
Welcome to Monday’s News on the March – The week that was in my digital world.
The Murder of Iryna Zarutska | Media Bias, Ideology & Selective Outrage
Video Essay at Quillette
Quillette, the Australian-based online magazine has become one of my go-to current affairs news sources. I really appreciate the care Quillette writers take to analyze and articulate these cultural phenomena. The founder Claire Lehmann was presented here back in March this year in an interview with Freddie Sayers at UnHerd about the threat to free speech from the right.
Today’s feature examines the disturbing silence surrounding the brutal murder of a Ukrainian refugee in North Carolina, United States – and what that silence might reveal about shifting media priorities, ideological bias, and cultural taboos. Was this case overlooked because it didn’t fit the dominant narrative? Are journalists making editorial choices based on ideology rather than truth? And what does this say about how we collectively process injustice?
I Skied Down Mount Everest (world first, no oxygen)
Video presentation at Red Bull
This is one of the most exhilarating and spectacularly filmed sporting adventure videos I’ve ever seen. From the moment I pressed play to the very end, I found myself agasp and bewildered – not only at how Andrzej Bargiel had the stamina to complete this world-first ski mountaineering feat without supplementary oxygen, but also at how it was filmed so exquisitely (by his brother, no less) at such altitude. I’ve seen my fair share of Everest climb videos, but this presentation captured the mountain from an entirely different – and utterly unexpected – perspective. Quite simply this video contains the best shots of Everest I’ve ever seen – and it’s not even close.
Ski mountaineer Andrzej Bargiel becomes the first person to climb Mount Everest and ski back to Everest Base Camp without supplementary oxygen. After nearly 16 hours climbing in the high altitude “death zone” (above 8,000m where oxygen levels are dangerously low), Bargiel clipped into his skis on the summit of the tallest mountain on earth and started his descent via the South Col Route.
How We Figured Out an Asteroid Killed the Dinosaurs
Video presentation at PBS Eons
Nearly all of us are familiar with the most cataclysmic natural event in Earth’s history – the asteroid impact that wiped out the dinosaurs. But do we really know why this hypothesis for their extinction has become so widely and resoundingly accepted by scientists as fact? What’s the evidence, and how did it all come together in such a relatively short span of time? This video goes a long way toward answering those questions, and I found it to be a fascinating learning experience.
Video description:
66 million years ago a giant space rock crashed into our planet and killed the dinosaurs. In the span of just four decades, we’ve gone from not knowing there was a space rock at all to knowing exactly where that planet-killer came from.
That is all. Thank you for reading.



















