How to cope with heartbreak during the holidays

A person holds a paper heart with a rip down the middle, with a Christmas tree in the background.

It was Christmas Day night and I couldn’t sleep. Not through excitement for continued Twixmas celebrations, but because I knew I had a difficult and almost certainly heartbreaking conversation ahead of me.

My self-esteem was at an all time low and a situationship of mine had developed into an emotionally torturous interaction. Sex with a good friend meant catching unreciprocated feelings. Despite the friendship, he’d gone quiet and ghosted me during a winter lockdown. It felt terrible. Rotating all possibilities, my mind searched for answers during this period of silence. My inner critic used the situation as a stick to beat me with, evidence of all my shortcomings, proof that I was deficient in other people’s eyes (not just my own).

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When he got back in touch to search for guilt absolution, to make sure his reputation remained unscathed in our friendship group, I was confused by his intentions and, I’ll admit, I hoped he’d had a change of heart. Things came to a long overdue head as I sat next to my parents’ Christmas tree sipping a gin and tonic — I knew I needed to end my misery and ask him what he wanted from me. Deep down, I realised the answer possibly wasn’t going to be what my heart wanted, but I needed to be set free from this waiting room of sorrow. My anxiety was mounting to unbearable levels and I knew I couldn’t put off the conversation any longer. So, on Boxing Day morning, I rolled over in bed and awoke to a message from him, apologising yet again for his behaviour. I sighed in recognition of what I needed to do.

After I’d sent the dreaded message, I sat in silence waiting for the inevitable. When his message arrived, the contents weren’t surprising to me — but that didn’t make it any less painful. And though I was free from the turmoil, that’s when anxiety gave way to heartbreak, a feeling that wasn’t exactly what I’d hoped to be dealing with over Christmas, a time of year I usually love. A neverending stream of tears rolled down my face as I sat watching my favourite films with my family. My mum looked at me with pity and concern, as I muffled tragic sniffs on the sofa. It was, as you can imagine, not a great time. And no amount of pigs in blankets or Terry’s Chocolate Oranges would make me feel better (though you can’t say I didn’t try!).


Heartbreak, sadly, doesn’t take a day off when it’s a special occasion.

Heartbreak, sadly, doesn’t take a day off when it’s a special occasion. And the holidays can be particularly difficult when you’re in the throes of a breakup, or the ending of a situationship. As writer Annie Lord, author of Notes On Heartbreak, tells me, “It’s pretty horrible because everyone’s so loved up during Christmas.”

“There are couples everywhere, holding hands at the Christmas markets, looking for rings in shops, and when you turn on the TV they’re still there, kissing in cozy cottages in The Holiday, declaring their love in Love Actually. I think the coldness makes people want to cozy up with someone they love,” she says.

Just because it’s hard doesn’t mean you have to put up with it, though. Mashable spoke to psychotherapists for tips on coping with heartbreak during the holidays.

Limit your time on social media

If there’s anything guaranteed to make you want to throw your phone at the wall, it’s seeing endless pics of engagement rings with the caption “so, this happened!” You simply don’t need to see it right now.

Fiona Yassin, family psychotherapist and founder and clinical director of The Wave Clinic, says it’s a good idea to limit your social media use so you’re not bombarded with what your friends and internet pals are up to during this period. “When we see others having fun on social media and we feel we are not, it can trigger negative emotions like loneliness and isolation,” says Yassin.

Here are some tips on how to limit your Instagram usage and TikTok usage.

Give yourself time to grieve

The holidays are a time that champions joy. And that can be particularly challenging when you feel, well, pretty rotten. Giving yourself permission to feel sad is important in validating the difficult emotions you’ll be (understandably!) feeling during this time.


“Don’t feel like you’re ruining other people’s good time.”

Dr. Elena Touroni, a consultant psychologist and co-founder of The Chelsea Psychology Clinic, says, “A big break up is comparable to grief, particularly if that person was very embedded in your life. Instead of rushing out to date again and trying to ‘get over it,’ be gentle with yourself and give yourself time and space to process the loss.”

Also, don’t feel bad for feeling sad. “Don’t feel like you’re ruining other people’s good time,” author Lord says. “You are not a burden. It’s an honour to be able to be there for people when they need it.”

If you’ve been ghosted, Mashable has some tips on how to move on.

Surround yourself with people you love

Heartbreak is a universal emotion and chances are, everyone around you right now will have gone through it at some point in their life. Opening up to others about what you’re going through can make you feel less alone.

“Speak to your parents or any older members of your family. Most of the time they have been through this before and they survived, knowing this can give you hope,” says Lord. “Christmas means you’re often surrounded by your family and friends. Celebrate the love you get from them, a love that is often less intense or glamorous, but a lot more enduring than romantic love.”

Going home or to safe spaces can sometimes give you an opportunity to reconnect with your younger self. “Going home can be quite grounding,” she adds. “You’re surrounded by all this stuff from when you were younger which can put things into perspective. I remember finding an old diary of mine where I was crying over a guy and though I was now upset about another one, I could still see that I was dealing with it in a much better way.”

Not everyone has access to a support network at this time of year. If your heartbreak is impacting your mental health or if you’re experiencing a mental health crisis, please talk to somebody.

You can reach the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 988; the Trans Lifeline at 877-565-8860; or the Trevor Project at 866-488-7386. Text “START” to Crisis Text Line at 741-741. Contact the NAMI HelpLine at 1-800-950-NAMI, Monday through Friday from 10:00 a.m. – 10:00 p.m. ET, or email info@nami.org. If you’re based in the UK, contact the Samaritans (116 123). If you don’t like the phone, consider using the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline Chat at crisischat.org. Here is a list of international resources.

Try some grounding techniques

As a practical daily means to cope with heartbreak, Yassin recommends equipping yourself with some grounding techniques, which can be helpful for people to manage and work through emotions they wish they weren’t feeling. Grounding techniques are exercises or activities that help you refocus on what’s happening in the present moment, distracting yourself from triggers, anxious feelings, or difficult emotions.

“By using grounding techniques, we are not saying that we will not deal with or process the emotions and sensations, but we are saying that right now, at this moment, this is not going to intrude in what I’m doing,” says Yassin. “Walking can be really good to bring you back into the moment. When we walk and put one foot in front of the other we are actually stimulating both sides of the brain in a process called Bilateral Stimulation (BLS) which can feel soothing for some.” Here are six free grounding meditations to help you get started.

Repetitive activities like cross-stitch or crochet can have a soothing effect for some, while others like to keep themselves in motion. “Journaling or watching a good movie can also be effective grounding techniques,” says Yassin. Touroni also recommends journaling as it “helps get difficult thoughts and feelings down on paper so you can gain greater clarity and a new perspective.” Check out Mashable’s non-intimidating guide to journaling to get started.

Look after your physical needs

When you’re feeling low, it can be difficult to muster the energy to look after ourselves. Taking care of your immediate physical needs can be a way of making yourself feel a little better, despite not being able to shift the difficult emotions that come with heartbreak. Make sure you’re hydrated, eating, and getting plenty of rest.

“Make sure you’re doing activities that keep you both physically and mentally healthy e.g. regular exercise, eating healthy, nutritious meals etc.,” Touroni says. “Avoid turning to substances to numb any difficult thoughts and feelings. They might provide relief in the short-term but are likely to make things harder in the long run.”

Can’t sleep? Here are some tips on tangible things you can do to help you drift off.

Don’t rush into another relationship

Heartbreak can also be accompanied with feelings of panic, especially if you have been contending with anxious thoughts about “running out of time.” If you can resist some of these feelings and try to reassure that anxious voice in your head, know that you are allowed to take time to heal, and that you are enough on your own.

Yassir advises against rushing into another relationship straight away— often referred to as a “rebound”. “People that rebound tend to be those who are already struggling around interpersonal relations and relationships. Build a relationship with yourself before having a relationship with someone else. It’s unlikely a rebound relationship will be healthy if you don’t give yourself the time and space to be able to work out what you’re feeling.”

Don’t read into their texts

As the queen of reading-into-text-messages, I feel highly qualified in saying that it’s completely natural to want to search for signs of hope in any contact you might have had from the heartbreak-inflicter. But this habit can also prolong your agony and make it difficult to accept what’s really happening.


“If they message you ‘Happy Christmas’ don’t start thinking it signals anything.”

