❤️ End of heart disease? 🍇 Grapes = Sunblock 🚘 Gas hack

❤️ End of heart disease? 🍇 Grapes = Sunblock 🚘 Gas hack

Heart disease is the #1 global killer and while cholesterol's precise role is debated, most agree LDL cholesterol - a.k.a. "bad cholesterol" - plays at least some role.

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Heart disease is the #1 global killer and while cholesterol's precise role is debated, most agree LDL cholesterol - a.k.a. "bad cholesterol" - plays at least some role.
May 31, 2026 Sign Up | Shop

Not a big baseball guy, but Bryce Harper's toothpaste take has lived rent-free in my head for days.

Instead of putting the toothpaste on his brush, Harper squeezes the tube from the bottom and puts the toothpaste in his mouth before brushing.

Insanity, right? Do other people do this?

Makes me wonder how much variance exists across other everyday tasks like tying shoes.

As always, please forward IQNEWS to a friend if you're a fan!

STORY OF THE WEEK

Eli Lilly just…solved cholesterol?

image: pexels

Heart disease is the #1 global killer and while cholesterol's precise role is debated, most agree LDL cholesterol - a.k.a. "bad cholesterol" - plays at least some role.

Which is why people spend ~$20 billion/year on statin drugs to lower LDL (note: statins are also hotly debated).

Welp…Eli Lilly may have just radically changed the landscape.

This week they published clinical data of a gene therapy called VERVE-102 that reduced LDL up to 62% after a single dose. Even wilder? The effect held for eighteen months.

VERVE-102 isn't a drug - it's a means of editing your genome to permanently turn off the liver gene responsible for high LDL levels.

And again, it's one. single. shot.

Some think this foretells the end of most heart disease - an astonishing possibility. Others warn about caveats to the study (e.g., small trial, no comparison group).

Either way, this is likely to change the world in a big way.

IN OTHER NEWS

SPF 50 grapes, crowd-sourced symptoms, nosy Wi-Fi…

image: boldsky
Grape Sunblock
A study found two weeks of daily grape consumption altered skin gene expression to strengthen the skin barrier and reduce UV damage. "Grape summer" is here.
Ozempic x Reddit
AI scanned 400K posts about GLP-1s and surfaced side effects missed by trials like chills, menstrual changes, hot flashes. Drug side-effects are increasingly crowd-sourced.
Lonely Gen Z
A survey of 5,275 22-to-35-year-olds found only 31% are active daters. Only ~half want a serious relationship. Young folks are in a full-blown dating recession.
Creepy WiFi
German researchers showed WiFi will soon be able to "see" you with 99.5% accuracy, even when your phone is off. Your router just got a lottt nosier.
Pain Unlock
Duke researchers reversed nerve pain in mice by ferrying fresh mitochondria into damaged nerves. Pain behaviors dropped by 50% (TBD if this translates to humans).
HACK OF THE WEEK

Gas up on Sunday

image: easterns

Gas prices are gassy right now (too high).

As a result, many folks are seeking out which stations have the cheapest gas (this often entails driving more miles to save on driving miles – ironic!).

But guess what: the day of the week matters far more than the brand or station.

GasBuddy ran the numbers on all 50 states.

Sunday is the cheapest in 41 of them. Monday is next-cheapest. Wednesday through Friday is the most expensive.

Hump Day ≠ Pump Day

SHOWER THOUGHTS

1. Has screaming for ice cream ever worked?

2. One of your keys probably works on some other lock in the world.

3. You have ten minutes before feeling effects of a meteor impact if you're standing at the opposite end of Earth.

4. It's often not what we read that determines our opinions, but the order in which we read it.

5. Technically, people read more in the smartphone era than they did before.

POST OF THE WEEK
image: Substack
QUOTE / TIL / WORD / TRIVIA
Anne Lamott: “Almost everything will work again if you unplug it for a few minutes, including you.”
Today I learned Sea otters hold hands while they sleep so they don't drift apart from each other. Groups link up in chains called "rafts," sometimes numbering in the hundreds. (more here)
psithurism [ SITH-er-iz-um ] - noun
The sound of wind whispering through leaves.
I find the psithurism of leaves more relaxing than any meditation app.
Q: How many hearts does an octopus have?
A. 1
B. 2
C. 3
D. 4
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