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A countdown, a wig switch, and two stories that stick: we dig into what your blood type might say about your health, then climb to the rooftops with the man who sets Times Square’s confetti loose at midnight. The science comes first. We break down how types A, B, AB, and O relate to risks like norovirus, ulcers, heart attack, stroke, and clotting, and why hospitals treat AB plasma like “liquid gold” while relying on O-negative donors in emergencies. We talk through universal recipient and donor rules, the differences that may influence COVID-19 severity, and how to use these insights without turning them into fate. Practical, plain-English takeaways help you ask smarter questions at your next appointment.
From there, the show lifts into the human layer. Meet the confetti king coordinating more than 100 volunteers and 3,000 pounds of paper across Times Square’s skyline. His radio call syncs with fireworks and “Auld Lang Syne,” but what makes the spectacle unforgettable are the wishes on each slip—tiny notes gathered online and from a wishing wall, drifting over a million strangers. One message about a mother’s cancer led to a phone call, a pause, and quiet sobs that turned a city ritual into something intimate and real. We love the logistics, but we linger on the feeling: the way simple craft delivers a shared heartbeat at midnight.
We close with a question for you: if your wish could ride a confetti flake over Times Square, what would it say? Hit play, then share your line. If the conversation gave you something useful or moved you, follow, rate, and send this to a friend who needs a nudge of science and a spark of wonder.
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Music by Alehandro Vodnik from Pixabay
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