Usually, in the Esquire Endorsement, we focus on a singular item. One style of chinos. One sneaker. One sweatshirt. The whole idea is letting you, dear reader, in on that one thing we here at Esquire are digging at the moment. This installment is a little different. We're going to talk about two shoes instead of one (please don't clutch your pearls too emphatically; everything's going to be okay). There's a desert boot-ish chukka aptly named the "desert boot" and a wallabee-ish low-top called a "desert shoe," which fits with the theme but doesn't actually make much sense. Oh, well. We'll let Everlane have this one just because both shoes are executed well, and because they're executed well, we're going to talk about why both of them can factor quite capably into your footwear rotation.
From the ones behind your favorite undershirt to the ones that make a version you can rock with a suit. Score some brownie points with all these discounted items. 2021 has proved a remarkable year for literary releases. From authors both established and new, our favorite works thus far meditate on everything from life online to life in the intersections of identity. Set everywhere from the all-too-real world or solely in the mind, the distant past or the speculative future, these books offer escape, education, and spiritual enlargement—whatever you're looking for. All to say, with so much to offer for your literary diet, you'll have plenty to keep your mind occupied.
It doesn't matter if you spend over a grand or less than 150 bucks. You'll hear the difference immediately. Nearly two years after Michael Jordan called the small forward's character into question, 'Unguarded' fires back. On Tuesday night, for the second time in two days, Judge Tanya Chutkan 86'd the former president*'s effort to shield records and documents from the special congressional committee investigating the insurrection on January 6. Currently, this material is stored at the National Archives, and the former president* is transparently desperate to make sure it stays there, locked away amid Lincoln's breakfast orders and rum-stained early drafts of the Hay–Bunau-Varilla Treaty. Late Monday night, she refused to issue an emergency order blocking the transfer of the material. The former president* will appeal this ruling because that's what he does. But the U.S. Congress isn't some unlucky glazier from New Jersey. He can't money-whip it into exhaustion and defeat.
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Wednesday, November 10, 2021
Everlane's New Shoes Hit Just Right
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