
Annie Reneau
Associate Editor at Upworthy
Associate editor at @Upworthy. Former @ScaryMommy and Brilliant Star Magazine staff writer. Humanity First.
Articles
-
5 days ago |
upworthy.com | Annie Reneau
Is there anything more beautiful and graceful than ice skating? It's got the gorgeous aesthetics of gymnastics and dance combined with an almost other-worldliness as the skaters glide and fly around the ice. There's a reason people can't seem to look away from the rink when the winter Olympics roll around every couple of years. However, the sports of ice skating comes with certain expectations of what the skaters body should look like.
-
6 days ago |
upworthy.com | Annie Reneau
We have a small favor to ask of you Facebook is critical to our success and we could use your help. It will only take a few clicks on your device. But it would mean the world to us. Here’s the link . Once there, hit the Follow button. Hit the Follow button again and choose Favorites. That’s it! If you’d like to know why this is so important for us, you can read more about it here . CommunityPeople are right to complain about being charged a cleaning fee and being asked to do chores.
-
1 week ago |
upworthy.com | Annie Reneau
We have a small favor to ask of you Facebook is critical to our success and we could use your help. It will only take a few clicks on your device. But it would mean the world to us. Here’s the link . Once there, hit the Follow button. Hit the Follow button again and choose Favorites. That’s it! If you’d like to know why this is so important for us, you can read more about it here . JoyA teen was elated getting his first paycheck from McDonald's.
-
1 week ago |
upworthy.com | Annie Reneau
Because we use water all the time, most of us have an intuitive sense of how long it takes a drop of water to form and fall. More viscous liquids, like oil or shampoo or honey, drop more slowly depending on how thick they are, which can vary depending on concentration, temperature and more. If you've ever tried pouring molasses, you know why it's used as a metaphor for something moving very slowly, but we can easily see a drop of any of those liquids form and fall in a matter of seconds.
-
1 week ago |
upworthy.com | Annie Reneau
We have a small favor to ask of you Facebook is critical to our success and we could use your help. It will only take a few clicks on your device. But it would mean the world to us. Here’s the link . Once there, hit the Follow button. Hit the Follow button again and choose Favorites. That’s it! If you’d like to know why this is so important for us, you can read more about it here .
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →X (formerly Twitter)
- Followers
- 3K
- Tweets
- 5K
- DMs Open
- No

Ironically, I just wrote about this yesterday. Dishwashers actually work fine. People just don't know how to use them properly: https://t.co/D4zkcvNb5K

Duffy: "The president is talking about shower heads. You don't have enough water that can come through your shower heads because of Biden's regulations. So fixing small things like that -- hopefully he's gonna get the dishwashers. Wouldn't it be great if dishwashers worked https://t.co/F1NFJvpZl5

“Why didn’t they tell you?” Here’s the problem with takes like this. They DID tell us. There were news articles all over the place about this. https://t.co/YmTmhc4wJO https://t.co/Bu2b1le5N6 https://t.co/90XgWIN5TY

The government HAS NO CAPS ON CHOLESTEROL..for ten years now. So why didn’t they tell you? 🤔 The U.S. government quietly dropped its cholesterol cap in 2015 (the American Heart Association did the same in 2013), yet most people still think dietary cholesterol is something to https://t.co/aa7xWg6Fxk

The first time I worked in an office after being a teacher, I was blown away by being able to get up and go to the bathroom whenever I needed to. Or shoot the breeze with my coworkers. Or zone out at my desk for a few minutes. An entire hour for lunch? Unreal.

One of the hardest parts of being an educator is the lack of downtime. You have to be on all day long. This is mentally and physically draining.