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A 41-year-old Pilates instructor said she's prioritizing longevity workouts as she gets older. AdvertisementFor Lia Bartha, a mom-of-two who founded the fitness app B The Method, that means low-impact exercise. Bartha told Business Insider she spent her 20s and early 30s pushing her body to the limit doing high-intensity cardio and teaching Pilates. AdvertisementLow-impact workouts like Pilates tend to emphasize slow, controlled movements instead of fast, explosive techniques. "We want to think of the body in the long term, and I think that's where low-impact is just so important," Bartha said.
Persons: Lia Bartha, Bartha, Aubrey Plaza, Cynthia Erivo, Nwodim, Martha Hunt
Insider Today: Work out smarter
  + stars: | 2024-12-14 | by ( Joi-Marie Mckenzie | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +6 min
This post originally appeared in the Insider Today newsletter. She's a Business Insider fellow who asked ChatGPT what to get her family for Christmas. AdvertisementThe AI-powered tool "gave me 19 suggestions," Brew wrote, "along with additional ideas under categories suggesting quirky and personalized gifts." : Time is running out for gift shopping, but luckily, we have a guide to the best last-minute gift ideas for when you're in a pinch. More of this week's top reads:AdvertisementThe Insider Today team: Dan DeFrancesco, deputy editor and anchor, in New York City.
Persons: Natalie Ammari, Caroline Brew's, ChatGPT, Brew, we've, BI's, cancer's, Herman Miller, Jason McDonald, Chelsea Jia Feng, Lia Bartha, Moritz, Alessandro Bellani, Barts, Ralph Fiennes, Stanley Tucci, Maria, Angelina Jolie, Maria Callas, Rebecca Zisser, they've, Dan DeFrancesco, Grace Lett, Lisa Ryan, Amanda Yen Organizations: Business, Alpha, SDI, Lancet Oncology, BI, Netflix Locations: St, Los Angeles, New York City, New York
The Man Who Wrote Everything
  + stars: | 2023-09-17 | by ( Alexandra Jacobs | More About Alexandra Jacobs | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
BARTLEBY AND ME: Reflections of an Old Scrivener, by Gay TaleseGay Talese has a tic. I want to get this out of the way because in general I have such tremendous admiration for the man: that debonair eminence of ye olde New Journalism who is both a living landmark of Manhattan and his own best character. It’s a writerly tic, the retro habit of referring to women by the color of their hair, but as noun rather than adjective. If occasionally feeling as if you’re trapped in a Peter Arno cartoon is the price of admission to a new work by Talese, sign me up. But only one chunk of his latest book, “Bartleby and Me,” from which the above quotations are drawn, can fairly be called new.
Persons: Scrivener, Gay Talese Gay Talese, It’s, , you’re, Peter Arno, Nicholas Bartha Organizations: olde New Journalism Locations: Manhattan, Romanian
CNN —Giving the “National Treasure” movies a young-adult spin, “National Treasure: Edge of History” transforms the franchise into a Disney+ series, one that offers the same playful approach to the past while weighing that down with tiresome relationship issues and a protagonist with her own Scooby gang. The opening episodes have their moments, but it’s less something to treasure than at best mildly enjoy. Nicolas Cage starred in the 2004 movie and its sequel, a sort of discount “Raiders of the Lost Ark.” The baton here passes to Lisette Olivera as Jess, a whip-smart Dreamer whose father, a protector of treasures, disappeared when she was a baby. As the recent “Willow” reminds us, Disney has aggressively mined its movie library for titles that might lend themselves to streaming-series treatment, and “National Treasure,” with its episodic aspect as Jess must locate and crack new clues, perhaps works on that level better than most. “National Treasure: Edge of History” premieres December 14 on Disney+.
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