One afternoon, 28-year-old Sarah Culberson was taking a stroll through Venice when her phone lit up with an unfamiliar call. She ducked into a nearby vintage shop for privacy and, hidden among the racks of clothes, answered. On the other end was a voice she’d never heard before—her birth father. Hearing him for the first time sent waves of emotion through her. That moment would change her life forever. As she soon learned, Sarah wasn’t just an ordinary person; she was royalty, according to the Los Angeles Times.



Sarah was adopted just two days before her first birthday by Jim and Judy Culberson in West Virginia, as she shared in a YouTube documentary. She had spent her first nine months with her birth mother and three months in foster care before joining her adoptive family, who loved her deeply. Though she was happy growing up with her parents and two white sisters, lingering questions about her birth family always left her feeling unsettled. She wanted to find them but feared rejection, especially from her birth father. “I was really angry at my birth father. I thought, where was he? Didn’t he want to meet me? Didn’t he want to talk to me?” she remembered.

Representative Image Source: Sarah Culberson attends Instagram's GRAMMY Luncheon on January 24, 2020 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Rodin Eckenroth/WireImage)
Image Source: Sarah Culberson attends Instagram's GRAMMY Luncheon on January 24, 2020, in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Rodin Eckenroth/WireImage)

Anyway, she hired a private investigator to track down her birth family for a fee of $25. He recommended her to write a letter. As her handwritten letter reached a woman in an African village, she dialed a call to Sarah and told her she was her aunt. “Sarah, do you know who you are,” the aunt asked. Then said, “You’re a princess.”


via GIPHY


On one hand, Sarah was overwhelmed, but on the other hand, her greatest fear got triggered again: the fear of getting rejected by her father. At this time, she was living in Los Angeles. Two weeks later, she was plodding down the airplane stairway and making her way to the blue gate of Sierra Leone in West Africa. 

Representative Image Source: Princess Sarah Culberson attends the Koshie Mills presents Heirs of Afrika 5th Annual International Women of Power Awards in California. (Photo by Unique Nicole/Getty Images)
Image Source: Princess Sarah Culberson attends the Koshie Mills presents Heirs of Afrika 5th Annual International Women of Power Awards in California. (Photo by Unique Nicole/Getty Images)

At the gate was her father, standing to greet her. She gave him a big hug, tears welling in her eyes. Her father apologized for not finding her first. “Your name changed,” he said. “I didn’t know how to find you,” he added. He told her that she was given up for adoption because, at that time, her parents were too young to take care of her. She accepted his apology, and the next day, they sat in her father’s Range Rover to drive through what she called the “Indiana Jones road.” 



Culberson recalled meeting with her father during an interview. “The man who I thought wouldn’t want anything to do with me was so afraid that I wouldn’t want anything to do with him,” she said. She left Bumpe donning an emerald African dress that was a gift from her father. Culberson was stunned to see the reception she got as hundreds of women cheered and clapped for her as they sang in their native language Mende. “Sarah, you have come to your homeland, welcome home,” they sang.

However, despite being a princess, she didn’t find herself entering a fairyland brimming with stars and glitter. Rather, the village she arrived at, was nothing but mounds of rubble, crumbling buildings, and kids with amputated limbs. The 11-year civil war had wreaked havoc on her hometown. But despite everything, people were cheering at her arrival. Hundreds of people were singing and dancing, welcoming their princess. Sarah was overwhelmed and disheartened at the same time.



Not long after, the princess initiated a non-profit organization, Sierra Leone Rising, which reconstructed town Bumpe’s collapsing school buildings, installed solar lanterns, and wells that serve 12,000 people with clean drinking water, using grants from Rotary International to which her father was associated. Building several partnerships and collaborations, Sarah also started an education program to teach young girls how to make sanitary pads that are built into their underwear, so girls stop dropping out of school. She also started a computer center to train kids how to code. She worked on the town’s hospital system and restored most of the schools’ toilet systems. “But we have more to do,” she said in the YouTube documentary.


via GIPHY


“My only guidance of what a princess was what I saw in movies,” Sarah told NBC News. “But it’s really about responsibility. It’s about walking in my great-grandfather and grandfather’s footsteps and what they’ve done for the country. I realized that’s my role as a princess, to keep moving things forward in the country.”



Putting her acting dream on hold, Sarah dedicated herself to transforming the picture of her hometown. In 2009, she published a book, “A Princess Found,” about her journey, which was thought to become an inspiration for a Disney movie, per CNN.



“I’ve learned to stay open in the journey of life because there is always a grander plan than our minds can imagine,” the princess wrote in an October 2019 Facebook post.


https://youtube.com/watch?v=tV8_cPjsizE%3Fsi%3D847M1MFojVqiEUBc

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on August 2, 2024. It has since been updated.

