| The president took a break from attacking two new Russia reports and complaining about being alone in the White House. | If you have trouble reading this message, view it in a browser. | | | | | The Music of True Detective Subtly Connects Every Season | | Music has always played a strong role in True Detective, which in its first two seasons, brought a highly stylized and menacing atmosphere to the crime thriller genre. According to T Bone Burnett, the sound of the show comes to him from the style of creator Nic Pizzolatto's writing. Esquire.com spoke with Burnett to discuss True Detective Season Three's incredible soundtrack (which includes a new song he wrote with Andrew Bird), unpack the meaning behind the show's specific sonic atmosphere, and learn how the music is the one thread that connects every season. Read More | | | | | | | | | The Woman Who Was Banned From Walmart for Drinking Wine Out of a Pringles Can Is a Relatable Nonpartisan Icon | | We've found a woman whose actions manage to at once delight and offend members of almost all political affiliations (progressive to Everything-Butta-Nazi). She is a unicorn of tastelessness, and a relatability queen; a woman so low-brow she pops out of the other end of the spectrum and mysteriously ends up as high-brow as Daniel Day Lewis at a performance art installation. She is the salt of the strip mall, and as bipartisan as Flamin' Hot Cheetos: she is the woman who was banned from Walmart while drinking wine from a Pringles can. Read More | | | | | | | | | Marie Kondo, Please Tidy Up Our Digital Lives | | Marie Kondo, bestselling author, lifestyle maven, and star of the new show Tidying Up, is a little shocked. She's shocked that the feeling of sparked joy that she urges her acolytes to uncover among all their junk can be so universal. She's shocked by how much stuff Americans have. And she's shocked by how many people have latched onto her KonMari method of tidying up and throwing away since bingeing her new eight-part series on Netflix. Through her translator, Marie Iida, Kondo told Esquire.com how to apply the KonMari method to our exhausting, tech-filled lives. She gave us a good pep talk about 2019, too. Here's hoping that optimism rubs off. Read More | | | | | | | | | There Is a Bombshell of a Word in the New York Times Report on the Trump FBI Investigation | | Deep in the New York Times' latest bombshell is one singularly deadly word, a lethal bit of shrapnel aimed directly at the vitals of a criminal—and possibly treasonous—presidency. The word is tucked into a sentence that, at first glance, seems to be a perfectly anodyne statement of the current facts. Indeed, it's tucked into a sentence that would be an unremarkable bit of knee-jerk newspaper balance if this explosive charge of a word weren't placed right the in the middle of it. Read More | | | | | | | | Follow Us | | | | Unsubscribe Privacy Notice | | esquire.com ©2019 Hearst Communications Inc. All Rights Reserved. Hearst Email Privacy, 300 W 57th St., Fl. 19 (sta 1-1), New York, NY 10019 | | | | | | |
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