“If they message you ‘Happy Christmas’ don’t start thinking it signals anything,” says Lord. “They’re probably just trying to be polite. At the same time if you’re the one who ended the relationship don’t send a text, it will confuse your ex.”

A good rule of thumb is to assume that there is never a hidden meaning to their messages. If a person wants something badly enough, they’ll find a way to make sure their meaning and intention are fully understood. Tell yourself that if they want to communicate something important, they will likely do so in an explicit manner.

Cut yourself some slack

When you’re feeling sad, the last thing you need is another voice inside your head telling you what a misery you are. Your inner critic can rear their annoying head during this time to convince you that you’re bringing down the vibe, but most people understand that heartbreak truly is the worst.

“Be really kind to yourself,” advises Lord. “Don’t get annoyed if you don’t get off the sofa for the entire day, that’s what Christmas is for and everyone’s doing it too. It might feel like in doing these things you’re going backward, but you’re not you’re getting somewhere because stewing and feeling miserable is all part of the process.”

Talk to someone

If you’re really struggling, don’t suffer in silence. Speak to a mental health professional if you can. Shout is a 24/7 free mental health service in the UK (Text SHOUT to 85258). If you’re in the U.S., text “START” to Crisis Text Line at 741-741.

“If you find yourself stuck in the same recurring relationship patterns, it could be a sign to dig a little deeper,” Touroni advises. “Negative early life experiences can sometimes impact the types of relationships we form — and choose —in later life. If you suspect there are things in your past that you haven’t dealt with, therapy is a great place to start this process.”

Lean on your support network and don’t bottle up your feelings. “If you’re struggling, reach out to friends and family,” Touroni adds. “These are the moments when we need their support the most, and the right people will want to be there for you.”

If you’re nursing a bruised or shattered heart this Christmas, know that you’re not alone. And know that it won’t be forever. Take care of yourself.

The best early Boxing Day deals for 2022

Online Shopping

BEST LAPTOP DEALS

  • HP Pavilion Plus 14, 12th Gen Intel Core i5, 16GB RAM, 512GB SSDA$1,279 (was $1,599, 20% off)

  • Lenovo Yoga Slim 7i Pro Laptop, 14”, Intel Core i7-11370H, 16GB RAM, 512GB SSDA$1,499 (was $1,999, 25% off)

  • Lenovo Ideapad Duet ChromebookA$381.74 (was $539, 29% off)

  • Lenovo Legion 5, AMD Ryzen 7 6800H, 16GB RAM, 512GB SSD, RTX 3050TiA$2,199 (was $2,474.10. 11% off)

  • Razer Blade 14, AMD Ryzen 9 6900HX, RTX 3070 Ti, 16GB DDR5, 1TB SSD – A$2,999 (was $4,499, 33% off)

  • 2022 Apple MacBook Air Laptop with M2 chipA$2,174 (was $2,349, 7% off)

BEST HEADPHONE AND SPEAKER DEALS

  • Sony WF-1000XM4 Truly Wireless Noise Cancelling EarbudsA$298 (was $449, 34% off)

  • Sony WH1000XM4 Noise Canceling Wireless HeadphonesA$438 (was $549, 20% off)

  • Bose Noise Cancelling Headphones 700A$369 (was $599.95, 38% off)

  • Ultimate Ears Boom 3A$145 (was $229, 37% off)

  • JBL FLIP 6 Portable Waterproof SpeakerA$127 (was $169.95, 25% off)

BEST WEARABLE TECH DEALS

  • Fitbit Versa 3A$197 (was $399.95, 51% off)

  • Fitbit Charge 5 + Fitbit PremiumA$189 (was $269.95, 30% off)

  • Samsung Galaxy Watch 5 LTEA$545 (was $649, 16% off)

  • Huawei Watch GT 3 A$254.50 (was $403.30, 37% off)

  • Huawei Watch GT 3 ProA$567 (was $899, 37% off)

BEST TV AND HOME CINEMA DEALS

  • Sony 75″ X85K 4K HDR LED TVA$2,488 (was $3,495, 29% off)

  • Sony 55″ X85J 4K UHD HDR TVA$1,495 (was $1,799, 17% off)

  • Sony 32″ W830K HD LED HDR TVA$639 (was $749, 15% off)

  • TCL 43″ P735 QUHD 4K TVA$495 (was $599, 17% off)

BEST ROBOT VACUUM DEALS

  • ECOVACS DEEBOT N8 Robot Vacuum CleanerA$399 (was $999, 60% off)

  • ECOVACS DEEBOT N8+ 3-in-1 Robot Vacuum CleanerA$699 (was $1,499, 53% off)

  • ECOVACS Deebot X1 Omni Robot Vacuum CleanerA$2,499 (was $2,999, 17% off)

  • iRobot Roomba i7+ Robot VacuumA$1,149 (was $1,899, 39% off)

  • iRobot Roomba i3 Robot VacuumA$719 (was $999, 28% off)

  • Eufy RoboVac 25CA$299 (was $399.95, 25% off)

  • Eufy Boost IQ RoboVac 11S Slim – A$235 (was $399.95, 41% off)

BEST AMAZON DEALS

  • Echo Show 5 A$59 (was $119, 50% off)

  • Amazon Echo Dot (3rd Gen) Smart Speaker with AlexaA$19 (was $59, 68% off)

  • Amazon Echo Show 8 (2nd Gen)A$99 (was $199, 50% off)

  • Fire TV Stick 4K MaxA$49 (was $99, 51% off)

  • Ring Stick Up Cam Battery 3 packA$389 (was $470, 19% off)

  • Ring Video Doorbell (2nd Gen)A$119 (was $149, 20% off)

BEST SEX TOY DEALS

  • Lovense Lush 2 Pink App Controlled Rechargeable Love Egg VibratorA$157.46 (was $224.95, 30% off)

  • Mantric Rechargeable Wand VibratorA$43.98 (was $109.95, 60% off)

  • Lovehoney Magic Bullet 10 Function Bullet VibratorA$12.47 (was $24.95, 50% off)

  • BASICS Slimline Realistic Dildo Vibrator 8 InchA$20.97 (was $34.95, 40% off) 

  • Lovehoney Oh! Kama Sutra Playing CardsA$9.06 (was $12.95, 30% off)

BEST GAMING DEALS

  • Nintendo Switch ConsoleA$399 (was $469, 15% off)

  • Nintendo Switch SportsA$54 (was $69.95, 23% off)

  • Just Dance 2023 – Nintendo SwitchA$44 (was $79.95, 45% off)

  • Xbox Series S ConsoleA$399 (was $499, 20% off)

  • Xbox Series X/S Wireless ControllerA$69 (was $89.95, 23% off)

  • PlayStation 5 Console – God of War Ragnarok BundleA$888

  • DualSense Wireless Controller – PlayStation 5A$69 (was $109.95, 37% off)

BEST SECURITY AND VPN DEALS

  • McAfee Antivirus Plus 2-year plan (5 devices)A$64.97 per year (save $105)

  • NordVPN 2-year planA$5.99/mo + 3 months free (63% off)

  • ExpressVPN 1-year planA$6.67/mo + 3 months free (save $55.45. 49% off)

  • Private Internet Access 2-year planA$2.68/mo + 4 months free (83% off)

Christmas Day has come and gone, and that means it’s time to snag a present for yourself (for cheap) in Australia’s infamous Boxing Day Sales. And, now that it’s 2022, forget the old days of traveling to the inner city to wade through huge crowds. You can score the best Boxing Day deals online, right now! 

What is Boxing Day?

Boxing Day is the day after Christmas (December 26), and is a public holiday in Australia. Boxing Day Sales have been a thing in Australia since the 1980s. It was a chance for retailers to quickly sell off their excess inventory from the Christmas season, and traditionally involved a trip into the city, hours of queuing and navigating big crowds. Thankfully, these days you can save yourself a trip and snag a great Boxing Day deal online. 

When is Boxing Day in 2022?

Boxing Day falls on Monday, December 26, the day after Christmas (December 25). However, early deals begin to pop up throughout this week leading up to Christmas, and stay online the week following. For example, Amazon Australia’s early Boxing Day deals have already kicked off.

What are the best items to buy on Boxing Day?

