Sponsored By:

The AI revolution is here—and I've identified 9 powerhouse companies with real US operations, proven revenue growth, and deep AI integration that are primed to dominate. From a hidden chip maker set to power domestic AI manufacturing to a cloud provider ready for explosive growth, these aren't the tired "AI hype" stocks everyone's talking about.

The smart money is already watching, and once they move, these stocks could soar. Don't be the last to catch this wave—get the complete details on all 9 game-changing companies in my FREE report before opportunity passes you by.

Get the Free Report

By clicking this link you agree to receive emails from StockEarnings and our affiliates. You can opt out at any time. Privacy Policy.


When TV Had Catchphrases, Not Algorithms

Image via Mental Floss

When TV Had Catchphrases, Not Algorithms

Mental Floss was out with a little bit of fun this week: a quiz asking whether you can match famous ’80s sitcom catchphrases to the shows they came from. It’s not a think-piece or a market mover, just one of those cheerful reminders that before entertainment got sliced into a thousand micro-genres, most of America still had a handful of shows in common—and we talked about them the next day like they were neighbors.

The piece leans on a simple premise: the 1980s were packed with sitcoms that didn’t just have jokes, they had lines—short, repeatable phrases that somehow became household currency. The quiz format is the hook, but the real point is recognition: you either remember where a line came from or you don’t, and that tells you something about what you watched, who you watched with, and what kind of living room you grew up in.

It also quietly reminds you how television used to work. In those days, a catchphrase didn’t spread because an app decided to show it to you; it spread because a whole lot of regular folks saw the same episode around the same time and repeated it at work, at school, or across the dinner table. If you were there, you can practically hear the laugh track and feel the glow of the set in a dim room.

Read the full story at Mental Floss →


Until tomorrow—keep the coffee hot, the porch light on, and your heart open to the good still ahead.

— Jack Reynolds

Keep Reading