The Abuses of Objectivity
In January 2017, Kellyanne Conway, at that time President Trump’s press secretary, coined the term “alternative facts” on Meet the Press. The term was part of a broader move by President Trump and...
View ArticleThe Airport Workers Who Starved Themselves in the Super Bowl’s Shadow
This year’s Super Bowl LIV in Miami, Florida, was, by all accounts, a successful event. One team’s fans were filled with victorious joy, the other’s with the agony of defeat; the bombastic halftime...
View ArticleHow to Mess Up Black History Month
Book events rarely garner national media attention—or, for that matter, much attention at all. But on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble canceled the launch of “Diverse Editions,” a series of 12 new covers...
View ArticleDemocrats Embrace the Grift
The press accounts of the App That Failed during the Iowa caucuses this week were probably most Americans’ introduction to Acronym, the Democratic nonprofit responsible for developing the app, but...
View ArticleThis Is How Bernie Wins
I managed to find one person in Coos County, New Hampshire, who would admit to voting for Bernie Sanders in the 2016 primary and Donald Trump in the general. Don Couture, 79, is a Berlin native who...
View ArticleHistory Will Remember Democrats’ Timidity, Too
For reasons well beyond the antics of Trump himself, this has already been one of the most frustrating weeks of the Trump era. In the headlines, the ongoing fracas in Iowa has managed to overtake not...
View ArticleThe Radical Possibilities of Not Paying Your Student Loans
I left college $25,000 in debt, a fact I’m reminded of every month when an email from Great Lakes Borrowers Services informs me that “Your Automatic Payment Will Be Made Soon.” But relative to most...
View ArticleThe Lodge Is a House of Horrors With Nothing Inside
Horror destabilizes, but it follows rules. It is illicit and thrilling but temporary: like taking drugs, only safe. So I tell myself, anyway, when I have to watch a horror movie. Just in case, I saw...
View ArticleThe Empire Strikes Back
One day after the Senate acquitted him in 1999, Bill Clinton spoke from the White House about the grueling impeachment battle. It had been a bitter ordeal. He had lied to the country and broken the...
View ArticleDuncing About Architecture
On February 4, 2020 the Architectural Record reported that it had obtained a draft copy of a proposed executive order titled “Making Federal Buildings Beautiful Again.” The order would, essentially,...
View ArticleJoe Biden Is Collapsing
Joe Biden brought his “No Malarkey” tour to a New Hampshire debate stage on Friday night. But in promising to tell the truth, he accidentally exposed his own doleful (or I should say, Bob Dole-ful)...
View ArticleHow Ditching the Iowa Caucus Could Remake the Biofuels Debate
In the wake of Iowa’s caucus vote-counting disaster, political staffers and pollsters alike are reconsidering the state’s “first in the nation to vote” status. The quaint caucuses and infamous...
View ArticleWe’re Debating Climate Predictions While Rome Burns
Are we on track for a catastrophe or a meltdown? This somewhat gnat-straining debate has emerged around new modeling, some of which suggests that a much-dreaded “worst case scenario” of five degrees...
View ArticlePsychopath Nation
If the news in the hours after the Trump administration assassinated the Iranian military leader Qassem Soleimani felt like the six months leading up to the Iraq War squeezed into one evening, then the...
View ArticleThe Dissonance of a Land Acknowledgment at the Oscars
There is something obviously insane about Parasite, a Korean film about the violence of wealth inequality, winning the top honor at an event that sends its honored guests home with $225,000 gift bags....
View ArticleThe Obsolete Politics of James Carville
Ahh, 1994. What a time to be alive. Ill Communication, Monster, and Superunknown were blaring from every boom box and Chevy Cavalier cassette deck. Final Fantasy 3 had a generation of socially awkward...
View ArticleThe Non-Fascist Case for Classical Architecture
Federal design guidelines for government buildings aren’t normally front-page news. But a draft executive order that aims to rewrite the rules for federal buildings is attracting widespread attention...
View ArticleWhat New Hampshire Voters Are Watching
Shortly after 5:30 Monday evening, Suzanne Roantree, a TV reporter for the New Hampshire station WMUR, did a segment on a Manchester sidewalk about the large swath of Democrats who were still up for...
View ArticleJeff Sharlet’s Flawed Experiment in Empathy
It’s standard practice to begin a text about photography by citing Roland Barthes or Susan Sontag. In the introduction to This Brilliant Darkness: A Book of Strangers, Jeff Sharlet opts for the former:...
View ArticleThe Enduring Vision of Chinatown
The first time I saw Chinatown, I was about as far as you can get from Los Angeles—sitting by myself in an old movie house in Cape Cod, Massachusetts. This was in the early 1970s, before the era of the...
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