Senator Tim Kaine, Democrat from Virginia, seems like a decent enough skin, although his selection as the 2016 Democratic vice-presidential candidate was the first ominous indication that Hillary Rodham Clinton was running a no-risk, milk-the-clock strategy against an obviously charismatic wildman. Now, though, he's got his dander up in a good cause. As part of the proposed debt-ceiling extortion, a provision was inserted that would green-light the approval process to finish the Mountain Valley Pipeline, a natural-gas delivery system beloved by Senator Joe Manchin (also a natural gas delivery system) and despised by people living along its proposed route, many of whom are Kaine's constituents. |
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It's only $10 and infinitely better than anything else out there. |
| Burnt coffee will never be an option again. |
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| "So it's like a hobby?" Someone recently asked about my writing. No, I wanted to say. But yes, kind of. I've stumbled my way through this conversation many times before. Yes, I have a full-time job that isn't related to my writing; yes, I still think of myself as a writer. Is it a hobby, a side hustle, a passion project? It's all of those things and somehow none of them. Yet when someone refers to writing as my hobby, I flinch, despite knowing the value of hobbies, or perhaps because it feels so unlike my actual hobbies, like baking. I know how often creative work or work by disabled people, people who are parenting or caregiving, or people with other responsibilities gets relegated to this "hobby" categorization, regardless of how people classify it themselves. Maybe it is a hobby. Or maybe it's work someone cares about that doesn't fit a forty-hours-a-week model. | |
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| As Succession rounded home this past weekend, Tom Wambsgans (Matthew Macfadyen) falling into the lap of wealth and power likely shocked audiences at home. But for one Succession theorist on TikTok, the popular HBO drama played out just as she predicted. Now, you may be thinking, Well, a lot of people thought Tom could end up as the CEO in the end! If so, you'd be mostly right. But not everyone figured it out using obscure, Ken Burns-level baseball history. | |
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You know Ronny Chieng. He's the guy who waltzes in with an ego the size of Texas—even though he's from Malaysia—cracking wise in a way that makes your jaw drop before the joke sinks in, then you laugh. The 37-year-old is famous for his hilarious (yet absolutely scathing) political commentaries as a correspondent on The Daily Show, his brilliant Netflix comedy specials, and his scene-stealing turns in blockbusters like Crazy Rich Asians and M3GAN. In between all of Chieng's comedic duties, we managed to catch him on a Zoom call to muse about his penchant for playing immoral characters, his future as an action star, and if just maybe, fortune willing, he could be the next permanent host of The Daily Show. | |
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| You sit down at the Italian joint, order your negroni, and grab the menu off the red-and-white gingham tablecloth in front of you. The antipasti are there at the top left, and before long, you're ready to suggest a starter. But you're not quite sure how to say it—or play it. BruSHetta? BrusKetta? BruSKEHtta?! Based on an extensive peer-reviewed study titled, Listening to Random Americans I Both Know and Don't Know Saying It, I feel comfortable declaring that most would suggest to their table that they share a plate of "bruSHETTA." There's a 'C' in the word—bruschetta—but the 'S' usually dominates an 'SC' in English (muscle). In Italian, the 'CH' creates a hard 'C'. The "SH" is highly common, though, and also wrong, and wrong in such a way that it does betray what you do not know. |
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