Author: Imrul Hasan

This is Imrul Hasan's profile, and this is a bit of copy about him. He grew up in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Imrul is a Wordpress developer, Linux Server Expert, Software Tester, Blogger, and Cyclist. He’s known for his love of cats, but is also crazy about movies, dogs, coffee, sea and mountains.
The Night Stalker (1972): The Television Movie That Redefined Horror, Journalism, and Genre Storytelling
Movies, TV Shows

The Night Stalker (1972): The Television Movie That Redefined Horror, Journalism, and Genre Storytelling

On a quiet night in January 1972, American television crossed an invisible line. What premiered as a modest made-for-TV horror movie on ABC would go on to reshape genre television, redefine what audiences expected from supernatural storytelling, and inspire one of the most influential television series of all time. That film was The Night Stalker—and its impact still echoes more than half a century later. At a time when television horror was considered risky, niche, and largely disposable, The Night Stalker proved that fear, intellect, and character-driven storytelling could coexist—and thrive—on the small screen. Television in the Early 1970s: A Safe Medium Takes a Risk In the early 1970s, American television was conservative by design. Networks favored familiar genres: sitcoms...
The Airport That Never Existed: How Emmanuel Nwude Sold a Phantom Runway for $242 Million
Crime, Humor

The Airport That Never Existed: How Emmanuel Nwude Sold a Phantom Runway for $242 Million

In the long history of financial crime, there are schemes so audacious they sound like urban legends. Stories people repeat with a laugh, assuming they must be exaggerated. Yet one of the most unbelievable frauds ever committed is entirely real—and meticulously documented. A former Nigerian bank director named Emmanuel Nwude once sold a completely fake airport to a major Brazilian bank. No runway. No control tower. No planes. No land. No location you could point to on a map. The price? $242 million. What makes this crime extraordinary is not just the amount of money involved, but the way it succeeded. There was no clever digital hacking, no elaborate shell company maze, no cutting-edge financial engineering. The scam worked because it looked respectable. It relied on paperwork, titles, ...
Erich von Däniken: The Man Who Taught the World to Question the Sky
Books, Personalities

Erich von Däniken: The Man Who Taught the World to Question the Sky

Some thinkers don’t simply offer answers—they ignite questions so unsettling that the world never quite settles again. Erich von Däniken belongs to that rare category of visionaries who permanently altered the way millions look at history, archaeology, and the night sky. For more than half a century, von Däniken has stood at the fault line between orthodox science and radical curiosity, insisting on a single, controversial idea: what if humanity’s past is far stranger than we’ve been told? Love him or loathe him, dismiss him or revere him, his influence is undeniable. A Question That Changed Everything When Chariots of the Gods? was published in 1968, it detonated like an intellectual bomb. The book didn’t arrive quietly into academic circles—it crashed into global consciousnes...
The Most Romanticized Era Was Far From Romantic: The Brutal Reality Behind the Victorian Illusion
Culture, Culture and Anthropology, History

The Most Romanticized Era Was Far From Romantic: The Brutal Reality Behind the Victorian Illusion

Few periods in history are wrapped in as much aesthetic nostalgia as the Victorian era. Mention it today and images immediately surface: women in flowing gowns, gentlemen in tailored coats, candlelit parlors, polished manners, handwritten letters, and grand houses framed by wrought iron gates. It is an era endlessly romanticized in films, novels, and social media aesthetics—portrayed as refined, elegant, and morally upright. But for most people who actually lived through it, the Victorian era was not romantic at all. It was loud, crowded, filthy, exhausting, and often lethal. The graceful image we’ve inherited was constructed almost entirely from the lives of the wealthy minority. The daily reality for the majority—factory workers, miners, servants, widows, children—was defined by pover...
Coffee on an Empty Stomach: The Morning Habit That Can Quietly Spike Stress
Food, Health

