Tuesday, June 01, 2021

The Tupac Trial: An Oral History

 
For the first time, a juror is speaking out about what happened inside the jury room.
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An Oral History of Tupac's Sexual Abuse Trial
 
In 1993, Tupac Shakur had the world in his hands—until he was charged with sexual abuse. The trial consumed headlines for nearly a year, but there's still so much we don't know. For the first time, a juror is speaking out about what happened inside the jury room, raising powerful questions about race, criminal justice, and the mistreatment of women that echo today. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
50 Gifts That'll Make Any Dad's Day Brighter
 
In a perfect world, you would've already had that brilliant idea for a gift for your old man, bought said gift, wrapped it up all nice, and presented it to him so he could geek out about whatever it might've been: an engrossing book, a new pair of sneakers that are cooler than all the other dads', a top-shelf whiskey he'd never dare to buy for himself. He would've told you that you're the best kid a dad could ask for, dropped a dad joke and then a grain of dad wisdom, and driven off into the sunset. But that brilliant idea for a gift just isn't coming to you, is it? As it'd happen, we know what to give the guy who's been giving you stuff—hand-me-down baseball gloves, Band-Aids, second opinions, backseat driving instructions—since the day you were born. These are 50 surefire gifts for dads ahead of Father's Day. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Republicans Are Outlining Their Strategy to Steal Future Elections in Plain Sight
 
Republicans aren't trying to hide it. They're doing all the stuff Trump begged them to do to keep him in power in contravention of the will of the people. First, they'll try to stop people from voting. But if that doesn't work, they'll try to throw out the election results on the basis of "fraud." And the task will be made easier by the fact that in a bunch of states, practitioners of the Big Lie are running for state-level positions that are in charge of administering elections and/or certifying them. The mechanisms of electoral democracy will deliver the right outcomes, or they will be remade to deliver those outcomes. And undergirding it all will be an outright assault on reality itself. You need the window dressing of the "fraud" claims to justify the vandalization of democratic institutions, but there's also an almost primal force at work here, where any defeat for The Movement represents an attack on The America You Know and Love, a theft of the nation itself by Others and undesirables. Their votes are fraudulent because They are casting them. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
Give Your Microwave a Rest and Cook Everything—Yeah, Everything—in This Perfect Wok
 
There are a ton of woks to choose from, but the Made In Carbon Steel Wok has become one of Esquire's Kevin Sintumuang's favorites because of its durability and simplicity and just-right size. He practically never puts it away. Maybe he should, but hey, as he writes here, he's not going for perfection in the kitchen. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
These Picks From the Nordstrom Half-Yearly Sale Need a Place in Your Closet ASAP
 
With so many great things on sale at Nordstrom (more than 21,000, if we want to talk numbers), navigating the shopping extravaganza can be a lot. That's why we're here. What we found was a whole lotta well-priced stuff perfect for summer and beyond. Ahead you'll find 17 items from Nordstrom's half-yearly sale worth adding to your wardrobe. All that's left is the heavy task of pressing "add to cart." The sale ends June 6, so act quickly. Happy shopping, my friend! Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
These Mass Press Conferences Are Useless, and Athletes Don't Owe Us Anything Anyway
 
Naomi Osaka's precipitous withdrawal from the French Open in the wake of being knuckled by tennis authorities for not appearing at a "mandatory" press conference is probably the most worldwide attention—which, as always, means American attention—the French Open has garnered in decades. Osaka, who has one of the most interesting minds of any young athlete, explained her withdrawal lucidly and sympathetically on social media, even apologizing to the tennis media for putting them in the middle of the controversy, which Osaka said had its roots in a depression that began with her winning the U.S. Open in 2018. In both of Charles P. Pierce's reporting careers, sports and politics, he has dealt with the phenomena of mass press conferences, and he can state with some authority that 90 percent of them are completely useless. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
One kettlebell is all you need
 
 
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