What does an extraordinary life look like? Since the release of its first season last year, “Martin Scorsese Presents: The Saints” on Fox Nation has attempted to answer this question by dramatizing ...
The story of the first millennial saint, dubbed "God’s Influencer" for his use of the internet to spread his faith, is spotlighted in the final installment of season two of Martin Scorsese's "The ...
PBS Masterpiece has revealed the premiere date for its adaptation of The Count of Monte Cristo tsarring Sam Claflin (Daisy Jones and the Six) and Jeremy Irons (The Borgias). The latest version of the ...
There appears to be a growing appreciation for GM’s sporty front-wheel-drive cars from the 2000s. Although it didn’t have a V8 or rear-wheel drive, some enthusiasts fondly remember the W-body Chevy ...
General Motors is performing well across the US automotive market – they have already sold more than 2.2 million vehicles across their mainstream (Chevy, Cadillac, Buick, GMC) and niche brands. But ...
I looked over the colonnade of St. Peter’s Square and couldn’t believe my eyes. Eighty thousand people below erupted into applause as Pope Leo declared Pier Giorgio Frassati and Carlo Acutis to be ...
Pope Leo XIV canonized 15-year-old Carlo Acutis as the first millennial saint who is nicknamed "God's influencer" for using technology to spread faith. The pontiff made the announcement at an open-air ...
Pope Leo XIV proclaimed a 15-year-old computer genius the Catholic Church’s first millennial saint, along with another popular Italian figure who spent his life spreading his faith before dying at a ...
An Italian teenager who liked playing video games and making funny films of his pets became the Catholic Church’s first “millennial” saint on Sunday. Carlo Acutis, who was just 15 when he died from ...
Pope Leo XIV waves to faithful holding a picture of Blessed Carlo Acutis, who will be canonized Sunday, as he arrives in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican for an open-air jubiliar audience Saturday, ...
Before he was known as a soon-to-be-saint, Carlo Acutis was simply a boy in a school uniform, lugging his backpack through the hallways of the Tommaseo Institute in Milan. His teachers remember him as ...