Coffee on an Empty Stomach: The Morning Habit That Can Quietly Spike Stress

For a lot of people, the day doesn’t begin with sunlight or a stretch—it begins with a cup. The first sip of coffee feels like flipping a switch: the fog lifts, the brain sharpens, the body wakes up. It’s a ritual so common that we rarely question it. But there’s a growing body of research and clinical discussion around a simple twist that can change how coffee feels in your body: whether you drink it before you eat. The claim you shared—coffee on an empty stomach can amplify stress by driving a sharper cortisol response—sits at the intersection of two real physiological facts: cortisol is naturally high in the morning, and caffeine can stimulate cortisol release in many people.  Add in an empty stomach and fragile blood sugar after sleep, and for some bodies the result is a “wired-but-w...
When the Body Moves, the Mind Follows: Why Dancing May Be One of the Most Powerful Antidepressants We Have
Medical Science, Mental Health

When the Body Moves, the Mind Follows: Why Dancing May Be One of the Most Powerful Antidepressants We Have

Depression is often described as a chemical imbalance, a malfunction in mood-regulating neurotransmitters that medicine must correct. This explanation has value, but it is incomplete. Depression is not only chemical; it is behavioral, social, sensory, and deeply embodied. It affects how people move through space, how they relate to their own bodies, how they connect with others, and how they experience pleasure. That is why one of the most quietly powerful tools against depression does not come in a pill bottle—it comes through movement, rhythm, and human connection. Dancing, long dismissed as entertainment or leisure, has emerged in serious scientific research as a robust, evidence-based intervention for depression, sometimes matching or even outperforming antidepressant medications in r...
When Humanity Outweighed Life: The Moment Human-Made Matter Overtook Earth’s Living World
Earth, Nature, World, World News

When Humanity Outweighed Life: The Moment Human-Made Matter Overtook Earth’s Living World

For most of Earth’s 4.5-billion-year history, life shaped the planet slowly. Forests rose, oceans filled with microscopic organisms, animals evolved and vanished, and biomass—the total weight of all living things—remained the dominant physical presence on the surface of the planet. Even the most dramatic natural events rarely altered that balance for long. Then, quietly, without a single dramatic headline or global announcement, something unprecedented happened. Around the year 2020, humanity crossed a threshold no species had ever crossed before. The total mass of human-produced materials—concrete, steel, asphalt, bricks, glass, plastics, metals, and infrastructure—surpassed the dry weight of all living biomass on Earth. For the first time in planetary history, what humans have built n...
Is Paganism Returning? Understanding the Modern Revival of Ancient Beliefs
Culture and Anthropology

Is Paganism Returning? Understanding the Modern Revival of Ancient Beliefs

In the last decade, interest in paganism and nature-rooted spiritualities has grown noticeably across North America, Europe, and parts of Asia and Latin America. What was once seen as fringe or antiquarian has increasingly stepped into mainstream culture—not as a single unified religion, but as a broad resurgence of pre-industrial spiritual sensibilities. The question isn’t just “Is paganism returning?” It’s “What does that return look like, and why now?” To answer that, we need to separate three related but distinct trends: The growth of modern pagan and earth-based spiritual movements The broader cultural shift toward spirituality outside traditional religious institutions A deeper psychological reaction to modern life All three have contributed to what many ...
Postpartum Depression: The Silent Crisis That Begins After “Happily Ever After”
Mental Health

Postpartum Depression: The Silent Crisis That Begins After “Happily Ever After”

Postpartum depression does not arrive loudly. It does not announce itself with dramatic breakdowns or obvious despair. More often, it slips in quietly, wrapped in exhaustion, guilt, numbness, and a sense that something fundamental has gone wrong at the very moment society insists everything should feel complete. For millions of women worldwide, the period following childbirth is not defined by joy or fulfillment, but by an emotional collapse they were never warned about—and often feel ashamed to admit. Postpartum depression is not rare, and it is not a weakness. It is a serious mental health condition rooted in biology, psychology, and social pressure. Yet it remains one of the most misunderstood and minimized experiences in modern medicine. When Motherhood Doesn’t Feel Like Moth...
Doctor Reveals the Actual Average Penis Size — And Why the Truth Matters More Than the Numbers
Health, Weird World

Doctor Reveals the Actual Average Penis Size — And Why the Truth Matters More Than the Numbers

