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Showing page 162 of 3498.
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The Japanese reality show “Old Enough!” is a gentle series, with dependable rhythms that “land somewhere between those of a baseball game and a David Attenborough-led nature show,” @frynaomifry writes. https://t.co/hwXzNv8Frv — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“Everything that I try to do is based on positive feelings.” A conversation with Neil Young, on how he created his latest LP, “World Record”—his 42nd—and whether he’ll ever retire from songwriting. https://t.co/HssrNwBXbk — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
If you find a black sock on a machine, leave it there, even if you realize that it is your sock. This is a shared facility and now it’s everyone’s sock. https://t.co/GfXYWXA5Zo — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“Climate scientists often feel a mixture of pride and foreboding,” @dwbwriter notes. “Pride because they can shed light on our collective future; foreboding because it’s a future they fear.” https://t.co/iI7t7wmg61 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“Even in the far reaches of YouTube comments, the most throwaway of online forms, we can find a record of the millions of private memories and feelings that flood our world like invisible radio waves,” Max Norman writes. https://t.co/FjsTKmxQK6 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The Sandy Hook memorial’s spatial poetics—the balance between circular pathways and blocks of granite, its enduring engravings of names in stone and perennials for texture and color through the seasons—ground its intent. https://t.co/Yy0DHbVB0c — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“For the sort of evening when you’d normally roast a chicken, and you want to make dinner into *dinner,* duck is your friend,” @hels writes. https://t.co/CsxqsmgjTm — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Much of El Paso can be considered “nature deprived,” meaning that the community is experiencing higher-than-average loss of natural spaces. Grassroots groups have been working to conserve the 7,000-acre Castner Range for nearly 50 years. https://t.co/WYPPKehLOY — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
.@drawingolive illustrates the freelance life. https://t.co/WzmNc5SpYE — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The nematode Ascaris lumbricoides has established residence in the intestines of a sixth of the human population—more than a billion people. In a “parasite Olympics,” it would earn a gold medal, the authors of the new book “Parasites” write. https://t.co/HVK3ThHAWk — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Rachel Aviv writes about a man who, at 34, learned his abusive childhood was part of an experiment. https://t.co/NV2li0m7g1 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The avant-garde writer Kathy Acker liked to say that she wasn’t one person but many, and she made this multiplicity the main subject of her transgressive, at times alienating fiction. https://t.co/d7YGRleeMB — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
An interview with Mike Judge, the creator of hit shows such as “Beavis and Butt-Head” and “King of the Hill” and “one of the most prolific, needle-accurate satirists of the past few decades,” Mike Sacks writes. https://t.co/XDvKp5BVKE — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Sam Bankman-Fried was the latest and the most effective crypto messiah, precisely because he did not seem to take crypto all that seriously. https://t.co/GfVFJ3DMaR — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
A book by James Q. Whitman methodically explores how the Nazis took inspiration from American racism. https://t.co/xaCzw498uO — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
How many books is too many books? https://t.co/n0J23xy7rg — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
An expanded group of voters participated in Sight and Sound’s poll for the Greatest Films of All Time, resulting in a more lucid view of the best films in the history of cinema. See what picks made @tnyfrontrow’s ballot. https://t.co/kGUJCsLqqr — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The new book “Parasites” explores how the creatures may keep populations of species in balance, the ways in which they are imperilled by climate change, and what we owe them. https://t.co/1Gx67Xg6LH — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
On #NewYorkerRadio, @susanorlean reads from her obituary column about the Choco Taco, a beloved ice-cream novelty that was discontinued earlier this year. https://t.co/Nb04TVIlXH — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Bob Dylan’s book of essays, “The Philosophy of Modern Song,” is “rich, riffy, funny, and completely engaging,” David Remnick writes. https://t.co/WvZZxpYdLm — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Welcome to Fancy Fake French Fashion’s Web site, where bras don’t exist and everything costs $215. https://t.co/QzjJGWo9ie — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“Sept. 3: I realized it was Tommy’s birthday. . . . He’s been dead longer than I knew him alive.” Excerpts from the novelist Thomas Mallon’s 1980s diaries. https://t.co/khJU4TXm5T — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Unfolding in one of the country’s oldest and most far-flung industries is a story of prioritizing payments to wealthy stockholders over everything else—including serving the public interest. https://t.co/GakMHmYrio — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
A cartoon by @PaulNoth. #NewYorkerCartoons https://t.co/caXpw3Yazp — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
A 90-year-old Vermont farmer dispenses his wisdom on how to grow and tend to Christmas trees. https://t.co/WErDUtvNuA — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Elon Musk’s stated plan is to purge Twitter of its censorious past. What does he actually think about free speech? https://t.co/6AUbQSc47c — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Can you name this actor and banjo player? Guess here. https://t.co/q6SHpki0OU — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
At the start of the 2021 Formula 1 season, the Mercedes team head Toto Wolff asked staff—from aerodynamicists to caterers—to find out who their opposite number was at Red Bull. “Put the picture right in front of you so you know whom to beat,” he wrote. https://t.co/FkA40TAuQR — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Rebecca Kiessling has devoted her legal career to advocating for mothers whose children were conceived through rape. For Kiessling, this line of work is first and foremost a strategy for combatting abortion. https://t.co/eft65262RM — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Physical beauty was always important to the French novelist Colette; in her most famous books, time, and its effect on her characters, is the grand antagonist. https://t.co/0vs4bOhQ2Y — PolitiTweet.org