DeathHacks
Public
Will Scott Jurek Break the Appalachian Trail Record? Maybe.
Sounds like it'll come down to the wire. Can't even imagine the mental aspect of this let alone the physical side.
Irked by Black Lives Matter? Here’s What to Do.
Irked by Black Lives Matter? Here’s What to Do. via @instapaper
Fairly Random Thoughts on Ashley Madison & the Swiftly Moving Line
Fairly Random Thoughts on Ashley Madison & the Swiftly Moving Line — The Message — Medium via @instapaper
6 Ways You Harm Me When You Appropriate Black Culture – And How to Appreciate It Instead
This is a really good piece (despite the Buzzfeedy appearance) that deserves a read. As someone who grew up in an overwhelmingy white suburb (my high school is STILL 98% white according to recent stats) but who latched onto black culture and music at an early age, I've made many of the mistakes listed in the article over the years. It took me a while to figure out what's appropriation and what's appreciation. I've always aimed to be an ally, to amplify black voices especially where my own take on things isn't as relevant, and to understand historical and cultural contexts behind the struggles. Hopefully I'm moving in the right direction.
www.nytimes.com
Oliver Sacks: Sabbath
30 Years Later, ‘The Golden Girls’ is Still the Most Progressive Show on Television
Haven't even read it yet, but I know it's gotta be good.
How Spotify’s Discover Weekly cracked human curation at internet scale
@verge's long piece on Spotify's Discover Weekly is a great read. | http://t.co/J00wISDmaq
— Ryan MacMichael (@supalaze) October 1, 2015
SB Nation Publishes, Deletes "Complete Failure" Of A Story About Convicted Rapist Cop Daniel Holtzclaw
SB Nation Publishes, Deletes "Complete Failure" Of A Story About Convicted Rapist Cop Daniel Holtzclaw
The Journalist and the Troll: Benjamin Wey Spent Two Years Trying to Destroy Me Online - Bloomberg Business
The Journalist and the Troll: This Man Spent Two Years Trying to Destroy Me Online
www.nytimes.com
Marie Kondo and the Ruthless War on Stuff
www.nytimes.com
Confessor. Feminist. Adult. What the Hell Happened to Howard Stern?
www.nytimes.com
The Easiest Way to Get Rid of Racism? Just Redefine It.
www.nytimes.com
What I Learned From Executing Two Men - NYTimes.com
www.nytimes.com
Patton Oswalt: ‘I’ll Never Be at 100 Percent Again’
Republicans are now vowing Total War. And the consequences could be immense.
These three paragraphs sum up why we're so bugged out about the direction this election has taken: "It’s important to understand that strong institutions are what separate strong democracies from weak ones. In a strong democracy, one party can’t come into power and just lock up its opponents. It can’t turn the country’s law enforcement agencies into a partisan tool to destroy the other party. It can’t say that the courts will function only at its pleasure. We have the world’s most stable system not just because there aren’t tanks in the streets on election day, but because we have institutions that are strong enough to restrain the venality of individual men and women. And now, Republicans are not even pretending that those institutions should be impartial and transcend partisanship. They’re saying, if we can use them to destroy our opponents, we will. Something is seriously breaking down. And please, spare me any explanations for this phenomenon that rely on how “divided” Americans are. Are we divided? Sure. But there’s only one party that is so vigorously undermining core democratic institutions in this way. You may not like what Democrats stand for, but they aren’t engaging in widespread official vote suppression, chanting that should their candidate win her opponent should be tossed in jail, promising to prevent any Republican president from filling vacancies on the Supreme Court, suggesting that they’ll try to impeach their opponent as soon as he takes office, cheering when a hostile foreign power hacks into American electronic systems, and trying to use the FBI to win the election. Only one party is doing all of that. And we should all be very worried about what Republicans will do after November 8, whether they win or lose."
Radio World: A Few Thoughts on the Dusty Ol’ Archives
When it comes to radio archiving there's perception and then there's reality https://t.co/umDIiVRao6 @RadioTaskForce @WNYC @librarycongress http://pic.twitter.com/S95bfysZui
— Radio World (@radioworld_news) February 8, 2017
SuperBabies Don’t Cry | Vela
"We try to stop the growing body inside us from having what all bodies inherently have: vulnerability, that crack of a doorway through which our suffering creeps."
jezebel.com
All the Greedy Young Abigail Fishers and Me
Jazz Icon Sonny Rollins on Giving Up Playing and His Legacy
RT @WFMU: Jazz Legend Sonny Rollins on Retiring His Sax, His Legacy, and the Secret to Life:
A Gentle Corrective for the Epidemic of Identity Politics Turning Us on Each Other and on Ourselves – Brain Pickings
Today's @brainpickings is a good way to start off the year. https://t.co/pSbl753ary http://pic.twitter.com/BFYsR7EPk1
— Ryan MacMichael (@supalaze) January 2, 2018
www.latimes.com
The busboy who cradled a dying RFK has finally stepped out of the past - LA Times
Miserable and Middle-Aged? Is Something Wrong With You? | Psychology Today
Miserable and Middle-Aged? Is Something Wrong With You? | Psychology Today
You’ve Gotta Hear About Betty
You’ve Gotta Hear About Betty
BBC - Travel - The world’s oldest vegetarian restaurant
The world’s oldest vegetarian restaurant
How Do You Move a 320-Year-Old House Across an Ocean? - Atlas Obscura
How Do You Move a 320-Year-Old House Across an Ocean? - Atlas Obscura
The man who's going to save your neighborhood grocery store | New Food Economy
The man who's going to save your neighborhood grocery store | New Food Economy
The Glorious, Almost-Disconnected Boredom of My Walk in Japan | WIRED
The Glorious, Almost-Disconnected Boredom of My Walk in Japan | WIRED
The Fullness of Half Pint (The Interview)
The Fullness of Half Pint (The Interview)
Emotionally stunted stunting | The Outline
Emotionally stunted stunting