After small social blunders, laughing at yourself may land better than visible embarrassment, researchers say.
New research reveals 76% of workers avoid joking around bosses. Here's how humor at work is changing and how to navigate it for your career.
Prankster Anatoly gives his victims a false sense of superiority before turning the tables. Humbled by his strength, they ...
Sanders became a Fort Worth police officer on Feb. 24, 1964. He later claimed that when he first applied for the job, he hadn ...
BJ Odom was never supposed to live past his teenage years. Yet here he is, 70 years old, still breathing and still making people laugh.
In "Grow Your Business," a small business owner uses LinkedIn to run her company while her employees spend their lunch break sparring with robot vacuums. In "Cat," an employee uses LinkedIn Premium to ...
Katelyn is a writer with CNET covering artificial intelligence, including chatbots, image and video generators. Her work explores how new AI technology is infiltrating our lives, shaping the content ...
The late actress Catherine O'Hara had advised, "There is nothing sexier than laughing together." Her recommendation is risk-free and financially free, yet worth hundreds of dollars. Our country is ...
Instructors cracking a joke here and there could make students feel better about the class as a whole, according to new research from the University of Georgia published in the Journal of Microbiology ...
American workers adopted artificial intelligence into their work lives at a remarkable pace over the past few years, according to a new poll. Some 12% of employed adults say they use AI daily in their ...