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The 5 Absolute Worst Kinds of Bosses

The characters of fictional Dunder Mifflin in The Office have to work under Steve Carell’s socially-inept Michael Scott. (Or they did for the first few seasons.) Dilbert has an obtuse, pointed-haired drone of a boss. But what’s funny on TV or in comic strips can be miserable if you’re actually living it. According to career site Glassdoor.com, one in five employees have had their careers hurt by a boss. Often, this is because bad bosses lead to bad performance, experts say, and the effect can linger for years.

The Best Gifts for James Bond Fans

If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Variety may receive an affiliate commission. As 007 fans know all too well, no big-budget film in recent memory has been plagued by more setbacks and delays than “No Time to Die.” But Daniel Craig’s final entry as James Bond is finally here after hitting theaters on Oct. 8 — and it’s already received rave reviews.

The Boss: Birchbox Katia Beauchamp on Beauty, Startups

In The Boss, successful women share how they reached the top and the lessons they learned along the way. After graduating from Vassar, I began my career in banking. I was doing well, but didn’t feel challenged or fulfilled so I decided to change my career path — and was lucky enough to get into Harvard Business School. When I arrived at Harvard, I had no intention of becoming an entrepreneur.

The Congo: Bare Cupboard | TIME

TIME February 8, 1963 12:00 AM GMT-5 Awaiting the victorious United Nations at the National Bank of Katanga in Elisabethville were some legitimate spoils —or so it seemed. There should have been $16.2 million in Congolese francs originally deposited in the bank to support the currency of Moise Tshombe’s Katanga—and U.N. officials hoped to turn it over to the Congo government for reconstruction. But when they got there, Tshombe’s cupboard was bare.

The Science Behind the Cannibalism on Yellowjackets

The cruelty of teenage girls can often feel like life-or-death—but in Yellowjackets, Showtime’s hit series about a New Jersey girl’s soccer team that gets stranded in the wilderness, it really is. Starving, freezing, and with no animals to hunt and little else to lose, the teens have slowly transformed from classmates into cannibals. It’s not an unrealistic scenario—the show’s creators have referenced the real-life catastrophes that inspired it, many of which devolved into cannibalism.