Do you think love stinks? These businesses have your Valentine’s Day figured out

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By Julian Torres, CNN

New York (CNN) — Not everyone loves the gooey, heart-shaped version of Valentine’s Day. Even for those who celebrate, the pressure to deliver the picture-perfect night can — quite frankly — stink.

This Valentine’s Day, some nonprofits and businesses are siding with the jaded lovers of the world. Those skipping romance this season can name an ex after a pile of animal feces, shred old photos for dining deals or smash their way through staged date nights in rage rooms.

According to Google, the phrase “I hate Valentine’s Day” has seen an over 5,000% increase in searches in the past month, suggesting demand for cathartic campaigns like these is growing alongside the holiday itself.

“Even for those who aren’t currently heartbroken, participating in ‘anti-Valentine’s Day’ events can serve as a small act of self-affirmation,” said Raluca Ursu, an associate professor of marketing at the NYU Stern School of Business. “(It’s) a way to acknowledge past challenges, celebrate resilience and perhaps even laugh at what once hurt.”

For some, the anti-romance promotions might just be a way to make it through the mushy holiday. For others, like nonprofit organizations and businesses, they’re a way to capture every customer — lover or hater.

Heartbreak meets the animal kingdom

Zoos and shelters around the world are offering lighthearted ways to support their animals while letting go of heartbreak.

At WildCat Ridge Sanctuary in Scotts Mills, Oregon, people can donate $100 to have an ex-partner’s name placed on a gelatin heart made with meat and nutrients. The heart is fed to one of the sanctuary’s big cats, and donors receive a video of the feeding.

The “Be My Bloody Valentine” fundraiser has grown from about 10 participants in its first year in 2020 to more than 75 last year.

“It’s definitely something we have no plans on discontinuing,” said Ian Ford, associate executive director at Wildcat Ridge Sanctuary.

WildCat Ridge isn’t alone in turning heartbreak into donations. Ireland’s Galway SPCA, for example, is running its “Neuter Your Ex” fundraiser, where feral cats are named after former partners before being neutered and released as part of its population control program.

The Maryland Zoo is offering a “Dollars for Dung” promotion that allows donors to name a pile of animal waste after someone from their past, starting at $5. Meanwhile, the Bronx Zoo in New York has revived its annual tradition of naming one of the zoo’s thousands of Madagascar hissing cockroaches for $15.

Love stinks — and it’s on the menu

Restaurants are also leaning into the anti-romance trend, with something on the menu for everyone — whether they’re in love, opting out of the tradition or just hungry for some revenge. National restaurant chains and local eateries have adopted unconventional promotions to disrupt the usual “for two” dining packages.

Hart’s, an upscale Mediterranean restaurant in Brooklyn, New York, is marking its ninth annual “Love Stinks” event — the longest-running promotion in the restaurant’s history.

Compared to traditional date-night cuisine, Hart’s limited menu leans into pungent ingredients like anchovies, garlic and blue cheese. Dishes like an onion tart with anchovies emphasize that the best parts of love don’t always smell so sweet.

“It’s really turned into a tradition, not only for us, but for some of our regulars,” said Nick Perkins, co-founder of Hart’s.

“It’s become so popular that starting last year, we started doing it

Highest-rated Class of 2027 football recruits from California

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Stuart Monk // Shutterstock

 

The recruiting race for the Class of 2027 is already heating up — not just on the field, but in the increasingly complex ecosystem of modern college football, where NIL (Name, Image, and Likeness) deals are reshaping how programs and players navigate early recruitment. For elite underclassmen, talent alone is no longer the only factor drawing attention; marketability, social media presence, and brand potential are now playing pivotal roles in how offers are extended and decisions are made. The top recruits in the 2026 cycle are not only physically advanced and highly skilled — they’re entering high school with endorsement potential and media savviness.

Stacker compiled a list of the highest rated Class of 2027 football recruits from California using data from 247Sports. Players are ranked by their 247Sports composite ratings. Here’s the players from California set to dominate Saturdays (and potentially Sundays) for years to come.

