Tuesday, August 20, 2019

The Bond 25 Title and Release Date Has Finally Been Announced

 
The latest 007 gets back to the franchise's famous naming conventions.
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The Bond 25 Title, No Time to Die, and Release Date Have Finally Been Announced
 
In 1967, Sean Connery's James Bond movie You Only Live Twice was the first film in the 007 franchise to wrestle with the concept of mortality in its title. Since then, six of the subsequent Bond films have had titles that relate to life, death or killing. Which makes sense. Life, death, and killing are at the core of every James Bond movie. Now, after a long wait, the title for the upcoming James Bond 25 movie has been announced—and it gets back to some of 007's favorite naming conventions. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
How to Get Brad Pitt's Wrangler Jean Jacket From Once Upon a Time...In Hollywood
 
At this point, it's getting easier and easier to channel Brad Pitt's incredibly cool, late-'60s style from Once Upon a Time...In Hollywood. Last month, the good folks at Champion auto parts restocked the faded-out logo tee his character, Cliff Booth, wears in Quentin Tarantino's ninth movie. And now, Wrangler is offering up his perfectly worn-in denim jacket. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Jay-Z's Partnership With the NFL Is Wrong. Erasing Colin Kaepernick From the Narrative Is Worse.
 
Jay-Z sounds oddly to the right of President Trump on the issue of whether or not Colin Kaepernick should be back in the NFL. Last week, Jay-Z and the NFL announced a massive new collaboration that will fundamentally alter the future of the league going forward. Roc Nation will combine forces with the NFL while Jay-Z serves as the league's "live music entertainment strategist." But days before the historic merging of entertainment empires, President Donald Trump was asked if Kaepernick should get an opportunity to play in the NFL again. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
The Donald Sterling Tapes Fundamentally Changed the NBA—And All of Sports
 
If anything, you probably remember the tapes. Once you hear something that explosive, you can't really forget it: the racist comments in 2014's nuclear Donald Sterling audio, which was recorded by the former Los Angeles Clippers owner's mistress, V. Stiviano. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Rowing Blazers' Latest Collaboration May Have Just Changed My Mind About Nantucket Red
 
Ah, Nantucket Red. Developed back in the 1960s by Philip C. Murray of Murray's Toggery Shop on Nantucket Island, it's become the official color of summertime prepsters everywhere. No, really—it was even included in The Official Preppy Handbook, the essential, tongue-in-cheek guide to '80s prep ascendency. Because of that lineage, you might have some feelings about the salmony shade of faded red. But whether they're positive (you've probably spent time on a sailboat) or negative (you've probably spent time with obnoxious frat bros), Rowing Blazers' new collab with Murray's is here to make you rethink them. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
The Unsolved Atlanta Child Murders Have Been Re-Opened 40 Years Later
 
Between 1979 and 1981 at least 25 black children and six adults were murdered in the Atlanta area. In 1982, Wayne Williams was convicted of the murders of only two of the adult victims, though "law enforcement task force concluded that there was enough evidence to link Williams to another 20." The child killings stopped when Williams went to jail for life. Though he maintains that he never murdered any children, police think he is responsible for at least 22 of the children's deaths, despite those murders remaining unsolved. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
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