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Friday, April 30, 2021
Thursday, April 29, 2021
How to characterize the true subtext of social media? Kyle Chayka suggests vibes, or, "moments of audiovisual eloquence."
A comic about how to cope with numbness from the NPR editor responsible for updating their Covid counters.
Making the case that Biden realistically won’t achieve much comparable to Obama in his first two years (because Republicans).
Public policy is moving left, no question. But while both parties have their reasons for depicting the Democratic government in Washington, DC, as a progressive juggernaut, that doesn’t mean it’s true.
↩︎ The National Review
How many artists overshadow their band after going solo? "The real takeaway is and always has been Beyoncé."
Photographer Michelle Groskopf visits James Turrell's volcano-in-progress "Roden Crater" in Arizona.
A tough case befuddling the Supreme Court: does the First Amendment permit schools to sanction students for off-campus speech?
Nineteenth-century England’s anti-vaccine movement feared that the smallpox vaccine would turn people into cows.
About 60% of congressional Republicans that hold seats vacated by fellow Republicans are more conservative than their predecessor.
Get your daily dose of TMN—plus extra links to explain the news—delivered to your inbox in the morning, Monday-Saturday.
Wednesday, April 28, 2021
Designer Tim Denee illustrated his play-through of the game "Thousand Year Old Vampire."
Fifty years ago, NPR aired its first original broadcast.
NPR as we now know it began with the May 3, 1971, debut of All Things Considered, in an episode covering, among other items: an anti-war protest, barbers shaving women's legs (due to "the decline in business with today's popularity of long hairstyles in men"), and addiction.
Here's the first segment from the show, and you can hear the rest over at NPR:
Invesco bets on new tech to refine its FX trading
The problem with law-enforcement National Park rangers: They’re not seen as “real” cops—a misperception that can end in violence.
In December 2020, a ranger at Petroglyph National Monument, in New Mexico, tased a man who provided a false name when stopped for walking off-trail in the park. Once again, the Park Service concluded that the ranger’s actions were reasonable.
↩︎ Outside
New Belgium's intentionally bad Torched Earth Ale imagines how global warming will ruin beer,
"What you hear...is complete natural reverb due to the placement of the mics." How Bowie's "Heroes" vocals were recorded.
The Scandinavian Cello School has spent quarantine playing for cows.
"The existence of the Secretly Group Union may...reflect how indie music as a whole continues to grow out of its DIY origins."
A community-built collection of thousands of statues and sculptures ready for 3D printing.
Remembering Texas’s Mexican restaurants—before Tex-Mex.
I didn’t cut corners in the kitchen. The original recipes from my grandmother were pretty basic—some just said “handful of this and that,” so the results depended on the size of your hand. We measured the ingredients exactly.
↩︎ Texas Monthly
After Rotten Tomatoes resurfaced an 80-year-old pan of Citizen Kane, the film lost its perfect score on the site.
A designer is creating “fictional book covers for unwritten memoirs” based on user submissions.
What it's like to realize the goal of your job's wellness app is to make you work harder for free.
BIS to operate sterling liquidity facility backed by BoE
Tuesday, April 27, 2021
In Hawaii, a shortage of vehicles to rent means tourists are driving U-Hauls. Last month, the cheapest car went for $722 a day.
Your weekly white paper: The “most instagrammable bird” is the frogmouth, formerly “the world’s most unfortunate-looking."
Breaking down the "copyright nightmare" of an NFT being sold by Emily Ratajkowski—that's also trolling "art troll" Richard Prince.
In ancient Rome, the justice was based on personal responsibility, though Tiberius "was basically a wannabe Fox Mulder."
"How I draw is how I draw." An interview about process with illustrator Amy Moss.
One of the largest building-moves in history.
In 1930 the Indiana Bell building was rotated 90 degrees, and supposedly no one inside felt it move.
Over a month, the 22-million-pound structure was moved 15 inch/hr, all while 600 employees still worked there. There was no interruption to gas, heat, electricity, water, sewage, or the telephone service they provided.
You’ve heard that restaurants and retail shops are struggling to fill jobs—perhaps because the economic model is broken.
The pandemic did not create these conditions. It simply made them even more impossible to ignore—and created scenarios in which some workers (not all, but some!) have been empowered, perhaps for the first time in their working lives, to opt out.
↩︎ Culture Study