David Lee // Shutterstock

#20. Elija Harmon (DL)

– National rank: #206 (4 stars)
– Position rank: #26
– College: Oklahoma
– Offers: Oklahoma, Arizona, Auburn, California, Florida
– High school: Inglewood (Inglewood, CA)

MaverickZ85 // Shutterstock

#19. Khalil Terry (S)

– National rank: #201 (4 stars)
– Position rank: #21
– College: Notre Dame
– Offers: Notre Dame, Michigan State, Alabama, Arizona, Arizona State
– High school: Tustin (Tustin, CA)

SEALANDSKYPHOTO // Shutterstock

#18. Danny Lang (CB)

Highest-rated Class of 2027 football recruits from California

Kraig Pakulski 0 27 Article rating: No rating

Stuart Monk // Shutterstock

 

The recruiting race for the Class of 2027 is already heating up — not just on the field, but in the increasingly complex ecosystem of modern college football, where NIL (Name, Image, and Likeness) deals are reshaping how programs and players navigate early recruitment. For elite underclassmen, talent alone is no longer the only factor drawing attention; marketability, social media presence, and brand potential are now playing pivotal roles in how offers are extended and decisions are made. The top recruits in the 2026 cycle are not only physically advanced and highly skilled — they’re entering high school with endorsement potential and media savviness.

Stacker compiled a list of the highest rated Class of 2027 football recruits from California using data from 247Sports. Players are ranked by their 247Sports composite ratings. Here’s the players from California set to dominate Saturdays (and potentially Sundays) for years to come.

David Lee // Shutterstock

#20. Elija Harmon (DL)

– National rank: #206 (4 stars)
– Position rank: #26
– College: Oklahoma
– Offers: Oklahoma, Arizona, Auburn, California, Florida
– High school: Inglewood (Inglewood, CA)

MaverickZ85 // Shutterstock

#19. Khalil Terry (S)

– National rank: #201 (4 stars)
– Position rank: #21
– College: Notre Dame
– Offers: Notre Dame, Michigan State, Alabama, Arizona, Arizona State
– High school: Tustin (Tustin, CA)

SEALANDSKYPHOTO // Shutterstock

#18. Danny Lang (CB)

Tatreez explained: Why Palestinian women are preserving this embroidery

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By Zoe Whitfield, CNN

(CNN) — Born in Ramallah at the end of the ‘90s, Ayham Hassan grew up privy to the political weight attributed to certain sartorial practices. “I became aware early on that Palestinian textiles are not just objects,” said the designer, who is based between London and the occupied West Bank. “They are evidence carrying geography, lineage, and memory.”

When Hassan graduated from London’s Central Saint Martins art and design college last June, he titled his final collection “IM-Mortal Magenta: The Color That Doesn’t Exist.” Shaped by his understanding of this relationship between art and politics, it was infused with visual elements inspired by Gaza. “The color magenta became a conceptual anchor, used to speak about erasure and survival,” he explained in an email. “And tatreez informed not only the visual language, but also the structure of the work, and fundamentally how I design.”

This perception of tatreez, or traditional Palestinian embroidery, as a type of visual language is widely shared, owing to its intimacy with the land and biographical characteristics. A centuries-old creative practice, tatreez originally married its maker (usually women from rural communities) with their respective region. Details like color, technique and even its depictions of certain plants and flowers were tied to specific areas; by design it denoted social status and personal life events, including marriage or widowhood.

Beginning in 1948, following the Arab-Israeli war (recognized as the Nakba, or catastrophe, during which 700,000 Palestinians were expelled from their homes) – as well as later intifadas, or uprisings, against the occupation in 1987 and 2000 – tatreez became a political vehicle, actively embodying resistance for many Palestinians.

“Today it’s become part of an understanding of Palestinian steadfastness, or ‘sumud’ — of resistance more broadly,” Rachel Dedman, a curator of Middle Eastern art at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, and author of “Stitching the Intifada: Embroidery and Resistance in Palestine,” said during a video call. “And its practice as one of solidarity is becoming more and more clear. On TikTok you get lots of results for people running stitching circles and tatreez workshops.”

