According to social media, 2026 is the new 2016. The trend is everywhere: TikToks with Snapchat dog filters, Instagram carousels with Rio De Janeiro filters, Spotify playlists with “Lush Life” by Zara ...
In 2026, TikTok and Instagram are looking back to 2016 and remembering the ‘good times’—here’s why some social media users are so nostalgic for the old days. The year 2026 has just begun, but the ...
Panera is jumping on the 2016 bandwagon and winding back the clock to a simpler time – the launch of PokémonGo, the Mannequin Challenge and, in the restaurant chain's case, bread bowls. In tandem with ...
Troy-based content creator Iliana Torres shares a photo of herself from 2016, when blocky-filled eyebrows and dark purple-reddish lipstick were in. Troy-based content creator Iliana Torres poses for a ...
I started seeing ghosts of the prior decade a few days after 2026 began, when acquaintances and friends began posting photos “like it was 2016.” They showed off their exaggerated eyebrows, Brandy ...
As people rang in the new year, TikTok turned into a time machine, christening “2026 as the new 2016” in a constant scroll of Snapchat dog filters, Mannequin Challenge throwbacks and choker and crop ...
Nearly half of the databases that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention used to update regularly — surveillance systems that tracked public health information like Covid vaccination rates and ...
The feeling of “take me back” has never been more relevant as 2026 kicks off. On TikTok, the hashtag #2016 has more than 2 million posts, often used to caption throwback photos, old videos and ...
VSCO filters, Kylie lip kits and the summer of Pokemon Go. The year 2016 is making a comeback in 2026 as people flood Instagram with throwback posts reminiscing about what they viewed as an iconic ...
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or ...
The crime-thriller movie “The Rip” released Friday on Netflix is centered around a real Miami-Dade officer who uncovered over $20 million stuffed inside Home Depot buckets during a 2016 raid. How much ...