Morning Overview on MSN
Lab tests use vaccine-carrying mosquitoes to immunize bats for rabies
Scientists fed Aedes aegypti mosquitoes blood laced with weakened rabies and Nipah viruses, then let those insects bite bats ...
Modern Teen on MSN
Animals that became death omens people still fear
Old omens linger because grief seeks patterns; learn habits, and fear turns into respect and safer choices for everyone ...
Performances in N.Y.C. With “The Lost Boys” on Broadway and Cynthia Erivo in “Dracula” in London, our horror expert looks at how bloodsuckers sank their teeth into pop culture. Credit... Supported by ...
Imagine if a nasal spray could make you immune not only to the viruses that cause COVID-19 and influenza, but to all respiratory diseases. In a paper 1 published in Science today, researchers describe ...
Roguelike After beating Slay the Spire 2 with an 8 year old deck, I'm starting to feel like this is more of a remake than a sequel Card Game Slay the Spire 2 dev compared it to unexciting 'chicken ...
Cult German filmmaker Ulrike Ottinger teams up with Nobel laureate Elfriede Jelinek, no less, for a loopy, queer Viennese vampire hunt that couldn't be more exquisitely tailored for its star. A droll, ...
An “exciting” new vampire movie franchise is rising out of Central New York. Production wrapped in Syracuse last month on “ Red Ink,” a newsroom thriller set in 1949 at a fictional newspaper office as ...
Vampire stories have been told and retold for hundreds of years, from folklore to film. From the spine-tingling to the romantic to the laugh-out-loud comedic, there is no shortage of great vampire ...
Ross Johnson writes about television, film, and literature for Lifehacker. He has a degree in political science from the University of Rochester and has previously been a legal writer and editor for ...
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