The Boxing Day Sales are a great time to score sizable discounts on big-ticket items like laptops, Hi-Fi, consoles and TVs. Online tech retailers will getting rid of stock to make space for the 2023 season, so keep an eye on stores like Amazon, The Good Guys, Bing Lee and Ebay. It’s also worth keeping an eye out specifically for the following products: 

  • Appliances: Expect tech and white good retailers like The Good Guys and Bing Lee to go big this Boxing Day, dropping prices on pretty much all stock. This means it’s a great time to find good deals on big items like fridges, freezers, washing machines, as well as the small ones like kettles, toasters and more. 

  • Games consoles: Console availability in Australia has been a challenge over the past few years, but things have definitely improved the last few months with PS5s and Xbox Series Xs readily available on Amazon and in gaming retailers. Boxing Day will no doubt bring some great prices on console accessories and games, and even on consoles if we’re lucky! 

  • Smartphones: Amazon offers some pretty impressive deals on smartphones the whole year around, and some of these prices should be even lower for Boxing Day.

  • Toys: While many of the in-demand toys will be sold out from Christmas, any left over will be up for grabs! We recommend checking out Amazon for the best deals on Lego, especially for the massively popular Star Wars and Harry Potter sets.

  • TVs: We expect all of the leading retailers to offer some hefty deals on remaining TV stock from top brands like Samsung, Hisense, Sony, LG and Panasonic. It’s worth shopping around for the best TV deals, but you’ll likely have the best chances on The Good Guys, Bing Lee or Kogan.

  • Security and VPNs: Off the back of the recent Black Friday and Cyber Monday deals, security companies will again be dropping their prices for Boxing Day – especially to Australians. If you need to renew your cybersecurity or VPN for the upcoming year, now is a great time.

Will Ferrell makes a dramatic festive return to ‘Hot Ones’, cries through the pain

A man eats a chicken wing while closing his eyes in apparent discomfort.

Taking on First We Feast’s Hot Ones challenge has become something of a celebrity right of passage. Nobody exactly enjoys it, but it’s certainly a box to tick off.

What most people probably wouldn’t do is go back and take on the challenge for a second time — but then most people aren’t Will Ferrell.

In the clip above the actor takes on increasingly spicy wings while talking about his time as a mall Santa and his new movie Spirited, all while trying to hold back the tears.

ElonJet is back on Twitter, but now it has a 24-hour delay

Twitter Elon Musk

If you want to know where Elon Musk’s private jet is right now, you won’t find that info on Twitter, due to the company’s new policy that prevents posting a private person’s location in real time.

But now, if you really must, you can find out where Musk’s jet was exactly 24 hours ago.

Jack Sweeney, the student at University of Central Florida who was behind the original @ElonJet account (now banned), is back with @ElonJetNextDay.

SEE ALSO:

Elon Musk has again said he will step down as Twitter’s CEO

Unlike @ElonJet, which tracked the whereabouts of Musk’s private jet in real time, the new account does so with a 24-hour delay, thus possibly circumventing Twitter’s new anti-doxxing policy.

The latest tweet from the account, which is less than a day old, says that Musk’s plane landed in Oakland, California – yesterday.

Musk likely won’t be too happy about it, but he did recently say that “posting locations someone traveled to on a slightly delayed basis isn’t a safety problem” and is “ok.”

Twitter’s official policy on this forbids sharing “live location information, including information shared on Twitter directly or links to 3rd-party URL(s) of travel routes, actual physical location, or other identifying information that would reveal a person’s location, regardless if this information is publicly available.”

Sweeney originally launched @ElonJet two years ago, irking Musk, who called it a “personal safety risk.”

Despite saying that his “commitment to free speech extends even to not banning the account following my plane,” Musk however did ban Sweeney’s @ElonJet account after taking over Twitter, citing an incident with a “crazy stalker.” Musk’s Twitter also banned the accounts of a number of journalists who covered Sweeney’s story. At writing time, some of those journalists are still banned on Twitter for unclear reasons.

Elon Musk doesn’t understand creators. Twitter’s third-party link ban proves it.

Side profile of Elon Musk in a suit. Next to him are screenshots of two tweets, reading:

Last weekend, Twitter announced that it would “no longer allow free promotion of certain social media platforms.” After pushback, it ditched the ban and deleted all evidence of it. Elon Musk acknowledged the blunder with a simple tweet that read, “Going forward, there will be a vote for major policy changes. My apologies. Won’t happen again.” And then everyone moved on.

Everyone except for me, because I absolutely cannot stop thinking about it. 

The ban was so desperately short-sighted, so wildly out of touch with the realities of social media, that I still can’t believe how bad of a call it was. So let’s break it down, shall we?

First things first: What did the ban policy say?

The first line of the policy is deceptively rational: “We will remove accounts created solely for the purpose of promoting other social platforms.” This makes sense, since these types of accounts could essentially be flagged as spam anyway. But then things got weird, because the policy also stated that Twitter would not allow “content that contains links or usernames for the following platforms: Facebook, Instagram, Mastodon, Truth Social, Tribel, Nostr and Post.”

It described a violation of the ban as “linking out (i.e. using URLs) […] or providing your handle without a URL [to] Facebook, Instagram, Mastodon, Truth Social, Tribel, Post and Nostr” and 3rd-party aggregators like linktr.ee and Ink.bio “at both the Tweet level and the account level.” It gave the following examples:

  • “follow me @username on Instagram”

  • “username@mastodon.social”

  • “check out my profile on Facebook – facebook.com/username”

OK got it, so why is this policy so idiotic (and what’s the real reason for the ban)?

Musk is scared of losing Twitter users to competitors, and this ban was a desperate bid to stem the bleed. The list of prohibited platforms did not include video-based platforms like YouTube and TikTok for a reason: Musk was mostly concerned with cutting off users from competing text and photo platforms.

The thing is, policies like this fail because they don’t reflect how social media works as a conduit for people to share things and connect with others.

On top of that, the policy betrays a deep misunderstanding of the problems plaguing Twitter at this moment. Many people definitely want to leave or already have left, whether because of Musk’s wacky leadership or the rise in hate speech or for another reason. But there have been dozens of people on my timeline saying things like “if this website dies, see you on [other social media site]” and sharing their Mastodon usernames, for example. But they always say “if this platform dies” or “just in case things get worse here on Twitter.”

So, sure, some people definitely want to leave. But it would seem that others don’t want to leave as much as they want the site to be better. And instead of addressing the root issues of why people think the site may be dying, Musk and his staff scrambled to weaken the healthy competition that challenges them to actually work hard to make Twitter a place where people willingly want to stay.

Why does it matter so much that this ban would directly affect creators?

Is much of Twitter a churning cesspool of negativity and misinformation? Yeah. It’s also a place for artists, musicians, photographers, comedians, writers, YouTubers, and other creators to share work that keeps the website from burning itself up. Some of them have built businesses and careers on the backs of their Twitter followings, but it’s hard to make money with the limited monetization opportunities the platform has available. That means these creators must diversify across other platforms and projects to survive. And how do they promote those platforms and projects? By linking out to them or creating linktr.ee and Ink.bio pages to online shops or affiliate links. To cut creators off from their ability to promote themselves on Twitter is to cut them off from their livelihoods. 

On Sunday, Musk tweeted this about the ban: “No more relentless free advertising of competitors. No traditional publisher allows this and neither will Twitter.” So, first of all, I have no idea what traditional publisher subsists on almost 100 percent user-generated content like Twitter does, so the comparison is ridiculous. But more importantly, Musk is making it extra clear that he is missing the point. People aren’t linking to Facebook to give Meta a little boost; they’re linking to Facebook to support their own personal or business pages on the platform.

Creators cannot subsist on Twitter popularity alone, and they will happily leave a platform that doesn’t pay them for one that does. And that’s the most idiotic element of the ban: Instead of making Twitter better, it alienates everyone that does.

The 14 most WTF TV moments of 2022

Composite image of a fantasy king wearing a mask, an office worker looking dejected, a man in a sunset looking shocked, and a woman in a beautiful dress looking distraught

It’s been a long, stressful, magical year of television, with standout episodes and both new and returning favorites keeping us glued to our couches. And it’s been an especially rich year for moments that made us wonder what the hell we just watched.

