales are no longer classified as endangered due to their population rebounding since the mid-20th century whaling days, some specific populations, like those around Tonga, still face risks. These numbers are currently in the low thousands, representing about 30 percent fewer than before commercial whaling started.

“This image captures a paradox: the horrific impacts of human behavior on nature alongside our compassion towards it,” remarked Jarrod Bourde, one of the contest judges, in an official statement.

Pluteus’ Firefly by Nick Wooding

Nick Wooding/TNC 2025 Oceania Photo Contest

The competition featured photographers from Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, and the Solomon Islands and awarded prizes in various categories. This enchanting photo above displays the Pluteus velutinornatus, a fungus growing on trees, which won in the “Plants and Fungi” category. Photographer Nick Wooding stumbled upon the hazel-colored fungus right before it blossomed, and upon revisiting days later, he found it transformed to a pristine white.

Windjana Valley by Scott Portelli

Scott Portelli/TNC 2025 Oceania Photo Contest

Scott Portelli received top honors in the land category with his stunning time-lapse image of stars captured (above) atop a rock wall in Windjana Gorge National Park in Western Australia, famous for its striking red rocks. The mesmerizing effect was crafted using over 600 photographs, illustrating the stars’ movement from dusk till dawn.

Peacock Mantis and Eggs by Peter McGee

Peter Magee/TNC 2025 Oceania Photo Contest

This striking image features a female peacock mantis shrimp (Odontodactylus syralus) captured on film by Peter Magee in Bali, Indonesia. The photograph earned third place in the water category, showcasing the shrimp vigilantly guarding its precious red eggs while observing its surroundings.

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Source: www.newscientist.com

Mystiques: The Haunting Antiques Store Run by the Worst Women I’ve Ever Met

I Located in the Blue Mountains of New South Wales, Australia, the Lemonade Games team lived in a rented house sandwiched between two vintage shops. With former antiques professionals and years of game-making experience joining the team, the idea for the studio’s esoteric adventure game began to come together. “We spent a week conceptualizing, making art, taking photos, watching films, and prototyping,” says Creative Director Ally MacLean-Hennessy. “It was a very organic way of shaping the game, and the spirit of that week continues into the way we work together today.”

In “Mystique: Haunted Antiques,” Its creators Described as “a game about a struggling antiques store run by four of the worst women I’ve ever met,” players slip on the platform sneakers of Jem, a fashionista and business owner struggling to run her struggling antiques curation business. Using her recently acquired, professionally useful psychic abilities, Jem will pierce the veil between life and death to track down troves of high-quality goods. “Players will travel to jobs such as the homes and estates of the recently deceased to search for cursed items and use information gained from communicating with spirits to find the most valuable items to take home and sell,” says MacLean Hennessy. From string-bound gaming magazines and lava lamps to cursed vases, players will examine and inventory all kinds of mysterious antiques as they progress through the game.

Jem is joined by a cast of lovable, problematic prima donnas. “The women of Mystique are partly inspired by the wave of con artists, con artists, and divas of the late 2010s and early 2020s, including Anna Delvey, Caroline Calloway, and Elizabeth Holmes,” Allie points out. “I can’t help but be drawn to them, in part because there’s a morbid thrill in watching people behave badly, but also in a way that I feel a genuine affection for them. There’s something so liberating about mentally stepping out of the psychodrama of modern womanhood and existing as someone who can commit incredibly selfish, self-centered, extravagant acts and still consider herself the moral high ground. Maybe they’re on to something.”




Among the antiques is a cursed vase… Mystique: Haunted antiques. Photo: Lemonade Games

Mystiques: Haunted Antiques takes its paranormal cues from Tulpamancy, a phenomenon that originated in Tibetan Buddhism and has inspired other strange and eerie media, such as David Lynch’s cult TV series Twin Peaks. “Tulpamancy currently exists primarily as a subreddit for people interested in the boundary between ‘reality’ and ‘imagination,'” says MacLean Hennessy. “There are lots of people who believe they can manifest entities through faith and will. We’re interested in them in the same way we’re interested in the female con artists of our current cultural moment. These are people who can construct the reality they want to exist for themselves. Who are we to tell them what is real?”

MacLean Hennessy are clear that Mystique: Haunted Antiques, which took inspiration from Italian horror classics like Suspiria and self-consciously girlcore movies like Jennifer’s Body, is not a cozy game in the modern sense of the word. “We were exploring stories of spiritual affliction, and these filmmakers knew how to bring it to life in a glamorous, stylish, extravagant way, which is what we really love and are inspired by,” they say. This strange and fresh blend of influences also extends to the soundtrack (which follows the brief: what if a 1970s detective thriller had a hyper-pop soundtrack?) and the game’s fashion, which is influenced by playfully eccentric brands like Schiaparelli and Moschino.

Lemonade Games is passionate about infusing its fantasy worlds with plenty of vulnerability and authenticity, drawing from a wellspring of personal experience to create a game that McLean Hennessey sees as an expression of the studio’s soul: “If the people making this game can find elements of themselves, their friendships, their experiences of the world in it, and feel a sense of relief, laughter, or catharsis from playing it, that would mean a lot to us.”

Mystiques: Haunted Antiques is in early development for PC. A release date has not been set.

Source: www.theguardian.com

Podcast: Paranormal Activity Celebrities Share Haunting Stories of Possessive Spirits

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Has the Olympics caused anyone else’s productivity to hit an all-time low? Like me, you’ve probably had that small but highly distracting iPlayer window open in the corner of your screen all day, gone straight home, watched athletics on TV, ignored the dirty dishes, and dozed off.

Surprisingly, what if you’re on the go? BBC Radio 5 Live and The official Olympic podcast. It’s great for catching up on the action away from the screen (you may have cried listening to the women’s triathlon on your commute to work), but these are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to pods extending the Paris 2024 journey. As medals are awarded and sporting heroes make their appearance, there are shows that take you even deeper into the personalities themselves.

Simone Biles said she thought America hated her after the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Call her daddy. Keeley Hodgkinson is confident of winning the gold medal. High Performance Podcast. Tom Daley’s Desert Island Discs Pleasant to listen to. Mondo Duplantis on being a pole vault champion Mindset Victory. Jess Thom, the lead psychologist for the British team, speaks candidly to The Guardian’s Science Weekly about how to prepare athletes for failure and success, and what happens when they have to return to normal life. Plus, Adam Peaty has a deep and meaningful conversation with his father-in-law, Gordon Ramsay. About the Olympics.

But if you’re completely bored of sports, don’t worry: this week’s best podcasts offer a lovely escape, with the paranormal, celebrity fantasies, and strolls through Borough Market. We’ve also rounded up the top five podcasts featuring A-list stars (which will likely include Olympic superstars and viral sensations at some point). Kim Ye-ji, South Korean shooting silver medalist.

Holly Richardson
TV assistant editor

This week’s picks




Dreamspace presenter Gemma Cairney. Photo: Katherine Ann Rose/Observer

Paranormal Activity: True Stories of Possession
All episodes available on Audible

Fifteen years after Katie Featherston and Micah Sloat terrified a generation with the film Paranormal Activity, they’re doing it again in podcast form. Sloat is a big fan of spiritual exploration, so it’s only fitting that he introduces the story of the Watseka Wonder, in which a 14-year-old girl claims to have been possessed by a dead woman for 16 weeks. “Dad of the Witch” Griffin Ceddo expands on the possession in a surprisingly moving account.
Hannah Verdier

Source: www.theguardian.com