Elevate your research and note-taking.
The year is 2016. You’re en route to a party having just fired off a text on Facebook messenger to find out what your friend is wearing. A few minutes later, a yellow notification lights up your ...
The feeling of “take me back” has never been more relevant as 2026 kicks off. On TikTok, the hashtag #2016 has more than 2 million posts, often used to caption throwback photos, old videos and ...
Millennial pink hair. Thigh-high boots styled with T-shirt dresses. Dare we even mention the Harambe of it all? Lately, you’d easily believe we’ve travelled back into a sepia-toned, bygone era. Social ...
A recent trend has taken off, claiming that 2026 is the new 2016, waxing nostalgic about how good we had it.The general vibe is that 2016 was the last good year of the decade, but there's hope for ...
You’d think there’d be more excitement around the new year—we’re only three weeks in, people!—but instead everyone’s occupied with plumbing the depths of their camera rolls for relics of their 2016 ...
Do you remember what you were doing in 2016? The year is stirring up serious nostalgia on social media. On TikTok, the phrase “2026 is the new 2016” is trending, with many people sharing videos about ...
Well, it’s the start of a brand-new year. But instead of planning for the future and looking ahead, all anyone seems to want to do is to go back. Thanks to a new TikTok hazy purple-blue filter ...
Over the holidays, the first trend of 2026 emerged: the year 2016. “2026 is the new 2016,” users declared, in captions waxing poetic about the good old days, accompanied by Instagram-filtered photo ...
As galling as it is to see young people refer to the items I wore 10 years ago as ‘vintage’, surely the real problem is that so many of them believe their best ...
Have you ever opened your digital notebook, only to feel overwhelmed by a chaotic sea of old notes, half-finished ideas, and forgotten to-dos? In his video, Andy Park breaks down how starting fresh ...