Dodging TV spoilers on social media can feel like a full time job sometimes, but it’s worth it when a show builds up to a huge reveal, stunning set-piece, or narrative curveball, and we get to experience the full impact of a surprising or shocking moment. Sometimes it’s a death we never saw coming, even as we braced ourselves for bad news; sometimes it’s an unhinged visual fever dream or dance sequence; it could be a surprise cameo, a season-long slow shudder, or just a sandwich filling too strange not to try. In no particular order, please join us as we relive some of 2022’s most surreal, surprising, and suggestive TV moments.

SEE ALSO:

The 20 best TV episodes of 2022

1. The waffle party (Severance)

An office worker in a yellow shirt sits in a chair looking dejected


Credit: Apple TV+

We heard about the waffle party perk all season-long on Severance, but absolutely nothing could have prepared us for the truth. Employees are taken to the replica of Lumon founder Kier Eagan’s house deep inside the complex, where they eat a plate of waffles that look fine but not amazing. They then have a Kier Eagan-themed sex party complete with a Kier mask, lingeried individuals dressed as Kier’s Four Tempers, and a cat o’ nine tails bearing the name of each of Kier’s nine core principles. In a show full of WTF moments, this strange combination of workplace rewards, cultish corporate devotion, and sexual gratification takes the cake — or, should I say, the waffle. — Belen Edwards, Entertainment Reporter

2. Tanya’s fate (The White Lotus)

A man and a woman at the opera, looking serious in the dark.


Credit: Courtesy of HBO

We’ve come to expect a lot of insanity from The White Lotus — Suitcase pooping! Possible incest! Portia’s wardrobe! Still, nothing could have prepared me for Tanya McQuoid’s (Jennifer Coolidge’s) yacht shootout in the Season 2 finale. One moment, Coolidge is mowing down a group of murderous gays with a mafia lackey’s gun. The next, she’s struggling to get off the murder yacht only to fall, hit her head on her escape boat, and drown. In terms of ways to go, this is just horrifying enough to be tragic and just stupid enough to be weirdly funny. But perhaps the most “WTF”-inducing element of all this is that White Lotus creator Mike White has robbed us of another season of Jennifer Coolidge. How dare he! — B.E.

3. The Doctor regenerates (Doctor Who)

A man stands in front of a phone booth, aka The Tardis, looking confused and staring at his hands.


Credit: BBC Studios

Back in May, returning Doctor Who showrunner Russell T Davies revealed Sex Education star Ncuti Gatwa was to be the next new face of the Time Lord in the TARDIS. He would start after 13th Doctor Jodie Whittaker exited the show in a special feature length episode in November to mark the BBC’s 100th birthday. Naturally, you assumed this meant Jodie would regenerate into Ncuti this November. But RTD got us all: He never once, in that May-November gap, said that Ncuti would be the 14th Doctor. He said he was a new face, not the next face. Result: mouths agape around the world in November when Whittaker regenerated, in a blaze of rainbow light, into … David Tennant, the 10th and now 14th Doctor. Who, with his signature line — “What? What? What?” — was clearly just as surprised as we were. 

Then came the coup de grace: a trailer for next November’s Doctor Who specials, featuring 15th Doctor Gatwa also speaking for us all: “Will someone tell me what the hell is going on?” The entire Who-loving world, down to the most casual fan of this most popular modern Doctor, can find their brain exploding with questions that won’t be answered for a year. — Chris Taylor, Senior Editor

4. Bruce Wayne brings his parents back as zombies (Harley Quinn)

HBO Max’s animated romp has been packed with sex, action, and mayhem since its start. But in its third season, Harley Quinn went hard with Batman’s orphan trauma. Not only did this outrageous cartoon usher us into his mind, filled with Crime Alleys, slaughtered parents, and those doomed strands of pearls, but also it made Bruce Wayne the seed of a carnage-sprouting finale. It all began with his twisted need to bring Thomas and Martha Wayne back from the dead. A bit of kidnapping, theft, weird science, and deep denial culminated in a plant-based zombie uprising that threatened to turn Gotham into the world’s weirdest and deadliest forest. In a season full of WTF moments, a giddy superhero introducing his half-tree, half-undead parents to a room full of friends and hostages definitely came out on top. — Kristy Puchko, Film Editor

5. Tampongate (The Crown)

A man in a suit waves at a crowd


Credit: Netflix

One of the biggest royal scandals of The Crown Season 5 (and the ’90s) was included almost word for close-up word. Yes, we’re talking about Tampongate, in which Prince Charles (Dominic West) and Camilla Parker Bowles’ (Olivia Williams’) private, saucy phone calls were recorded and sold to the Daily Mirror in 1993 the heir’s affair was out. Without kink-shaming anyone, just try and “feel your way along” through these scenes (sorry) represented in The Crown episode 5. The conversation runs twice, notably in full when the transcripts are published — and here’s where it gets, as Princess Anne unforgivably calls it, “gynecological.” As the camera gets right up close on West’s mouth, the pair utter the infamous Tampax-related lines as the scene cuts to various royals reading their intimate conversation on the front page — including the Queen Mum herself.

“God, I wish I could just live inside your trousers or something. It would be so much easier.”

“What are you going to turn into, a pair of knickers?”

“You’re a complete idiot. What a wonderful idea.”

“Or, God forbid, a Tampax, just my luck.”

All tampons aside, the scene certainly hits different in 2022 considering conversations around privacy and press intrusion have evolved since “Camillagate” — not to mention that Charles is now, y’know, the actual King. — Shannon Connellan, U.K. Editor

SEE ALSO:

We need to talk about Princess Diana’s revenge dress in ‘The Crown’ Season 5

6. Viserys rotting to death (House of the Dragon)

A medieval-fantasy king hunches in front of a throne made of sharp blades.


Credit: Ollie Upton/HBO

House of the Dragon gave us many memorable deaths, but none were as horrifying — or as drawn-out — as that of King Viserys Targaryen. A small cut from the Iron Throne leads to a lost pinky, which spirals into a lost arm, which culminates in a face that’s all but rotted away. Thematically, it makes sense: The pressure of sitting on the Iron Throne is literally killing Viserys. Visually, it’s difficult to watch, and even harder to stomach. Good thing Viserys is able to accessorize with that gold mask though — it’s all about the silver linings. — B.E.

SEE ALSO:

‘House of the Dragon’ season 2 needs to answer these 7 burning questions

7. That devastatingly ordinary finale death (Yellowjackets)

Half the fun of Yellowjackets is wildly speculating about what happens between the 90s wilderness flashbacks we’ve seen so far and the trauma-chaos of the survivors’ present-day antics — and one of the biggest questions was “What happened to Jackie?” Ella Purnell’s spoiled, complicated golden girl hadn’t appeared in the present day yet, with her best friend Shauna (Sophie Nelisse/Melanie Lynskey) clearly now mourning her lost pal, and she was top of the list of candidates for Who Gets Eaten (Or At Least Ritually Sacrificed) First. But her true fate, revealed in the Season 1 finale, was far more prosaic, and all the more heartbreaking for it.

SEE ALSO:

‘Our dearest apologies’: ‘Yellowjackets’ showrunner answers our many, many finale questions

After a fight with Shauna, Jackie goes to sulk and sleep outside by the campfire instead of inside the cabin where the Yellowjackets are sheltering. An increasingly eerie sequence where they make up is revealed to be a dream, as Shauna starts awake to find that the first snow of a harsh Canadian winter has fallen in the night, and runs outside in frenzied panic to where Jackie has frozen to death. The sound of Nelisse’s screaming has stayed with me all year, and when the show returns in 2023, we’ll be just as focused on the brutality of teenage girl feelings as the foreshadowing of cannibalism. — Caitlin Welsh, Australian Editor

8. Any time Julia Garner opened her mouth as Anna Delvey (Inventing Anna)

Portraying scammer Anna Sorokin (aka Anna Delvey), the American actress delved tongue-first into an explicable tangle of accents. From the first bored but biting bit heard in the trailer, the public was fixated, spurring a slew of social media commentary, a Saturday Night Live sketch, and interviews where Garner was asked to explain her choices.

SEE ALSO:

Julia Garner breaks down her unusual hybrid accent in ‘Inventing Anna’

When Mashable interviewed voice coach Chris Neher about this distinctive Delvey delivery, his expert opinion defended Garner, saying, “If you’re pissing people off, you’re probably doing something right.” — K.P.

9. Better Call Saul goes out swinging for the fences

A man stands at a podium.