  • 10 boys and 10 girls were left alone in separate houses. The results were shockingly different.
    A girl plays with block while two young boys play a gamePhoto credit: Canva
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    10 boys and 10 girls were left alone in separate houses. The results were shockingly different.

    Videos showed the children living normally for the first two days, but then the experiment took a chaotic turn.

    It sounds like the plot of William Golding’s Lord of the Flies, but in the mid-2000s, it was a very real, and very controversial, reality television experiment. Footage from the UK Channel 4 documentary “Boys and Girls Alone” is captivating audiences all over again, offering a fascinating—and chaotic—look at what happens when you remove parents from the equation.

    The premise was simple but high-stakes: 20 children, aged 11 and 12, were split into two groups by gender. Ten boys and ten girls were placed in separate houses and told to live without adult supervision for five days.

    While there were safety nets in place—a camera crew was present (though instructed not to intervene unless safety was at risk), and children could ring a bell to speak to a nurse or psychiatrist—the day-to-day living was entirely up to them. The houses were fully stocked with food, cleaning supplies, toys, and paints.

    As the resurfaced footage shows, the results between the two houses could not have been more different.

    In the boys’ house, the unraveling was almost immediate. The newfound freedom triggered a rapid descent into high-energy chaos. They engaged in water pistol fights, threw cushions, and in one memorable instance, a boy named Michael covered the carpet in sticky popcorn kernels.

    The destruction escalated to the walls, which the boys covered in writing, drawing, and paint. But the euphoria of freedom eventually crashed into the reality of consequences.

    “We never expected to be like this, but I’m really upset that we trashed it so badly. We were trying to explore everything at once and got too carried away in ourselves,” one boy admitted in the footage.

    Their attempts to clean up were frantic and largely ineffective, involving scraping paint and messily mopping floors. Nutrition also took a hit; despite having completed a cooking course, the boys survived mostly on cereal, sugar, and the occasional frozen pizza. By the end of the week, the house was trashed, the garden was littered with garbage, and the group had fractured into opposing factions.

    The girls’ house, however, looked like a different planet.

    In stark contrast to the mayhem next door, the girls immediately established a functioning society. They organized a cooking roster, with a girl named Sherry preparing their first meal. They baked cakes, put on a fashion show, and drew up a scrupulous chores list to ensure the house stayed livable.

    While their stay wasn’t devoid of interpersonal drama, the experiment highlighted a fascinating divergence in socialization. Left to their own devices, the girls prioritized community and maintenance, while the boys tested the absolute limits of their environment until it broke.

    This article originally appeared last year.

  • A ‘Severance’ fan with Stage 4 cancer made a ‘bucket list’ request. Ben Stiller’s reply is perfect.
    Ban Stiller with a quote card overlayedPhoto credit: Frank Sun via Wikimedia Commons
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    A ‘Severance’ fan with Stage 4 cancer made a ‘bucket list’ request. Ben Stiller’s reply is perfect.

    After a fan reached out with a “bucket list” wish to meet the cast, Stiller’s immediate response proved the internet can still be a force for good.

    Due to their serialized format, terrific TV shows can create a real sense of community, sparking our imaginations in ways other mediums simply cannot. The very best, like Apple TV+’s mind-bending dystopian mystery series Severance, can also offer a comforting form of escapism.

    Ben Stiller, the show’s primary director and executive producer, was reminded of that fact over X, when a hardcore fan reached out with a seemingly long-shot request:

    “Hi @BenStiller! Severance is the best show my husband and I have ever seen,” wrote Emily Powell-Heaton. “I have stage 4 cancer. A great bucket list item to check off would be to meet you and any of the cast and crew from the show. We can fly anywhere. We live near Toronto, Canada. Would this be possible? Thanks for your help!”

    Stiller, who has 5.3 million followers on the platform as of this writing, responded on the same day, asking for a DM. While we don’t know the specifics of their conversation, it appears they made plans to meet up in some fashion—potentially even with other people involved in the acclaimed show.

    “Thank you so much @BenStiller and team for making my wish come true!” they wrote. “My husband and I are over the moon about meeting you and the many other incredible people who work together to create #Severance! I am so happy.” The filmmaker replied, “Look forward to meeting you xx.”

    While social media can be a dark, depressing, divisive place, this connection highlights how it can be harnessed for good. Even the replies to their exchange were disarmingly positive, with strangers praising Stiller’s kind gesture and sending well wishes to Powell-Heaton.


    – “What a good guy. Prayers up for you, Emily!”

    – “YES!!! Fantastic… when the internet works well it really does. Xx”

    – “He is a legend! He’s made such an important dream come true!”

