Winner of the 2025 Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition; a sloth clinging to a fence post. Credit: Emmanuel Tardy. A brown-throated three-toed sloth strikes a familiar pose, clinging onto a ...
Are you holding on to your job like it’s a life raft? This story is for you. Many, or all, of the products featured on this page are from our advertising partners who compensate us when you take ...
The animal lovers at ZooEarthTV reveal that sloths really do kiss in this heartwarming moment. ‘Very Sad’: Trump Slams Supreme Court Ruling Woman confronts man who allegedly scammed her out of $60,000 ...
They don’t seem happy, they don’t give 100%—and they don’t quit. Cranky workers are clinging to the jobs they have instead of moving on because, well, what’s the alternative in the current economy?
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Banda Aceh, Indonesia — Two men in Indonesia's conservative Aceh province were among a group of people publicly caned on Tuesday after an Islamic Shariah court convicted them of violating Islamic law ...
PITTSBURGH — The National Aviary celebrated the birthdays of two of its resident sloths, Vivien and Wookiee, on Thursday, drawing nearly 300 guests to the event. Vivien, a Linnaeus’s Two-toed Sloth, ...
At its core, job hugging means staying in a role even when it no longer feels like a great fit. The reasons vary. For some, it is financial security and for others, it is loyalty to a team or fear of ...
Have you hugged your job lately? Maybe you should. Forget job hopping: More people are job hugging in the cooling labor market. “At an alarming rate, more and more employees are displaying what is ...
Workers are now "job hugging" for "dear life," according to consulting firm Korn Ferry. The worker quit rate is hovering at around 2% in 2025, and job growth is showing signs of slowing. Surveys show ...
The era of “job hopping” is over. Get ready for “job hugging.” Korn Ferry, a global organizational consultancy firm, has published a new report showing that employees are no longer moving quickly ...