Credit: GREG LEWIS/AMC/SONY PICTURES TELEVISION

The final season of Better Call Saul was stuffed with so many WTF moments, it’s hard to pick just one. Lalo Salamanca shooting Howard Hamlin! Gus Fring shooting Lalo! The whole show fast-forwarding to Saul’s post-Breaking Bad identity, a Cinnabon manager at a Nebraska mall, much earlier than expected! A reluctant mall heist that felt like a meta-commentary on consumer culture! But all that was just laying groundwork for the series finale, which wrong-footed us one more time. Having been turned in by cat video-loving senior Marion (Carol Burnett), Saul plays the Feds like a violin. He whittles a 190-year sentence for those meth cartel crimes down to seven years in prison. 

And then…Saul blows up the plea deal along with his identity, reverting to plain old Jimmy McGill. He confesses his crimes in court, and gets 86 years. For what? Basically, for the chance to have one more cigarette in prison with his former partner, in crime and out of it, Kim Wexler. (Kim gets her own WTF episode: this legal mastermind is now living a hellishly mediocre life in Florida with a forgettable boyfriend and a job at a sprinkler company.) Has the amoral lawyer finally made good? Not quite; when Kim arrives for that smoke, we learn he’s sorta Saul again, king of the convicts thanks to a cult of personality. BCS was American meta-commentary all the way down to the last scene — and as a result, Breaking Bad now actually stands in its successor’s shadow. WTF? — C.T.

10. The liverwurst and marmalade sandwich (Only Murders in the Building)

If you had told me that a marmalade and liverwurst sandwich would have cracked the main mystery of Only Murders in the Building Season 2, or that I would then try said sandwich for science, I would have laughed in your face. However, both things did happen, and I can confirm that the liverwurst and marmalade combo is exactly as disgusting as it sounds.

SEE ALSO:

Is the liverwurst and marmalade sandwich from ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 2 as good as it sounds?

A salty-sweet nightmare, this sandwich may have helped catch a killer — but at what cost to our taste buds? — B.E.

11. Jen smashes the fourth wall (She-Hulk: Attorney At Law)

A piece of machinery labeled K.E.V.I.N.

Knowledge Enhanced Visual Interconnectivity Nexus, if you’re nasty.
Credit: Marvel Studios

At a tense moment in She-Hulk‘s mega-meta Season 1 finale, I thought my Apple TV had glitched out — the distinctive airy “bloop” of the back button sounded and the Disney+ menu screen appeared. But then Jen Walters (Tatiana Maslany), aka She-Hulk, climbed out of her eponymous show’s tile and down into that of docuseries Marvel Studios: Assembled, where she stormed into the writers’ room of her own show, beat up a bunch of Disney security guards, and confronted Marvel Studios boss Kevin Feige A.I. overlord K.E.V.I.N. about the tired old round-em-up-and-punch-em-out denouement set out for her. While demolishing the fourth wall is as much She-Hulk’s thing as it is Deadpool’s, it was also satisfying fanservice to see someone take “Kevin” to task for not letting superheroes actually fuck until Jen came on the scene. — C.W.

SEE ALSO:

Want to see more of Jennifer Walters and Matt Murdock? So does ‘She-Hulk’ director Kat Coiro.

12. Wednesday’s dance routine (Wednesday)

A young woman with dark hair in a black tulle dress dances.


Credit: Netflix

We all watched it and loved it. Wednesday’s dance routine in Wednesday’s fourth episode was one of the most “wtf but YES EXACTLY” scenes we’ve been blessed with on television this year. The routine, an homage to all things ‘80s goth, was a treasure chest of chaotic, camp goodness, inspiring a wave of TikToks and misguidedly convincing everyone that they too can pull it off. But I fear no one has yet been able to match the subtle details in Jenna Ortega’s shoulder shimmy, her deadpan stare, or even the physics behind her perfect arm swinging. Yes, Wednesday’s dance routine was an enigma of science, and for the first time ever, it had me wishing I was a goth raving in a dingy nightclub in the ‘80s. A WTF moment for its sheer camp spectacle, and a huge slay all the same. — Yasmeen Hamadeh, Entertainment Intern

13. Tommy Lee’s penis talks (Pam & Tommy)

A shirtless man with many tattoos throws his arms wide in a grand house.


Credit: Hulu

The raunchy docu-comedy series took audiences behind the scenes of one of the biggest celebrity scandals of ’90s: Pamela Anderson and Tommy Lee’s stolen sex tape. In jaw-dropping makeovers, Lily James and Sebastian Stan starred as the Baywatch bombshell and the rock n’ roll bad boy. But the scene-stealing cameo of this madcap mini-series was beloved comedic actor Jason Mantzoukas, who lent his voice to Lee’s grumbling penis, shown in full frontal. Inspired by Lee’s memoir Tommy Land, his unit acts as an intimate and foul-mouthed confidante, who provides surprisingly thoughtful advice about this whirlwind romance. In a year full of true crime-inspired shows, this wacky re-imagining stood out with a helpful hard-on. — K.P.

14. The Cow (Peacemaker)

There’s one accusation you could never level at James Gunn’s hilarious and surprisingly touching Peacemaker, which rescues John Cena’s character from the wreckage of Suicide Squad. From the first title sequence to its finale-opening joke about fart jokes, it ain’t exactly going for subtlety. But how do you top that? How you end a season that contained at least one major WTF moment per episode (including Peacemaker straight-up shooting his white supremacist dad between the eyes, and alien butterfly creatures entering the orifices of humans)? Simple: explode a giant alien “cow”, one that’s feeding all the tiny butterfly creatures, in as gross a way as possible. That’s what we get at the conclusion of “It’s Cow or Never,” Peacemaker‘s first (but blessedly not its last) finale episode. After a tender moment of connection with those suddenly sympathetic alien butterflies, outcast from their planet, the eponymous oaf fires one of his helmets into the belly of the cow. 

SEE ALSO:

8 ways ‘Peacemaker’ crushed the competition

But what makes it a legendary WTF moment is that the helmet is being worn by Peacemaker’s friend Adebeyo (Danielle Brooks) at the time. Adebeyo’s first words after falling from the belly of the beast, alongside a few thousand gallons of blood and guts: “What the fuck?” Not even the appearance of DC’s biggest superheroes in the denouement – not even a cameo from Aquaman (Jason Momoa) responding to the rumor that he has sex with fish – can top it. — C.T.

Researchers develop robot tentacles to pick up almost anything

tentacle grip bot

Harvard researchers have taken inspiration from jellyfish in order to create a robot that can pick up fragile and heavy things without the risk of damaging or dropping them. While gripping robots typically need feedback sensors and algorithms to avoid crushing objects, this new model uses curly balloon tentacles to safely envelop objects without any additional calculations. What else can we learn from the animal kingdom?

The very best digital gifts and subscriptions for when you can’t be there in person

Person working out in front of TV / wine on porch / potted plants / desserts / person designing on tablet

Knowing how to give a good virtual gift — good as in more personal than a Visa gift card — is a key life skill. Celebrating with loved ones IRL isn’t always in the cards, and it’s only human for a loved one’s birthday to slip your mind until the last minute day of every now and then.

Digital gifts, surprise deliveries, and subscription boxes not only offer a serotonin boost upon the initial unboxing, but are often the gifts that keep on giving. Free DoorDash deliveries or a recurring toothbrush replacement may be nothing more than a click and credit card charge to you, but they’ll think of you every time they don’t have to leave their couch.

Each of the following gifts is delivered online or with a recurring delivery to their door, which means you won’t have to rely so hard on timely shipping.

1. A streaming service membership

hbo max


Credit: hbo max

No one is gonna turn down new stuff to watch. If you’re gifting to someone who already has the classics like Netflix, Hulu, and Disney+, consider a newer or more niche streaming service:

  • Paramount+ (starting $4.99/month): One streaming platform they may not have yet is Paramount+. One of the newer services to the fold, it’s the go-to place for nostalgic Nickelodeon shows, reality icons like RuPaul’s Drag Race and Love Island US, plus access to live sports.

  • HBO Max (starting at $9.99/month): HBO Max is home to HBO originals like House of the Dragon and The White Lotus and non-HBO content like Abbott Elementary and Friends. It’s also the streaming service that many new movies hit first when they come out.