Dedman has spent the past decade researching tatreez and curating exhibitions in Europe and across the Middle East, following an initial invitation from the Palestinian Museum in Birzeit, north of Ramallah, in 2014. “Thread Memory: Embroidery from Palestine” is currently on show at the V&A Dundee in Scotland while more recently “Embroidering Palestine” opened at MoMu, the fashion museum of Antwerp, where work by Hassan is displayed alongside thobes (embroidered ankle-length dresses, also known as thobs) made over a century ago.

“Often in museums there’s a feeling that historic fashion is something that’s unchanging and static, held in amber,” said Dedman. “In the 19th century, tatreez and Palestinian dress was fashion – women were looking at each other. Being in MoMu then, I was excited to really approach this as fashion in the fullest sense, carving that connection between a 19th century embroidered thobe and the work of designers in the present.”

“The purpose of tatreez was a celebration of culture, land and identity,” added Samar Abdrabbou, a Palestinian program manager for Made in Palestine (MIP), an Australian humanitarian non-profit, who is based in Bethlehem. Many women used the traditional craft to “celebrate their beauty and femininity – they were not trying to fight or resist,” Abdrabbou explained. “Tatreez was never meant to be political, but during the Nakba many women left with only the thobe they were wearing, and a lot of fabric factories were burned. Palestinian women never stopped stitching.”

After 1948, tatreez became important as material evidence of Palestinian presence on the land, and

These Americans made big investments in Italian property. Here are the rewards and pitfalls

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By Maureen Ohare, CNN

(CNN) — In our travel roundup this week: why British Chinese food is baffling to Americans, the couple who bought an Italian mansion sight unseen, plus who’s staying in North Korea’s luxury hotels.

A home in Italy

Vito Andrea Racanelli’s ancestors migrated from Italy to America in the late 1800s. More than a century and a half later, he and his family decided to do it in reverse, choosing Tuscany as their home. Racanelli, a Denver-based attorney, spent more than $1 million on a sprawling farmhouse in Radicondoli.

“Buying real estate in Italy is completely different,” he tells CNN, suggesting that foreign buyers hire help with navigating the process, rather than trying to tackle it all on their own. Read the full story of the renovation for what else he learned.

For CNN subscribers, we have two more tales of property-buying abroad.

Texas couple John Alan and Vicky Ambrose bought the empty shell of a Piedmont mansion for 140,000 euros (around $160,000) without even seeing it.

They then embarked on a three-year renovation, spending a further 150,000 euros to transform the property into a boutique luxury apartment with two panoramic balconies. Here’s what it looks like now.

Mussomeli, in Sicily, is famous as one of the towns around Italy selling off ruined homes for just one euro, or about $1.20. These bargain-basement homes are in need of a complete rebuild, but the project also includes “premium” homes, which need fewer interventions, and are often fully inhabitable, starting from around $12,000.

Around 450 houses have now been sold in the town, transforming the community, where the most popular properties with foreigners are those with hillside views. Here’s what locals, both established and new, say life is like there.

Endless summer

Here’s a reminder this Valentine’s Day that our hit series “Chance Encounters,” about extraordinary travel connections, is available in podcast form.

American Kerri Cunningham fell for Brit Dirk Stevens when they met as teenagers on summer vacation in Europe. They were each other’s first love but lived on opposite sides of the Atlantic. Then almost three decades later, they unexpectedly reunited. Listen here.

Mexico was the scene for yacht captain Bob Parsons and librarian Beverly Carriveau’s summer romance that lasted through the decades. A “thunderbolt” passed between them in Mazatlán in 1968, recalls Carriveau, and their lives were never the same again. Hear it in her own words.

Of course, it’s not just lovers who go the distance on Valentine’s Day. That bouquet of roses you ordered will have made a long and chilly journey to your sweetheart’s door. Here’s where they’ve been.

Destinations less visited

For decades, Somalia’s name has been shorthand for conflict, piracy and danger. Yet, against the odds, the East African nation is now seeing a quiet rise in foreign tourists. That’s despite most Western governments still advising against all travel. Here’s what’s behind the surge in tourism.

Over in South Asia, Bangladesh has tigers, tea plantations and beaches, but it’s never been a mainstream tourist destination. Just 650,000 international visitors arrived in 2024. Here’

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