For as long as men have talked to one another—often indirectly, awkwardly, or jokingly—penis size has been treated as a quiet benchmark of masculinity. It’s discussed in locker rooms without specifics, exaggerated in stories, distorted through jokes, and relentlessly amplified by pornography and pop culture. Over time, these influences have created a collective illusion: that most men are bigger than average, and that being “normal” somehow means falling short. Medical science tells a very different story. According to a large-scale global review and doctors who openly address body myths, the average penis size is significantly smaller than most men expect—and that revelation has less to do with measurements and more to do with mental health, confidence, and relationships. This isn’t ab...
Die, My Love: When Postpartum Depression Becomes a Psychological Landscape
Hollywood, Movies

Die, My Love: When Postpartum Depression Becomes a Psychological Landscape

Cinema has long explored madness, grief, and desire, but few films dare to sit inside the quiet, suffocating space that follows childbirth when joy is expected and despair arrives instead. Die, My Love does not approach motherhood as a sentimental transformation. It approaches it as a psychological rupture. Through its raw, unsettling lens, the film turns postpartum depression from a clinical term into a lived environment—one that breathes, isolates, and slowly consumes. Rather than explaining postpartum depression, Die, My Love immerses the viewer in it. The result is not comfort, but recognition. Motherhood Without the Myth The cultural script surrounding motherhood is rigid: fulfillment, bonding, instinctual love. Anything outside that narrative is treated as failure, ingra...
Nostalgia-Driven Trips: When Travel Becomes a Time Machine
Lifestyle, Travel

Nostalgia-Driven Trips: When Travel Becomes a Time Machine

There’s a certain kind of trip that doesn’t start with a destination. It starts with a feeling. A smell that hits you on a random afternoon—rain on hot pavement. The taste of a candy you forgot existed. A song you haven’t heard since school suddenly playing in a café. And without warning, your brain does that thing it’s terrifyingly good at: it brings back a whole version of you that you thought was gone. That’s the fuel behind nostalgia-driven travel—a growing style of trips where the real goal isn’t “seeing new places,” but revisiting old selves. Sometimes it’s literal: returning to the city you grew up in, the beach you went to every year, the village your grandparents spoke about like it was a sacred place. Sometimes it’s indirect: traveling to a movie location that felt like home, b...
Invisible Pain Day: The Battles We Don’t See and the Weight People Carry in Silence
Mental Health, World

Invisible Pain Day: The Battles We Don’t See and the Weight People Carry in Silence

There is a quiet kind of suffering that rarely makes headlines. It doesn’t announce itself with bandages, hospital beds, or visible scars. It walks among us every day, wearing familiar faces, answering emails, laughing at jokes, showing up to work, raising families, and functioning just well enough to avoid questions. This is invisible pain, and today—Invisible Pain Day—is a reminder of how deeply human it is, and how often it goes unnoticed. Invisible pain is not rare. It is not exceptional. It is woven into modern life so seamlessly that many people forget it exists at all—until they are carrying it themselves. Chronic illness without outward symptoms, depression hidden behind productivity, anxiety masked by humor, grief that lingers long after condolences stop, trauma that reshapes the...
Prehistoric Mystery: What Really Killed the Giant Insects?
Earth

Prehistoric Mystery: What Really Killed the Giant Insects?

The prehistoric world was a place of both wonder and terror. Towering ferns dominated the land, strange amphibians crawled through swamps, and colossal dragonflies with wingspans as wide as hawks ruled the skies. These giant insects, some growing far larger than anything alive today, were once among the most successful creatures on Earth. Yet, their reign ended mysteriously. What really killed these giants of the insect world? Scientists have debated this question for decades, and recent research is uncovering fascinating clues. In this article, we’ll explore the rise of giant insects, the environment that allowed them to thrive, and the theories behind their decline. By the end, you’ll understand why insects are much smaller today—and what their story reveals about evolution, survival, a...
Humanity’s Boldest Dream: The Concept of an Interstellar Generation Ship to Proxima Centauri B
Space

Humanity’s Boldest Dream: The Concept of an Interstellar Generation Ship to Proxima Centauri B

or centuries, humanity has looked to the stars and wondered: could we ever live on another world? While Mars and the Moon remain near-term goals, scientists and engineers are already sketching out visionary concepts that look far beyond our solar system. One of the most ambitious ideas is the interstellar generation ship—a massive spacecraft designed to carry thousands of people on a journey spanning decades or even centuries to reach another star. Recently, scientists unveiled a conceptual design for such a vessel, aimed at transporting up to 2,400 humans to Alpha Centauri, the nearest star system to Earth, specifically to Proxima Centauri B. This rocky exoplanet, orbiting in its star’s habitable zone, has long been a tantalizing target for interstellar exploration. Though still highly t...
A Lifeline for the Bees: How Pollen-Replacing Superfoods Could Save Global Pollinators
Agriculture, Nature, World News