  • Shudder ($5.99/month): Horror junkies who have already tackled Netflix’s hit-or-miss collection will dig Shudder’s massive library of (actually good) scary movies only. Aside from a few classics like Hellraiser, a big chunk of the lineup is made up of films that probably weren’t in theaters — but that blow mainstream disappointments out of the water. Mashable’s Sam Haysom has some suggestions.

2. A Drizly gift card

a collection of liquor and wine bottles laying on a wooden table


Credit: drizly

Paying for someone to have alcohol delivered is always a great gift, but will likely be extra appreciated during an all-around shitty year. With Drizly (now owned by Uber), they can get beer, wine, or liquor delivered within 60 minutes or so. Maybe they’ll find that really specific IPA that they like or discover a new favorite wine.

3. A Walmart+ membership

a pair of Walmart grocery bags waiting by a door


Credit: walmart

Walmart’s Amazon Prime competitor might be a wiser choice for your friends who make way too many trips to Walmart each week. It’s another “free two-day shipping” situation, but Walmart+’s unlimited free delivery is still legit — especially for just $12.95 per month. (Some products are even eligible for same-day delivery.) Other in-person shopping perks include Scan & Go and fuel discounts. The Paramount+ Essential subscription is also included.

4. A Planta Premium subscription

screenshots of the Planta app


Credit: planta

Plant parents could use a babysitter sometimes — whether they’re nurturing their first plant ever or taking a stab at a feisty orchid. A paid Planta subscription ($7.99/month) goes past watering reminders: The app recruits their phone’s camera to diagnose sick plants and make suggestions based on the amount of light in the room. Planta Premium also offers fertilizing, misting, repotting, and pruning help.

5. A Milk Bar delivery

boxes topped with cakes and cookies


Credit: milk bar

Milk Bar’s multi-tiered confetti cakes are definitely prettier than any of us, but that’s what makes them such an iconic long-distance birthday gift. Loved ones with an eye for aesthetically pleasing foods would also appreciate a just-because tin of Milk Bar cookies or truffles. Prices range from $20 to $72, depending on location fees. Gluten-free options are available.

6. A YouTube Premium subscription

someone watching videos on their phone


Credit: youtube

Picture this: Falling asleep to ASMR or a binaural beats playlist *without* being jolted out of a trance by an ad. For $11.99/month, YouTube Premium bars ads and continues playback when the Youtube app is closed. YouTube shares membership fees with content creators who otherwise make money from viewers watching ads.

7. An arrangement from UrbanStems

pink and maroon plants in white vases


Credit: urban stems

Flowers as a last-minute or long-distance gift is only cliché if you let it be. Online flower delivery service UrbanStems puts a modern twist on its floral arrangements with thoughtfully-chosen color schemes and vases outside of traditional glass. The bouquets blow away anything you could find in the flower section at Whole Foods, but we’re particularly psyched on the farmhouse chic dried bouquets that’ll last for months. Prices range from $65 to $175.

8. A class from MasterClass

natalie portman


Credit: masterclass

If your loved one always talks about mastering a particular skill, there’s probably a MasterClass course for it. MasterClass doesn’t offer just any online courses — they’ll be coached by, well, famous people. Annie Leibovitz teaches photography, Jane Goodall teaches conservation, Gordon Ramsey teaches cooking, and more. With a subscription starting at $15/month, your loved one can choose from more than 100 instructors with new classes added every month.

9. A Jackbox Party Pack

Jackbox Party Pack games on billboards with sunset in background


Credit: Jackbox

On the rare occasion that they get tired of Mario Kart, anything from Jackbox is going to be a good-ass time. Jackbox’s on-screen games are played on a phone app and are perfect for long-distance Zoom hangs. (Only one person has to have a Jackbox account. The others just have to download the app and enter the room code). Each Party Pack comes with four to five super unique games that really make you think — and will confirm the funniest person in the group.

10. A Nuuly subscription

Women modeling rented clothes with curtains in background


Credit: Nuuly

Perfect for the Urban Outfitters, Free People, and Anthropologie stans, Nuuly is an $88/month service that offers rental pieces from sweaters to dresses to jeans (from the aforementioned brands and more). If they end up loving one of their rental items, they can buy it.

(StitchFix is a similar deal, but with a $20 styling fee and only three days to decide whether to buy the clothes.)

11. A CodeSpark Academy subscription

a tablet on a table


Credit: codespark academy

If you’re seeking a kids’ gift that’s not Frozen or Marvel, consider CodeSpark Academy, which stars cute, memorable monster characters called The Foos. Parents will love it because it’s educational: It teaches coding through challenges that require kids to devise their own chain reactions. For kids, though, it’s just fun. Gift memberships start at six months for $59.99, but 12-month and lifetime subscriptions are available.

12. An e-card

a gift card

Credit: punchbowl

a gift card with a rainbow on it

Credit: punchbowl

Greeting cards may be a “duh” gift, but are heartwarming nevertheless. Punchbowl’s selection probably blows that of your local CVS out of the water, plus customization like text and photos or a gift card from partners like Amazon, Disney, and Sephora. Cards can be sent to multiple recipients for free, but removing ads or scheduling a date require a membership.

13. A virtual gym membership

a woman working out to a video in her living room


Credit: classpass

Even the most hardcore fitness obsessives just feel like staying home sometimes. Paying for a virtual gym subscription lets them get a workout in without leaving the house. ClassPass (starting at $19 per month) has taken things online with over 2,000 live and on-demand workout classes from instructors across the country, with options ranging from yoga to HIIT and everything in between.

14. An online gaming subscription

two people playing video games on a couch


Credit: microsoft

No one expects you to score them a PS5 or an Xbox Series X. A free year of online play is still a great gift for anyone with any console, though. (Both PlayStation Plus and Xbox Live Gold are $59.99 annually.) For Switch players, a $20 yearly Nintendo Online subscription will let them play Mario Kart, Fortnite, and more with friends across the globe.

15. An online grocery shopping subscription

grocers on a wooden counter


Credit: thrive market

Trader Joe’s on a weekend is always a mess, but trying to grab the last box of organic pasta off the shelf during a pandemic is just plain chaotic. Thrive Market is an online grocery store that focuses on organic groceries, fresh meats and seafood, and shelf-stable options (as well as natural home and beauty products) at wholesale prices. Like Costco, everyone needs a membership to shop there: An annual membership goes for $59.95 (billed $5 monthly) or you can go monthly for $9.95.

16. An Adobe subscription

someone drawing on a tablet


Credit: adobe

One doesn’t have to be a graphic designer to get a ton of use out of Photoshop — it’s must-have software for anyone with a creative side. Folks in marketing can make ads and cool emails, aspiring photographers can learn layering and blending, or anyone who draws in their free time could bump things up to animation. Prices start at $9.99 per month for photography basics like Lightroom, $20.99 per month for Illustrator, and more plans for Dreamweaver, interior design, and more.

17. Rosetta Stone (lifetime access)

screenshots of the rosetta stone app


Credit: rosetta stone

Learning a new language in adulthood isn’t off the table just because you can’t remember a thing from high school Spanish. Rosetta Stone is one of the OG language-learning services, known for its deep dive into accent pronunciation, culture, and not pressuring you like the Duolingo owl. 10-minute lessons from Spanish and French to Russian and Vietnamese can be accessed on a desktop or via the totally redesigned app.

18. A wine delivery subscription

wine delivery sitting on someone's doorstep


Credit: winc

If 2020 and 2021 taught us anything, it’s the importance of having wine on hand for emergency at-home happy hours. A Winc Wine subscription lets your wine-loving friend skip inconvenient trips to the liquor store and welcome a box of wine (starting at three bottles) monthly right to their door instead. All choices are customized by Winc’s team after a rigorous taste quiz, and if they don’t like a bottle, Winc uses the info to make a better suggestion the next month.

19. A Scrivener subscription

screenshots of the scrivener app


Credit: literature and latte/mashable photo composite

Know someone who thinks in long form? They need Scrivener. It’s like a hybrid of Microsoft Word and a notes app like Evernote, aimed specifically at writers organizing large projects like novels, screenplays, or research papers. Different templates and tools for honing in on chunks of writing make it easy to organize thoughts.

