On April 13, 2023, James Bond celebrates his 70th birthday: the first Ian Fleming 007 novel 'Casino Royale' was published on this day in 1953. To commemorate the occasion, the Fleming estate is reissuing all fourteen Bond books—twelve novels and two short story collections—including some eyebrow-raising changes. As was widely reported in February 2023, by the Fleming estate itself in a concise statement and by several news outlets, many of the original books have been updated with changes that remove racially offensive words. Unlike the changes to Roald Dahl's books, these new editions of Ian Fleming's Bond books will not contain any new lines, and in some of the novels, like 'Casino Royale', no changes will be made at all. In the case of the most egregiously racist book, 'Live and Let Die', the n-word has been omitted. While this could scan as an attempt to sanitize the Fleming books, the history of these changes is far more interesting than a literary estate performing some politically convenient self-censorship—and the result could be utterly transformative to the accessibility of the literary James Bond. |
|
|
Short answer: online, baby! |
| Yes, you can cover your calves and still keep it breezy. |
|
|
Was my time at the Star Wars: Galactic Starcruiser an extended fit of manic delirium, caused by whatever low-grade fentanyl they put in the drinking water in Florida? I'm almost sure of it. This is about what you get, for roughly two nights (more on the price later): a room in a frighteningly window-averse building at Disney World that has been decked out to feel—at every single inch—like a spaceship out of 'A New Hope'. Everyone is in character. Even some guests. You eat cute space food. Take a shuttle to Galaxy's Edge, the Star Wars theme park. (With a true all-timer of a ride in Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance.) Small talk with a freakishly smart AI droid in your quarters. There is a running storyline, which is unbelievably intricate, including missions, cameos from Yoda and the like, and an app that keeps track of it all. |
|
|
From a ranch in Napa Valley to a wellness retreat in Punta Mita, Mexico, here are the places where checking in could change your view of the world. |
| After years of grinding away, the suddenly-everywhere actor is enjoying fame and near-universal adulation thanks to his dual streaming blockbusters 'The Last of Us' and 'The Mandalorian.' Over a weekend in New York, he talks about all of it—and everything that's coming next. |
|
|
Who scheduled this mismatch anyway? It really is time for my man Mills Lane to come back from the Beyond to call this one off. I'm no lawyer, but it seems to me that pissing off the judge, day after day, in a $1.6 billion lawsuit in which you're being pilloried by your own words is dubious trial practice. And that doing it again, and immediately before the actual trial begins, is even worse. |
|
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment