Madison Cawthorn got dumped out of Congress on Tuesday night, losing the Republican primary for North Carolina's 11th House District to State Senator Chuck Edwards. Was it that he does not, in any discernible way, do the job of a United States congressman, belonging instead to the Viral Brigade alongside such luminaries as Lauren Boebert and Marjorie Taylor Greene? Was it that he called Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky a "thug"? Was it that super enthusiastic Instagram post about visiting Hitler's crib? Was it the allegations of sexual misconduct in college? Was it that he lied about getting into the Naval Academy, or that he said his friend left him to die "in a fiery tomb" after a car crash when his friend says he actually pulled him from the wreck? Was it that he expressed full-throated support for the most recent former president's campaign to throw out the results of an American election and stay in power in contravention of the will of the American people?
It's lightweight, easy to carry, and—most importantly—a pleasure to sit in for a spell. From its very first episode, Severance established itself as a high concept show that seamlessly blurred styles and genres. Viewers were riveted by its unique take on work-life balance, biting corporate satire, and often absurd, near-Lynchian visual imagery (waffle parties, anyone?). While a second season has been confirmed, a release date remains far from sight. Luckily there's a long list of books clamoring to fill the void. In the interminable interim, check out some of these notable reads that draw from Severance's key moods and themes. Whether you're craving workplace satires, technological horror stories, memory-bending mysteries, or all of the above, this list speaks to all facets of the show. Some of these reads take place in our current capitalist hellscape, while others posit futures ranging from slightly speculative to full-on dystopian. But regardless of when they take place, they all shed ample insight not only into the way we live and work now, but how we make meaning from the memory of it all.
Shop with our exclusive link to take 18% off on the Internet's favorite mattress. The future's so bright... Maybe you saw it online. Maybe you heard it on NPR. Maybe your girlfriend told you as you lay in bed together scrolling through your phones, her fielding frantic texts from her group chat or checking in on her mom, you reading legal analyses, both of you fluorescent with rage and despairing at the news: According to a leaked initial draft of its majority opinion, the Supreme Court planned to overturn the Roe v. Wade decision upholding our constitutional right to abortion. Legal access to safe, common, and often lifesaving medical care was disappearing before your eyes. But no matter how you learned of this, and no matter how consumed you were with righteous anger and concern that night, I'm willing to bet you did not wake up the morning after, or the morning after that, or every morning since, full of fear. I don't mean that you don't care, because I know you do.
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Wednesday, May 18, 2022
Cawthorne Is Out But Not For His Authoritarian Hijinks
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