20. A meal delivery service subscription

fresh produce and raw salmon sit beside recipe instructions


Credit: blue apron

Trying new recipes is fun. Trying to plan one of those recipes when you’re dead tired after work is not fun. Meal boxes from services like Dinnerly and Blue Apron allow you to customize meals online and then receive pre-portioned ingredients for those meals right to your door. Meals can be tweaked depending on dietary restrictions (like gluten-free or vegan) and how many people are eating. Portions can be as low as $4.99 each when you sign up for at least three months.

21. A Tidal subscription

screenshot of the tidal app


Credit: tidal

People love to say they don’t want to pay for Tidal on top of Spotify or Apple Music — and then they complain that they really wish they could listen to Prince’s posthumous album. While Tidal used to be big for exclusive albums from Beyoncé and Jay-Z, it’s now the go-to for audiophiles thanks to its glorious hi-fi streaming. A subscription starts at $9.99 per month and bumps up to $19.99 per month for Hi-Fi.

22. Escape the Crate subscription box

a box and clues from escape the crate


Credit: escape the crate

The idea of using clues to escape a fake locked room within a time limit is fun. The knowledge that there are multiple horror movies based on getting stuck in one? Not so much. Best of Cratejoy winner Escape the Crate brings the problem-solving adrenaline of an escape room to their home and is a 2019 winner of a Best of Cratejoy award. Boxes ship bimonthly with a new theme and clues each time, and you can use code TIGER to get 10% off the first box.

23. A Birchbox subscription

a collection of beauty products against a pale pink background


Credit: birchbox

If their relationship to makeup is like Ron Swanson’s to tools, opt for Birchbox. If they’re interested in beauty but have never been inside a Sephora, go for Birchbox too. Gift subscriptions start at $45 for three months, but if they’d prefer to just pick out their own stuff, a Birchbox gift card still gives them access to way more makeup than they’d find in a store. Plus, Birchbox frequently offers discounts on premium brands that Ulta and Sephora rarely discount.

24. A Quip membership

a quip toothbrush and toothpaste


Credit: quip

Everyone should be replacing their toothbrush every three months, but it’s easy to forget to buy a new one that often. Electric toothbrush subscription services do it for you; plus, swapping brush heads is better for the environment than throwing a whole disposable toothbrush away. Quip’s chic design combines the shape and control of a manual toothbrush with the vibrating power of an electric one. Prices range from $25 for plastic or $40 for metal, and the $5 refills come every three months.

25. FabFitFun

a collection of fitness gear and health products


Credit: fabfitfun

FabFitFun is like having a birthday four times a year. Once every three months, eight to 10 full-sized products arrive at your door, and it’s really nice stuff. The variety is impressive: Boxes could contain anything from hair and makeup products to exercise gear to blankets and other cozy items. A gift card can be applied to a subscription itself ($219.99 annually), member-exclusive sales, or single purchases directly from the website.

26. A Headspace subscription

screenshots of the headspace app


Credit: headspace

Meditation apps have become an increasingly popular way to de-stress, sleep better, and get a better grasp on mindfulness in general. Headspace has hundreds of guided meditations anchored toward everything from stress and anxiety to productivity and exercise, providing an excuse for much-needed breaks throughout the day to get back into the right headspace. Gift a monthly subscription for $12.99 per month or a year for $69.99.

27. A Craftsy membership

a woman working at a sewing machine


Credit: pexels

Think of Craftsy (formerly Bluprint, but now back to the original name after the mysterious closing of Bluprint in May 2020) as MasterClass for people who could spend three hours in Hobby Lobby. This artsy service offers over 1,500 video classes teaching everything from embroidery to macaroon baking, to floral arrangements led by industry professionals. (Fabric supply kits are no longer available for purchase.) Gift a membership for $8.99 per month or $89.99 for the whole year.

28. Subscription boxes for kids

kids playing with toys


Credit: kiwico

Keeping kids busy on one Saturday can be a task, let alone busy for multiple months at home. Kid-friendly subscription boxes pick up where TV leaves off, offering hours worth of hands-on activities to do alone or with parents each month. Our favorites include learning about other countries with Little Passports, making math and science fun with KiwiCo, or organic (and very colorful) baking with Foodstirs.

29. A Grove Collaborative VIP membership

a woman unpacking a box of cleaning supplies


Credit: grove collaborative

The quest for effective, natural household products shouldn’t require a trip to some expensive specialty shop. The Grove Collaborative has one of the best online selections of eco-friendly cleaning, baby, pet, and bath brands like Mrs. Meyers and hello. You don’t have to subscribe to shop here, but the $19.99 per year VIP membership gets free scheduled shipments every month versus a usual flat rate of $4.99 for shipping.

(Personal anecdote: I live in NYC and, surprise, had roaches in my first two apartments. I got Aunt Fanny’s Roach Remedy from the Grove Collaborative and it worked 100 times better than any mainstream brand I’ve ever used.)

30. An Amazon Audible subscription

a collection of audiobook covers


Credit: amazon

A subscription to Amazon Audible expands their entertainment options far past music, whether they have a boring commute or need background noise while working from home. $15 for one month, $45 for three months, and so on, gets your gift recipient an audiobook per month (two the first month), plus the Audible Plus catalog which gives them access to hundreds of titles. Some books are read by well-known talent like Michelle Obama and Jonathan Van Ness. (And others by professional audiobook narrators who have their own fandoms, such as Julia Whelan.)

31. A Book of the Month subscription

a stack of books


Credit: book of the month

Being in a book club with strangers across the country is a bookworm’s dream. That’s essentially what Book of the Month is: The company’s judges (which include up-and-coming authors themselves) feature five must-reads each month. Then, the subscriber chooses which one(s) they want based on synopses and reviews from other readers. Give a gift subscription starting at $49.99 for three months.

32. An Omaha Steaks gift card

Medium well steak with vegetables on plate


Credit: Omaha Steaks

Shopping for premium cuts of meat or decent seafood can get as expensive as going out to eat. Omaha Steaks offers choice cuts, burgers, really nice filet mignon, sides, and more in larger portions and at better prices than many brick-and-mortar stores, all delivered to your door in vacuum-sealed packaging. Meal boxes, family portions, and sides like au gratin are also available, and everything comes with easy-to-follow instructions (even for people who are definitely not meat connoisseurs).

33. An Atlas Coffee Club subscription

a world map


Credit: atlas coffee club

Anyone who thinks that their Starbucks go-to is the pinnacle of coffee is about to be blown away by the menu at Atlas Coffee Club. Each month, Atlas spotlights a few sustainably-farmed coffee beans from a specific country as “Coffee of the Month” options, which are available in monthly subscriptions from 15 to 60 cups. Imagine spending less than $15 to have two cups of coffee per day for an entire month.

34. A gift card to The Sill

potted plants


Credit: the sill

Indoor plants are an easy solution for loneliness not only because they can take a space from drab to homey, but also because it just feels good to take care of something. If you’re not sure of their skill level (or of the collection they already have), a gift card to The Sill lets them pick out some new greenery on their own.

35. A Task Rabbit gift card

man building ikea furniture


Credit: thumbtack

Do your grandparents need someone to mow their lawn? Does your friend need help moving? Task Rabbit connects you with local professionals offering freelance help for everyday tasks, from fixing WiFi to helping you declutter to moving your entire living room set to a new apartment to cleaning up after a party or removing a Christmas tree. Prices usually start at around $50 per hour depending on the service, and professionals are available to chat and answer questions before you decide who to hire.

36. An Uber or Lyft gift card

a gift card to uber


Credit: uber

The gift of not having to walk in the rain or take public transportation with heavy groceries is a godsend. Pay for some rides with an Uber or Lyft gift card. (The Uber one can also be used on Uber Eats.)

37. A subscription box from Bath Bevy

Box of themed bath items on bed with cup of coffee in corner


Credit: Bath Bevy

After a long day of work, why not treat your loved one to a relaxing bath? Opt for a monthly Bath Bevy subscription and choose from carefully curated and handcrafted bath and body products. There are bath bombs, bubble bath, bath salts, and more. Each box has five to seven items in beautiful packaging for that perfect unboxing experience. The subscription is $39.57/month if you get it for a year.

38. A Spotify Premium subscription

spotify logo


Credit: Spotify

If your loved one, like many of us, needs music to live, a Spotify subscription is a great gift. Only $9.99/month, you can not only play music, but also podcasts and audiobooks. With a Spotify Premium subscription, you can download music to play offline, play any songs, get unlimited skips, and there are no ads. You can create and share specific playlists with each other.

