Friday, October 23, 2020

This Particular Trump Lie Was Especially Revealing Last Night

 
We cannot and will not burn oil forever. Which of these candidates has a plan for the future, and which of them is trying to lie his way to the finish line 11 days from now?
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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 One Good Thing About Trump's Lies and Cynicism Last Night
 
Everyone's got their own con they're running, the president believes, just like him. You could see this at work towards the end, when Trump tried to "get" Biden on the issue of whether the United States would at some point transition away from burning oil as a source of energy. In the postgame, desperate conservatives seized on this as The Decisive Moment That Biden Lost Texas, itself an indictment of Trump's position. But even in the moment, Trump vocalized his cynical intent, offering meta-commentary as it was happening about the political fallout of Biden's supposed gaffe. Trump sees this entirely as a political cudgel—"Will you remember that, Texas? Pennsylvania? Oklahoma? Ohio?" he said—because he does not care about any of this. He has no climate or energy plan—or infrastructure plan, or healthcare plan, or much of anything else. He's just trying to lie his way through each day. But there was actually a fruitful discussion to be had here about the reality of our situation. Politics Editor Jack Holmes dives into the details. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The 2020 Esquire Grooming Awards Have Arrived
 
In case it wasn't already abundantly obvious: Yes, being stuck inside for months on end did change some of the calculus of grooming in 2020. Rallying under the flag of "Who's Going to See It, Anyway?" we countered cabin fever with enthusiastic experimentation. We gave ourselves haircuts, we tried different facial hair, we painted our nails, we spent way more time on skincare. And thanks to all those endeavors with the new and novel, we reminded ourselves of an old standby: Grooming isn't always about quantity, it's about quality. And, hell, we had the time to find it. So, through extensive trial and error, we discovered updated essentials, revisited a few classics, and reimagined our routines from the ground up thanks to these winning products. Esquire Grooming Editor Garrett Munce brings you the products you need to look, smell—and feel—great right now. Plus! We got six of our famous friends to share the grooming product they can't live without. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
It's a Beautiful Time to Embrace #RobeLife. Here are 18 We Love Right Now.
 
If, for some reason, you've been intentionally avoiding the comfiest garment known to man, allow us to introduce you to the best possible thing you can do for your cold, trembling body—and, frankly, the worst possible thing you can do for your chances of ever leaving the house—this fall. Because once you wrap yourself in one of these bad boys you're never going to want to take it off. Cuffing season is fast approaching and that means one thing and one thing only: It's time to hole up at home in your fluffiest bathrobe and do nothing but binge watch terrible TV, gorging yourself on last-night's microwaved pizza while swaddled in a robe so soft it could make a grown man cry. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Thursday's Debate Showcased the Greasy Line of Slime This President Has Left in the Country's Politics
 
During the final presidential debate between Donald Trump and Joe Biden, the president was less manic than he was the last time—thank you, muted microphone—but he made up for that with a torrent of untruth and some pure, uncut Internet insanity. According to the unsinkable Daniel Dale of CNN, the president* made up for appearing to be relatively sane by upping his already massive quota of falsehoods, fibs, and barefaced non-facts. He fired off the Hunter Biden gun in the first half-hour, but he did so in fragmented bursts that were coherent only to those people who spend the whole day watching Fox News or OANN with their eyes pinned open, like Alex in A Clockwork Orange. The rest of us, who have actual lives, are baffled by this stuff. At this point, writes Charles P. Pierce, most of America had two questions on its mind—what the fck is this thing with the laptop, and how can Daniel Jones fall on his face in the open field? And let the record show that the president* was supposed to be talking about race. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
Bruce Springsteen Is Playing a Young Man's Game
 
As with all of the nineteen studio albums that precede it, the credit on the cover of Letter to You reads simply "Bruce Springsteen." It's an immediate reminder that, while the big story around this project is Springsteen's reunion with the E Street Band, ultimately his music always comes down to something solitary. The record—which was cut almost entirely live over just four days last November in the singer's home studio (sessions that were filmed for a documentary which premieres October 23 on Apple +)—is a celebration and a lamentation. It offers plenty of moments reveling in the camaraderie and power that comes with being part of a rock and roll band. But at age 71, following a number of years dedicated to intense self-reflection and marked by the death of several friends and band mates, Springsteen has released a set of songs haunted by mortality and loss. The album struggles, not always successfully, with the tension of being an old man who's spent a lifetime playing a young man's game. Alan Light reviews the latest from The Boss. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
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