Performances in N.Y.C. In “Burnout Paradise,” four performers try ambitious tasks while jogging. If they can’t beat their run time goal, the audience gets its money back. Credit... Supported by By ...
Workplace burnout is often discussed as if it were a single condition with a single solution: fewer hours, better boundaries, more resilience. That framing is ...
Burnout isn’t just about broken systems. It’s about the skills high performers were never taught, writes Archana Shrestha.
In this episode, FJ Campbell, MD, Chief Medical Officer at Ardent Health, discusses how virtual nursing, virtual physicians, and AI powered documentation tools are reducing clinician burnout while ...
Nearly half of U.S. family medicine physicians reported burnout, which is linked to higher rates of leaving or switching practices, and may compromise physician workforce stability, according to a ...
Jess Saxby, chief executive of Banjo’s Bakery Cafes, couldn’t stop. She was always chasing the next thing. Until she couldn’t any more. After five years of running her own business, Jess Saxby’s ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Preview this article 1 min In this edition of The Playbook ...
In its second season, Paradiseseeks to be several different shows. It wants to drown its audience in the tragic loneliness of living in a post-apocalyptic world, while also giving the thrills of a ...
The Season 2 finale of “Paradise” reached 4.3 million viewers in its first three days of streaming on Hulu and Disney+. That total marks a 35% increase in viewership compared to the season premiere, ...
"Frogman Returns" is a riotous masterclass of cryptid horror. All hail the Frogman. Read our Panic Fest review here.
Hulu’s Paradise, currently wrapping up a fine second season after an Emmy-nominated first, is the most spoilable show on TV. Try as he might, even the conscientious critic can’t avoid untying its ...