| If you're looking to re-up on sunglasses at a bargain price, now's the time to do it. | If you have trouble reading this message, view it in a browser. | | | | | Amazon's Big Style Sale Is Chock Full of Ray-Bans. Now's the Time to Make Your Move. | | There are a whole lot of diamonds in the rough to be found among the items on sale in Amazon's big style event. And perhaps nowhere more so than in the site's extensive selection of Ray-Ban styles. If you're looking to re-up on sunglasses at a bargain price (from a brand practically synonymous with the damn things, no less), now's the time to do it. From classic Wayfarers to timeless aviators to always-in-style Clubmasters and many, many more, we've got you covered. Here are the best options to shop now. Read More | | | | | | | | | 38 Years Ago Today Two of the Best Sci-Fi Films of All Time Bombed in Theaters. What Happened? | | Film critics get it wrong all the time. But even so, it's hard to imagine the profession has ever had a worse day on the job than June 25, 1982. If you're a rabid sci-fi nerd, that day marks a special sort of anniversary. One that remains as bittersweet as it is utterly confounding. After all, it was on that day, 38 summers ago, that two indisputable classics directed by two unassailable masters were released in theaters only to be met by critical venom and relative indifference from ticket-buyers. We're talking, of course, about Ridley Scott's visionary future-shock brainteaser Blade Runner and John Carpenter's gooey master class in sub-zero paranoia The Thing. Chris Nashawaty provides a little backstory. Read More | | | | | | | | | Every (Revised) Release Date for the Summer's Most Anticipated Movies | | This will be a summer like we've never seen in our generation. Thanks to COVID-19, the world is a different place and the entertainment industry is one of many forced to get creative and bow to the demands of a global pandemic. Summer blockbusters are uncertain in 2020. Some are moving to video on demand while others are getting pushed all the way to 2021. Even though the dog days ahead are going to be spent largely revisiting old favorites on Amazon and Netflix, we've made a rundown of what you might have been expecting versus when it's actually going to premiere. The good news is that with sanctions beginning to lift, features like Monster Hunter and Candyman aren't as far away as you'd have feared. Read More | | | | | | | | | We Strongly Suggest You Spike Your Arnold Palmer This Weekend | | Unlike masterful works of art, Arnold Palmers are about as ubiquitous as bonfires and sprinklers once summer hits. The name goes back to the 1960s, when golfer Arnold Palmer ordered a non-alcoholic version of the drink while out on the course—one part tea, one part lemonade. In a 30 for 30 documentary, Palmer later said that the drink got its name when a woman ordered the same drink and referred to it as "that Arnold Palmer" beverage. Sometimes, an alcoholic version is called a John Daly, but that really only counts if you add vodka, and we make the rules here, so we're using whiskey and calling it a Spiked Arnold Palmer. Here's why you should, too. Read More | | | | | | | | | I Was the Only Black Man Making Liquor in America. Not Much Has Changed—Except Me. | | Jackie Summers is a New York-based food writer, speaker, distiller, and author of a soon-to-be-published illustrated book about social justice. He's been sharing this story about his experiences with racism in the drinks industry for a decade, though since the nationwide protests for Black Lives Matter, it seems like people might actually be listening. "It feels like I have been saying, 'UFOs are real,' and people just saw their first UFO," he told Esquire's Sarah Rense when they spoke a couple weeks ago. So, he's sharing it once again. Read More | | | | | | | | | 5 Instant Coffees That Don't Taste Like Dirt | | As everyone knows, instant coffee requires only eight ounces of hot water and a touch of witchcraft harnessed from the root of a coffee plant. Just kidding. In most cases, instant coffee is just freeze-dried coffee beans. Too often, those beans lose all flavor and depth in the freeze-drying process, which is why instant coffee is left with the reputation of being bitter, flat, garbage, and gross. However, it's way faster and simpler than brewing regular coffee, and with this capitalist economy driving our lives into the ground, coffee companies know that you don't always have the time to brew a fresh cup. That's why they've improved the taste of instant coffee dramatically. We're not talking those packs of dried bat feces that are available in low-end motels. No, the instant coffee business is reformed and fancy. Here are five brands to keep in your back pocket. Read More | | | | | | | | Follow Us | | | | Unsubscribe Privacy Notice | | esquire.com ©2020 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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