The 2025 Star Trek Christmas Supercut, Starring Jeffrey Combs

John C. Worsley is the master of goofy musical Star Trek videos, and always has something special for Christmas (previously at Neatorama). For 2025, he's focused on Jeffrey Combs for the supercut "Here Comes Jeffrey Combs." Who is Jeffrey Combs? He's an actor and voiceover artist who has become the go-to guy in the Star Trek universe. Combs has played nine aliens (and one human) so far on Star Trek - some of them recurring characters, including the Vorta clone Weyoun and the Ferengi character Brunt in the series Strar TreK: Deep Space Nine. On Star Trek: Enterprise, he was Andorian military officer Schran. He also appeared on Star TreK: Voyager and Star Trek: Lower Decks. Combs has even worked on a Star Trek video game! You need to be a real Trekkie to know all that, but you don't have to have a photographic memory of all the players to enjoy the cleverness of this song. -via Metafilter 


A New Cancer Treatment, Thanks to Fireflies

A type of cancer called diffuse midline glioma (DMG) grows on the brain, specifically on the thalamus, brainstem, or spinal cord. Surgery in those areas is impossible because it's so dangerous, and patients diagnosed with DMG have a 1% survival rate. But a breakthrough is giving these patients more time.

The new drug Modeyso was developed with the aid of fireflies. Dr. Joshua Allen has been exploring how our bodies' own immune system fights cancers, and inserted the firefly gene for bioluminescence into human genes known to fight cancer to study their behavior. When the body's cells become cancerous, these genes are activated and made cancers glow and easier to see. The study of how such genes are activated led to the new drug. Some DMG patients that were given nine to twelve months to live have survived months or even years longer after the new treatment. Read how all that came about at Popular Science. -via Damn Interesting 


"Six Seven on a Merry Rizzmas" and Other Brainrot Christmas Carols

To torment me, my teenage children introduced me to a YouTube channel filled with AI-generated Christmas carols filled with Gen Alpha slang. The slop flows melodically and the lyrics are far from mid, inducing much gyatt with their rizz rhythms.

In addition to the above embedded "Six Seven on Merry Rizzmas", there is "12 Days of Rizzmas", "Rizzmas Bells", "Oh, Rizzmas Tree," and "Six Seven Christmas."

No cap, they are all very skibidi.


Mincemeat the Way Soldiers of WWII Experienced It

War is hell, but field kitchens do whatever they can to bring a little comfort to soldiers risking their lives for the cause. Back in WWII, that meant baking mincedmeat pie for the troops around Christmas time —even if they didn't quite have all the traditional ingredients. Tasting History has the recipe for this fascinating wartime sweet. It is quite interesting and includes boullion, corned beef, apples, sugar, raisins, cinnamon, nutmeg, and pepper. 


"Baby It's Cold Outside" Rewritten for 2025

The song "Baby It's Cold Outside" was written in 1944 as a romantic comedy duet. In the 21st century, it has come to be seen as creepy because the man is trying to prevent a woman from leaving his company. That's not cool. 

The country-western duo The Doohickeys rewrote the song by changing only the male lines to make it more appropriate for modern sensibilities. So she's in 1944 and he's in 2025- talk about an age gap! In this version, it becomes obvious that the woman really wants to stay, but she is using the expected performative phrases to protect her reputation as "hard to get" or a "good girl." The clues as to her age don't translate well across the years, because in 1944 it was more common for a woman to live with her parents until she married, no matter her age. What she really wants out of the evening is ambiguous, because back in the day, the difference between romance and sex wasn't explicitly discussed in polite society. It's no wonder signals were so often crossed. "Clear and enthusiastic consent" may not lend itself to jokes as well, but it's a better way. 


The Worst Christmas Parties Ever Thrown by World Leaders

What makes a party a disaster? I once threw a party in which more than a dozen attendees were arrested, and I was evicted, as well as two neighbors. They're still talking about that one more than 40 years later. But it wasn't as bad as the event President Francisco Macías Nguema of Equatorial Guinea threw for Christmas in 1969. He invited 150 of his political opponents to a football stadium, and his guards (who some say were dressed as Santa Claus) shot and killed them all.   