    – “You’re the man @BenStiller”

    – “Good on you, Ben. Emily, I hope you enjoy all things good and wish you wellness. XO”

    After the interaction with Stiller went viral, Powell-Heaton reposted an article about the news, writing, “He is a legend! He’s made such an important dream come true!”

    Powell-Heaton, who, according to their X profile, is 34 and has metastatic breast cancer, shared a health update shortly after the interaction with Stiller: “The spinal surgery is a go. No date set up yet but it’s likely to be in April. The spinal surgeon has to consult with some ENT specialists and I have to get a [CT] scan done on my face and neck area. This will determine if the surgery will be done from the back of the spinal cord or the front. A metal cage will be placed around the crumbling part of my spine to strengthen it.”

    Metastatic breast cancer, according to the Cleveland Clinic, is a cancer “that’s spread from your breast to other areas of your body.” The article states that there is no cure, “but thanks to newer treatments, more people with metastatic breast cancer are living longer than ever before.”


    In a study published in February 2025 in Cancer Causes & Control, researchers from Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health analyzed data from all 50 U.S. states, concluding that breast cancer cases are increasing for women under 40. “From 2001 to 2020, breast cancer incidence in women under 40 increased by more than 0.50 percent per year in 21 states, while remaining stable or decreasing in the other states,” according to a news release about the study. “Incidence was 32 percent higher in the five states with the highest rates compared to the five states with the lowest rates.”

    Rebecca Kehm, PhD, the study’s co-author and an assistant professor of Epidemiology at Columbia Mailman School, wrote that these increases are “alarming” and cannot be solely explained by genetic factors or changes in screening practices.

    This article originally appeared earlier this year.

  • Aaron Paul recalls heartbreaking exchange with his daughter that made him rethink smartphone use
    Aaron Paul recalls how his daughter made him rethink his smartphone use. Photo credit: Gage Skidmore via Wikimedia Commons, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0

    If you own a smartphone and aren’t addicted to it, I sincerely salute you from afar. It’s so easy to grow obsessed with the passive dopamine rush of browsing internet headlines and scrolling our social feeds.

    In any brief moment of everyday silence—sitting in the dentist’s waiting room, riding in the passenger seat during an argument with my wife, even waiting for commercials to end during a TV show—I find my hand unconsciously reaching for my pocket. That feels…not normal, and I often think about the effect it must have on my relationships with friends and family. It’s not like magically rewinding the clock to the dial-up era would fix everything, but maybe certain situations call for leaving our phones undisturbed.

    Actor Aaron Paul, best known as the co-star of the acclaimed series Breaking Bad, explored this subject during a recent video interview with The Wall Street Journal. Paul recalls that he was checking his email via iPhone when his daughter excitedly entered the room—and their interaction (or, at least initially, lack thereof) led him to make a profound personal change.

    “I wanna say I’m sorry”

    “I try not to use my phone in front of my kids,” he said. “My daughter comes running in, and she’s asking me a question, something, and I’m trying to just finish this quick email. And then she stopped asking, and she kind of went and started playing. And she’s 7 [now]—this is when she was 6. And I put my phone down and I went to her. And I go, ‘You know, I wanna say I’m sorry for not being responsive to you…I wanna make a pact with you right now. I wanna promise daddy’s not gonna be on his phone when he’s with you anymore.’”

    Her “one-word response” wound up leveling him. “She looks at me and she goes, ‘Really?‘ You know, just, ‘really?‘” he recalled. “And it broke my heart, you know what I mean? It really did break my heart. I go, ‘I promise you I won’t.’ And she just jumped up and threw her arms around me like she won the biggest prize. We owe it to our kids to at least give it a shot…[With] technology as a whole, you can choose whether the technology controls you. You should control the technology.”

    Can smartphone usage impact parent-child relationships?

    It appears there’s some data to support these ideas. Robin Nabi, a professor of communication at UC Santa Barbara, led a study analyzing how parents’ various media usage—including smartphones—can impact the “emotional intelligence” of their children. The findings suggested there’s a link.

    “We know that how parents express, reflect, and talk about emotions with children influences their EI (emotional intelligence) development,” she said in 2023. “And we know how easy it is for parents to be absorbed in their own phones, which could limit the interaction and feedback they give to their children. So we thought it would be important to see what role parents’ screen time and phone use around their child might play in their child’s EI development.”

    The research, which involved 400 parents of children between the ages of 5 and 12, found that “parental use of cell phones” around their kids was the only activity associated with “lower child emotional intelligence.” Nabi noted, “Kids respond to their parents. And no matter what type of content a parent may be viewing on their phone, the outward appearance to the child is a lack of responsiveness.”

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