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+9 +1
The pleasures of Pauline Kael
The centenary of her birth provides a good opportunity to look back at the peerless career of a film critic remembered for her acuity, fierceness and idiosyncrasy – a writer whose brilliant insights and withering put-downs inspire loyal adulation and bitter enmity like no other. By Farran Smith Nehme.
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+15 +1
Farewell to Dr. John, Wherever You Is Now
Even in a city of characters, he stood out, wrapped in his own language. “You speak Spanish?” a journalist asked him. “No, man,” he said. “I don’t even speak English.” By Brian Cullman.
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+25 +1
The US Army Asked Twitter How Service Has Impacted People. The Answers Were Gut-Wrenching
The US Army tweeted, “How has serving impacted you?” As of this writing, the post has over 5,300 responses... By Caitlyn Johnstone.
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+18 +1
Powderfinger
Cowboy Junkies
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+6 +1
Why Joy Division?
Henry Rollins examines Jon Savage’s oral history of the post-punk band.
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+12 +1
The Healing Power of Gardens
Even for people who are deeply disabled neurologically, nature can be more powerful than any medication. By Oliver Sacks.
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+7 +1
The Legacy of Malcolm X
Malcolm X died fifty-one years ago today, just as he was moving toward revolutionary ideas that challenged oppression in all its forms. By Ahmed Shawki. (Feb. 2016)
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+8 +1
In Memory of Yellowstone Wolf 926
She was a survivor and an alpha. And then she was legally shot and killed by a hunter. Yellowstone Park's legendary wolf researcher Rick McIntyre reflects on the life of one of the park's most famous canines. By Rick McIntyre.
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+3 +1
A Longtime Fan of Luke Perry Mourns Her First and Greatest TV Love
Assistant TV editor Amy Amatangelo remembers Perry's heartthrob, Dylan McKay.
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+17 +1
The Heart
Kris Kristofferson
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+14 +1
Jack Kirby Interview
From The Comics Journal #134, February 1990.
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+16 +1
The 18th-Century Quaker Dwarf Who Challenged Slavery, Meat-Eating, and Racism
Benjamin Lay is not to be overlooked. By Natasha Frost. (Sept. 11, 2017)
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+23 +1
The incontrovertible truth about World War I
Our starting point for all commemorations must be deep sorrow, not only for the lives lost, but the effects on those who remained. By Peter FitzSimons.
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+16 +1
What does a minute’s silence mean?
Lest we forget what? What exactly? And who is this “we?” By George Theodoridis.
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+20 +1
The World According to Stanisław Lem
Ezra Glinter surveys the work of Polish science fiction writer Stanisław Lem.
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+11 +1
Cumana
Xavier Cugat and Orchestra featuring Lalo Schifrin
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+11 +1
The Lost World of Weegee
Nowadays Weegee is regarded by most art critics as an artist of permanent significance, one whose work is thought all the more valuable precisely because, like the gangster movies of the ’30s that are mirrored in his crime-scene photos, it was created for commercial purposes. By Terry Teachout.
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+8 +1
No No Man
Steven Jesse Bernstein
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+16 +1
The Senator Who Stood Up to Joseph McCarthy When No One Else Would
Margaret Chase Smith was the first woman to serve both the House and the Senate and always defended her values, even when it meant opposing her party. By Lorraine Boissoneault.
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+14 +1
The Manufactured McCain
Lifting Up A Bloodstained, Lying, Venal Servant of Capitalist Empire. By Bruce Dixon.
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