Other world leaders threw or attended Christmas parties that turned out to be disasters of one sort or another. Sometimes people got killed, while others were just embarrassing. Winston Churchill invited himself to a White House Christmas party in 1941. The King of Sweden's Christmas banquet in 1317 was the last time anyone ever saw his brothers. And then there was Jimmy Carter's hemorrhoids. Read about all these Christmas parties and more at Mental Floss. 


Christmas Frieren Cosplay

Frieren: Beyond Journey's End is one of the most popular and respected anime and manga franchises of the past few years due to its emotional depth and character development.

It is a story about regret.

The second season of the anime adaptation of the manga premiers in about three weeks. It's definitely on my must-watch list.

Last year, cosplayer Hanami made this cosplay of the main character, Frieren, dressed for Christmas festivities.


DJ Earworm's United State of Pop 2025 (Talk to Me)

Every year, DJ Earworm takes the 25 biggest songs that peaked in popularity in the United States during the calendar year and mixes them all together for his "United States of Pop." There is a track list at the YouTube page, although they can't be listed in order as the biggest ones pop in and out through the mashup. As has been the case for the last ten years or so, they all seem to fall into the same dance beat. 

Despite relative disappointment with Taylor Swift's album The Life of a Showgirl, it ended up on several top albums of the year lists and landed two songs in this mashup: "The Fate of Ophelia" and "Opalite." Other artists who have two songs represented here are Benson Boone, Morgan Wallen, and Tate McRrae. The cast from the movie K-Pop Demon Hunters also had two songs make the top 25, although they were credited to different combinations of artists. 


Ever Wish You Could Visit Hawkins in 1983?

You may be into Stranger Things, but do you really wish you could enter the fictional world of Hawkins? Well, thanks to the Byers Home listing on Airbnb, now you can.

Located only 15 minutes from Atlanta, this rental is the actual home where the exterior shots of the Byers'  home was filmed for the show.

And the inside is all decked out to match the vibe, with 80s decor, creepy lab designs, and giant growths permeating the home from the Upside Down.

On the downside, the place will cost you over $2,000 a night and they don't have any availability until July. But I guess that's the cost of true fandom.


Christmas Viewing for Dedicated Sci-Fi Geeks

So you've already seen all the holiday classic movies this month, and you've re-watched the more recent slew of Christmas comedies. You've even seen a couple of Hallmark Christmas romances, and can't take any more of that. But it's Christmas week, and you want to wring all the festive spirit possible out of your screen time. At the same time, it would be comforting to just go back to bingeing on one of your beloved science fiction or fantasy series like you do the rest of the year. Oh, those geeky franchises have plenty of holiday cheer, if you know where to look. 

Yes, Christmas exists in science fiction. It may be called something else, but we know Christmas when we see it. Holiday episodes exist in space, in time travel, and in other dimensions. Ars Technica has a list of recommendations for holiday episodes of TV series and some movies that you may have forgotten about. Check out what they have to offer, and you could plan a Christmas watch party with like-minded friends before you celebrate with the family. They don't tell you where to find these Christmas treats, but the exact name of the episode will help you search for them online. 


The Best of What MBARI Saw in 2025

The Monterrey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) has many projects, but we love to see them observing strange and rare creatures in the deeper parts of the ocean. Their research ships use Remotely Operated Vehicles (ROVs) to go deeper than divers can to send back amazing video of sea life in its native environment. In this video, they show off the most spectacular footage their robots sent back in 2025. These animals, seen between 2400 and 3100 feet below the surface, are as follows:

0:00 Shiny loosejaw (Aristostomias scintillans)
0:08 Crown siphonophore (Stephanomia amphytridis)
0:16 Longhorn decorator crab (Chorilia longipes)
0:23 Owlfish (family Bathylagidae)
0:31 Slender siphonophore  (Bargmannia elongata)
0:40 Octopus squid (Octopoteuthis deletron)
0:46 Market squid (Doryteuthis opalescens)
0:54 Roughtail skate (Bathyraja trachura
0:58 Giant siphonophore (Praya dubia)
1:02 Banded piglet squid (Helicocranchia pfefferi)
1:13 Armored sea cucumber (Psolus squamatus)
1:18 Swordtail squid (Chiroteuthis calyx)
1:24 Bumpy jelly (Stellamedusa ventana)
1:32 Pacific sergestid shrimp (Eusergestes similis)
1:45 Sablefish (Anoplopoma fimbria)
2:04 Striated sea elephant (Firoloida desmarestia
2:11 Sea anemone (order Actiniaria)
2:19 Pacific blackdragon (Idiacanthus antrostomus)
2:22 Clown siphonophore (Lychnagalma utricularia)
2:30 Fingered goblet sponge (Heterochone calyx)
2:34 Dandelion siphonophore and Pacific sergestid shrimp (Dromalia alexandri and Eusergestes similis)
2:42 Black-eyed squid eating a northern lampfish (Gonatus onyx eating Stenobrachius leucopsarus)
2:53 Longhand hermit crab (Pagurus tanneri
3:00 Silky jelly (Colobonema sericeum)
3:05 Bloody-belly comb jelly (Lampocteis cruentiventer)
3:13 Peacock squid (Taonius sp.)
3:17 Sablefish (Anoplopoma fimbria)
3:21 California firefly squid (Abraliopsis felis)
3:36 Neon jelly (Tetrorchis erythrogaster)
3:44 Lewis’s moon snail (Neverita lewisii)
3:51 Shiny loosejaw (Aristostomias scintillans)
3:59 Crown siphonophore (Stephanomia amphytridis)

You can also hover over the progress bar at the bottom of the video to see the names. I would recommend watching this in full screen mode. 


Photographic Evidence of Elves and Sprites

On November 26, Italian photographer Valter Binotto was able to capture two rare TLEs (transient luminous events) in one photograph. TLEs are so fleeting, lasting only milliseconds, that even if you saw them with your eyes they might not register. In other words, they are the epitome of the phrase "don't blink or you'll miss it." These are electrical discharges that happen in the upper atmosphere high above thunderstorms, and reach almost to the edge of space. 

What you see here is an elve, a ghostly red ring displayed high above the Alps near the town of Possagno. An elve is a group of glowing nitrogen molecules. The red, many-legged flashes of light are a cluster of sprites, or positive lightning discharging to the ground. Capturing both types of TLEs in one photograph is a once-in-a-lifetime accomplishment. Binotto has photographed TLEs before, but never two kinds in one photo. Read more about this rare photograph at Space.com.  -via Metafilter 


The Year's Most Scathing Book Reviews

Historians will study how bad this book is. English teachers will hold this book aloft at their students to remind them that literally anyone can write a book: Look at this, it’s just not that hard to do.

That's how Scaachi Koul describes American Canto, a memoir by journalist and political operative Olivia Nuzzi. Koul reviewed the book for Slate. This review is one of several collected by Literary Hub for a roundup of the most cutting book reviews for the past year.

Other books considered and then eviscerated are the first novel by comedian Louis C.K., a memoir by former White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre, and a posthumously published collection of short stories by Harper Lee.

-via Nag on the Lake | Illustration: Dawn Hudson


The Fast Flameout of CosMc's

Hey, remember that time McDonald's opened a chain of coffee shops? They wanted to get in on what Starbucks was selling, but it didn't work out. Weird History Food usually goes through the whole timeline of chain restaurants, but for this one they only had to go back two years. Really. CosMc's was a coffee shop that offered plenty of fancy variations on coffee plus a variety of bizarre cold drinks. There was a lot of hoopla in a very short time, and then it disappeared just as quickly. You will be forgiven if you don't remember it at all, because there was most likely never a CosMc's near you. And even if there was, it was gone before you knew it. What we learned from this experiment is that McDonald's, as successful as it is with burgers and fries, is always looking for the Next Big Thing, no matter how much they have to invest. Tom Blank explains the big splash and quiet legacy of CosMc's and other failed McDonald's experiments. 


35 Peppermint Desserts

Peppermint is a flavor often associated with Christmas and peppermint-flavored candy canes commonly appear in Christmas decorations and gifts. Sweets master Elizabeth LaBau--known on the internet as the Sugar Hero--proposes 35 uses for peppermints that are appropriate for the season.

My favorite are her candy cane cups, which are pictured above. These are little cups made from whole candy canes. She partially melted them in an oven-safe shotglass-sized mold until they held their shape as functional cups when cooled.

LaBau then filled them with peppermint hot chocolate, whipped cream, and crumbled candy canes. She proposes an alternative drink for adults: peppermint schnapps. Yummy!


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