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Saturday, May 29, 2021
Friday, May 28, 2021
New York's "Vessel" to reopen—after three people killed themselves there—with measures to reduce risk, though not higher barriers.
A fossil in Germany shows a shark eating a squid eating a lobster.
Afghanistan’s Gen Z rappers are entering their twenties as US troops exit. “For now, hip-hop is their way of making a difference.”
“There’s family who will support you, outside society who think rap is wrong, and radical Islamists who think this is something against Islam. All we can do as a family is be supportive.”
↩︎ VICE
Dan Johnson: The phrase “set it and forget it,” from a '90s informercial, is a study in (or mantra for) American ignorance.
Excerpts from 1909's The Woman and the Car, for "those who wanted to take to the roads, but did not quite know how."
Thursday, May 27, 2021
Pictures of characters from London's queer nightlife, by photographer Roxy Lee.
Redfin's CEO tries to contextualize our bizarre housing market. "It’s not just income that’s k-shaped, but mobility."
An update from the women hosting anti-racist dinners for white ladies. “We want people to, No. 1, call a thing a thing.”
Instead of goose feathers or synthetic stuffing, a new puffy jacket is filled with helium.
Your social media apps aren't listening to you and don't need to—everything you give them is much cheaper and way more powerful.
This is the song we listen to on repeat while we work.
We are the type of person who listens to a single song on repeat (for hours at a time, it's pretty stupid) while we work. Recently, that song is some nice house music from Hard Feelings, the new project from Amy Douglas and Hot Chip's Joe Goddard. There's a video, too.
Naomi Osaka says she won't talk to the press during the French Open. Ideally, tennis will reconsider its media format entirely.
The pandemic saved fast food. The wider restaurant industry is taking notes.
Long ago, fast food hit on the magic that can happen when sameness trumps creativity. And sometimes, customers might want exactly that, even from the highbrow places.
↩︎ Experience Magazine
Maps show a surge of new businesses in the US, particularly in predominantly Black neighborhoods.
A new trend in the wine world is "Brutal!!!," meaning wines that are "zero/zero," with no fining or filtration allowed.
"The astonishing tale of Krystall Schott’s defacement." A new NFT for one of the top images returned when people Google "face."
Wednesday, May 26, 2021
Chinese exporters urged to ramp up US dollar hedges
A new exhibit looks at how Soviet-era plastics were made and used in East Germany.
A roundup of the best of those videos that compare the relative sizes of certain things—e.g., asteroids, Pokémon, etc.
"For all the nuanced research and reporting on AI’s effects on society, the power of bumper-sticker rhetoric persists."
How social media has brought a reckoning over the casual misogyny of the ‘90s and early 2000s.
We just abused women for sport in the media, and I feel like that’s generationally something important to look at. What was in the media and the bloodstream when you were a child?
↩︎ Vox
Republican leaders may want the party to change post-2020—but despite election losses, constituents want to stay the course.
The White House has removed the Trump appointees on the arts panel that dictated federal buildings must follow classical motifs.
"It's just a bit demoralizing, isn't it?" Former shirtless Abercrombie greeters on what that whole deal was like.
There are currently around 465,000 cybersecurity job openings in the US.
How SoundScan’s debut in the early ‘90s turned the music world on its head, transforming the charts from guesses into real data.
For a certain breed of rock snob, the chart dip experienced by Sting’s January ’91 solo album Soul Cages—from no. 22 to no. 56 in that same span—was far more amusing, as the former frontman for ’80s new wave giants the Police was already exuding a certain classic-rock pompousness.
↩︎ The Ringer
Alabama ends its ban on yoga in public schools, though the use of "namaste" remains prohibited.
"We slept on our sides, all hugged, so we stayed warm." Children describe the conditions inside US border facilities.
A 10-day timelapse of shiitake mushrooms growing.
A 10-day timelapse of shiitake mushrooms growing.
A breakout of 25 years of Pitchfork review ratings, from all the 10s to all the zeroes.
Donald Trump brokered—or bribed—his way to silencing an investigation of the New England Patriots' "Spygate" cheating scandal.
Quant fund aims to tame bitcoin, and 39 other digital assets
Tuesday, May 25, 2021
US funds’ FX forwards settlement dates show clustering effects
Liberal Vermont loves its Trump-loathing Republican governor.
I asked Scott why he hadn’t become an independent. “That would probably be the easier path, to be quite honest with you,” he said. “But if you look at the longevity of the Republican Party, there’s a lot to be proud of, from my perspective.”
↩︎ The Atlantic
A day in the life of Joe Biden, who has a penchant for quirky headlines like “Japanese woman is 119 years old.”
Zak Cheney-Rice: The catastrophe isn't the rate at which the police kill. The catastrophe is the police.
From photographer Annie Lai, a series about young Chinese women living away from home.
Drinking tequila with Albert Einstein (straight, brain chaser).
Somehow we missed this last summer: the story, tucked away in a personal essay in Bookforum about angels and prophets, suggesting that teachers at the University of Kansas do tequila shots with slivers of Einstein's brain.
When Einstein died, in 1955, his brain was removed during an unsanctioned autopsy at a hospital in Princeton. Later, at the University of Pennsylvania, a pathologist named Thomas Stoltz Harvey sliced it up for research purposes but kept some of the slivers for himself. In 1988, Harvey—who’d since been stripped of his medical license—moved to Lawrence, home of the University of Kansas, where he presented one of the slivers to local author William S. Burroughs, after whose death in 1997 it passed into the possession of . . . I’m going to stop now, because I don’t want to get anyone in trouble. Let’s just say that when I was in Lawrence, teaching at KU, this was a thing that still happened, a hazing that was also an homage: You scooped the bit of Einstein’s brain out of the jar and shook off the excess formaldehyde; then, you put some salt in the crook of your thumb and licked it, after which you took down a shot of cheap room-temperature tequila and sucked on the brain-bit until your mouth went numb—until the formaldehyde paralyzed your lips and tongue and you couldn’t be understood, you couldn’t even feel yourself trying to make language.
True? Wish it were true? If only the dead could speak.