A Lifeline for the Bees: How Pollen-Replacing Superfoods Could Save Global Pollinators

Honey bees are more than just honey producers. They are the unsung heroes of global agriculture, responsible for pollinating nearly one-third of the world’s crops—from almonds and apples to cucumbers and coffee. Without them, our diets would shrink dramatically, and food security would be at risk. Yet these vital pollinators are facing a silent crisis. Habitat loss, pesticides, climate change, and poor nutrition are driving bee populations toward decline, raising alarms about their potential extinction. Now, scientists are turning to an innovative solution: a pollen-replacing superfood designed specifically to nourish and sustain honey bee colonies. This breakthrough could represent a turning point in the battle to stabilize bee populations and safeguard ecosystems. The Role of P...
Memories Beyond Time: A Deist Reflection on Creation and Existence
Science

Memories Beyond Time: A Deist Reflection on Creation and Existence

There are moments when memory defies chronology. A distant experience from years ago suddenly appears in the mind, alive with all the freshness of the present. What seemed buried in the past returns uninvited, as if it had never truly left. In that instant, time loses its authority; the memory has escaped its cage. This everyday phenomenon hints at a deeper philosophical truth: time is not always the measure of reality. Some things—like memory, meaning, and creation—may exist outside its flow. Memory as a Window Beyond Time A memory from eight years ago may strike us as vividly as something that happened yesterday. Why? Because memory is not just a record of the past; it is a presence that reappears. Unlike the clock, which measures continuous moments, memory collapses distance....
The Hidden Cost of Control: Why Focusing on the Uncontrollable Damages Health
Health

The Hidden Cost of Control: Why Focusing on the Uncontrollable Damages Health

Every day, life presents us with situations that slip beyond our influence: the weather, the economy, the actions of others, global events. Yet, many people devote mental energy and emotional weight to exactly these things. The result? Stress, anxiety, and declining health. The truth is simple but powerful: when we focus on what lies outside our control, we enter into a struggle we cannot win. Understanding this truth—and learning to shift our attention—can be one of the most liberating steps toward better well-being. The Illusion of Control Psychologists describe something called the illusion of control—our tendency to overestimate our ability to influence outcomes. While this illusion can sometimes motivate us, it often traps us in cycles of frustration. We can’t stop...
Sea Breeze and Land Breeze: Nature’s Daily Wind Cycle
Earth, Nature

Sea Breeze and Land Breeze: Nature’s Daily Wind Cycle

If you have ever stood on a beach, you may have noticed that the wind feels different during the day compared to at night. This regular change in wind direction is a natural phenomenon caused by temperature differences between land and water. Known as sea breeze and land breeze, it is one of the most important local wind systems in coastal areas, influencing weather, climate, and even human comfort. Why Does It Happen? The core reason lies in a simple fact: land and water heat and cool at different rates. Land heats up quickly during the day but also loses heat quickly at night. Water warms more slowly but retains its heat longer, cooling down gradually. This difference in heating and cooling creates variations in air temperature and air pressure, which drive...
Quantum Entanglement: The Invisible Thread Connecting Particles Across Galaxies
Science

Quantum Entanglement: The Invisible Thread Connecting Particles Across Galaxies

Imagine two particles, separated by billions of light-years, yet somehow still connected in a way that makes them behave as one. When something happens to one particle, the other reacts instantly, no matter the distance. This phenomenon—quantum entanglement—is one of the strangest and most fascinating discoveries in physics. It challenges our understanding of space, time, and reality itself. As Albert Einstein once said with skepticism, it is “spooky action at a distance.” And yet, countless experiments have shown that entanglement is not only real but may also be one of the keys to unlocking the mysteries of the universe. What Is Quantum Entanglement? At its core, quantum entanglement happens when two particles interact in such a way that their states become linked. If...