39. Annual DOGTV subscription

cocker spaniel


Credit: Pixabay

Not only will a DOGTV streaming service subscription improve your loved one’s life, but also the life of their dog. DOGTV has programs proven by scientific studies to entertain, alleviate stress, and stimulate a dog’s brain throughout the day. Try it free for one week and then pay $6.99/month annually. Watch anytime, anywhere, and in return, receive cute pics of their puppies watching TV.

40. A Mouth subscription

Bowls of snags, mug of tea, computer keyboard, and notebooks on green table


Credit: Mouth

Plan a monthly happy hour for them from after with a subscription from Mouth. Monthly gift boxes are curated by small-batch creators and can include anything as general as charcuterie or wintery treats or more specified boxes for the dedicated snacker, like a million different flavors of pickles or hot sauce.

41. August period product box

tampons, pads, and panty liners in packages


Credit: August

If your loved one menstruates, cross one worry off their list with a monthly subscription from August. Generally, the subscription is $16/month with a basic box of 24 tampons, 16 pads, and eight liners, but prices vary on how many pads, tampons, and liners are in the box. And, what’s super cool about August is that they’re carbon neutral, their pads and tampons are biodegradable and even the applicators are recyclable when washed. If you live in one of the 30 states with a tampon tax (ugh), August covers it.

‘Emily in Paris’ Season 3: The most exciting love triangles and slow burns of the season

Smiling white woman in pink and red abstract dress at dinner table.

Bonjour to the third season of Netflix’s chaotic original series Emily in Paris! What better way to enjoy a show that feeds everyone’s unrealistic desires to whimsically run off to France than with unrealistic plot points and a classic “will they, won’t they?” love story that disrupts everyone else’s lives?

In this third installment of the exciting television series, Emily (Lily Collins) juggles new projects, new clients, and new reasons to self-sabotage her personal relationships. After Savoir’s big shake-up, sharp-witted mogul Sylvie Grateau (Philippine Leroy-Beaulieu) launches a rival marketing company, Agence Grateau. Meanwhile, Emily scores the opportunity to market the newest addition to McDonald’s menu, the McBaguette.

SEE ALSO:

A tiny, extremely gross ‘Emily in Paris’ moment ruined Gabriel for me

Stuck between a rock and her very pregnant and emotionally unstable mentor Camille (Camille Razat), Emily makes the hard (and ridiculously unreasonable) decision to discreetly split her hours and the new deal between Savoir, now led by Madeline (Kate Walsh), and Sylvie’s firm. As Madeline makes the decision to move back to Chicago and close Savoir for good, the time has come for Emily to determine if she’ll stay in Paris permanently or return to America.

Even for a workaholic like Emily, her extended split alliance ended exactly as you can expect — with horrific carnage to her career. Luckily for people like herself whose larger-than-life problems always seem to cartoonishly work themselves out, she now finds herself working and living full time in the city of love; she’s also somehow forgiven by Sylvie, as well as her coworkers Julien (Samuel Arnold) and Luc (Bruno Gouery).

A group of friends chatting happily at a restaurant bar.


Credit: Netflix

With Emily’s boyfriend Alfie (Lucien Laviscount) working the finances for the perfume powerhouse that is Antoine Lambert (William Abadie), Camille’s secret infidelity with a hot Greek artist, and Mindy’s (Ashley Park) rollercoaster love triangle with bandmate Benoit (Kevin Dias) and a former boarding school crush, Emily takes a backseat to this season’s most appreciated drama. Even the drag that is chef Gabriel (Lucas Bravo) kept me more interested than Emily’s predictable fumbles.

The main love triangle is over (maybe)…but these other triangles are much juicier.

At least one exhausting Emily in Paris love triangle might have finally met its end in the explosive finale as Camille refuses to marry Gabriel — after she proposed to him, might I add. Spicy! In a fit of fiery frustration at the altar, the would-be bride-to-be exposes the dalliance between Gabriel and Emily. This also seems to conclude the relationship between Emily and Alfie, who definitely didn’t sign up for any of this drama.

Given that Netflix has already given the green light to not one but two more seasons of Emily, this climatic finale sets the series up for more canoodling between Emily and Gabriel. However, they’re the least interesting couple of the bunch. I would much rather dive into the love triangle between Mindy and Benoit and her blast from the past, Nicolas de Léon (Paul Forman), or the short-lived fling between Camille and Sofia (Melia Kreiling). Heck, even a focus on Sylvie’s relationships with her husband Laurent and her Golden Retriever-esque boyfriend Erik (Søren Bregendal) would be more entertaining than dragging on the unbearable slow burn between the show’s leads. Sylvie’s skinny-dipping sequence absolutely won scene of the season!

Three white millennial-aged friends watching happily in the distance


Credit: Netflix

It’s about that time for some much-needed character development.

It seems that the high-striving marketing expert and part-time social media influencer should probably have taken the advice of her peers to just slow down. Even an unemployed Emily stresses me out as she basically completes the Tour de France while serving half of the Parisian population in Gabriel’s short-staffed restaurant during her forced period of dormancy. Most notably, even the not-so-easily irritated Julien lost his patience with Emily during a business meeting. Perhaps this embarrassing call-out, paired with the quarrels and break-ups of her friends she always seems to be in the middle of, will be enough for Emily to “s’occuper de ses oignons.”

While the first season image of a high-strung American with tunnel vision is thankfully long gone, replaced by the remorseful student on her way to conversational French, Emily still has a ways to go in terms of character development. Scenes like the one where Emily interrupted her best friend’s concert to give a horrid rendition of Cilla Black’s “Alfie” to win her boyfriend back after their minor scuffle provided too much second-hand embarrassment to bear.

SEE ALSO:

Netflix orders two more seasons of ‘Emily in Paris’

Yet even with the show’s hiccups, the juxtaposition of a Parisian life of leisure and luxury and the excitable Emily rampaging through it all offers endless hilarity. With beautiful imagery, tasty montages, and delectable costuming, Emily in Paris has an unusual magic that speaks to our sense of childlike wonder. This utterly bingeable third season proves it’s the perfect silly little show for when you just need a silly little break from reality.

What’s going on with the suspended journalists on Twitter?

Twitter bird frozen

It’s been a week and the journalists who were unceremoniously kicked off of Twitter, then unceremoniously reinstated, then unceremoniously locked out once again, are still not back on Twitter.

As Mashable previously reported, Elon Musk banned several high-profile journalists for ostensibly violating Twitter’s doxxing policy on Dec. 15 despite most of them not actually violating Twitter’s doxxing policy. They had their accounts reinstated on Dec, 17, but their restored accounts weren’t completely restored. And even the suspensions were confusing. When Mashable’s Matt Binder’s account was first suspended, no one could see his tweets but he could see tweets from people he followed — the read-only mode for suspended users. Now, though, anyone can see his profile and tweets, but he can’t see anything.

SEE ALSO:

The reinstatement of journalists on Twitter appears to be conditional and incomplete

All of the suspended users were told they had to delete some tweets in order to regain access to the ability to actually tweet — and some have now done so. Binder, however, was initially let loose with no strings attached, but when he asked Twitter why he was suspended, his account was locked and he was told he had to delete a tweet that apparently broke some rules. The tweet goes like this: “remember Elon Musk’s first Twitter Files? the one about Twitter blocking links to NY Post’s Hunter Biden story Elon Musk is using the same thing to block links to @ElonJet on other platforms right now the exact same thing (except old Twitter stopped doing it the very same day).”

His tweet did not include any links to any other social media platform for ElonJet. It appears the reason they want the tweet taken down is because you can see the ElonJet Instagram handle in the screenshot he attached to the tweet. Twitter did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Mashable.

Originally, Binder wasn’t going to delete the tweet, because it’s unclear what kind of rules were even broken. He appealed Twitter’s decision, but lost the appeal. In the denial, where it points to a policy Binder broke, the policy is blank. There was nothing there.

Twitter wants Binder to delete the tweet — but the platform removed it already. Instead of the tweet, you just see a message saying it removed a tweet that broke policy. It appears that Twitter simply wants Binder to press a button taking responsibility for tweeting something inappropriate — but it is so unclear as to why that tweet was inappropriate in the first place.