| One candidate, Doug Collins, has assembled a Justice League of dunces from the Fox News Cinematic Universe. His opponent, Kelly Loeffler, has embraced a far-right loon from the Facebook fever swamps. | If you have trouble reading this message, view it in a browser. | | | | | We Started a Club. And We Want You to Be a Part of It. | | We at Esquire cordially invite you to join Esquire Select, and when you do, we'll send you a gift. (It's a magazine). But it's not just a magazine you'll get. With a membership to Esquire Select, you get unlimited access to Esquire.com, including The Politics Blog with Charles P. Pierce. You get a monthly discount to some of our editors' favorite brands. You get a members-only, weekly newsletter highlighting the best of Esquire right now. Read More | | | | | | | | | The Georgia Senate Race Is a Horrifying Look at the Republican Party's Present and Future | | In this wild year in which the American republic hangs on the precipice, Georgia has two active races for U.S. Senate. Perdue and his Democratic opponent, Jon Ossoff, are locked in a tight race—already the most expensive in the state's history—for one of them. In the other, there is an even bigger circus going on. It's a special election, which in Georgia means it's a "jungle" contest where 21 candidates will vie for the seat currently occupied by Kelly Loeffler, everyone's favorite stock trader. It's really down to four, however, and even then, three. Matt Lieberman, a Democrat and the son of everyone's favorite ex-Democrat, Joe Lieberman, has no chance to win, but he may syphon votes from the competitive candidate on the blue side, Reverend Raphael Warnock. Lieberman has so far resisted calls to drop out. But that drama pales in comparison to the other side of the ballot, a look at the horrifying future-present of the Republican Party. Read More | | | | | | | | | The 20 Best Sweaters for Less Than $150 | | To help you get over the inevitable "oh shit, is it already cold outside?" malaise, we rounded up 20 of the best sweater options available now—all for less than $150. Because fall is definitely here, and you shouldn't fight it. Instead, wrap your tired, aching body in the tender clutches of an affordable sweater and then commend yourself for seamlessly moving on from the warmer weather with such a wise, forward-looking purchase. Baby steps, man. Baby steps. Read More | | | | | | | | | David Bowie Knew I Wasn't Happy. Then He Made Me a Guitar Player Again. | | In an exclusive excerpt from his memoir, Do You Feel Like I Do?, Peter Frampton remembers how his career got new life thanks to the master of reinvention himself. "Dave saw how the perception of who I really was had changed and knew I wasn't happy. He gave me a huge gift by taking me around the world, and reintroducing me as the guitar player. I could not and can never thank him enough. That was a huge leg up he gave me, and from that moment on, I started to get my confidence back, and it made a huge difference to me and what was to come." Read the full excerpt here. Read More | | | | | | | | | The Rudy Giuliani Scene in 'Borat 2' Seems Pretty Damning for the Former Mayor and Trump Lawyer | | On Wednesday, Amazon gave journalists advanced screeners of Borat Subsequent Moviefilm, which shows the full scene of a prank that Sacha Baron Cohen pulled on former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani this summer. The scene stars newcomer actress Maria Bakalova, who plays Borat's daughter Tutar Sagdiyev, as she's interviewing Giuliani as a conservative journalist covertly planning to offer herself to Donald Trump's lawyer as a concubine. Through the interview, Tutar touches Giuliani's leg, shares a drink with him, and eventually suggests the two should have a drink in the bedroom of the hotel suite in which she is interviewing him. There, it appears that Tutar removes a microphone from Giuliani's shirt and jacket. At that point, the scene gets significantly more problematic. Read More | | | | | | | | | The Least Livable Body in America's Most Livable City | | Pittsburgh has been hyped as our most livable city. Yet, this beautiful and bountiful and livable place is, according to "Pittsburgh's Inequality Across Gender and Race"—a report by the city's Gender Equity Commission released in September 2019—"arguably the most unlivable" city in the country for Black women. Damon Young's mom's story—how she lived, and how she died—offers real-life proof of that. For our October/November issue, Young tells the story of how the city and its healthcare system failed his family, and cost them his mother's life. 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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