Jeans are a nice, reliable option, but denim doesn't always do it. When in doubt, turn to chinos. The style is usually made of pure cotton, sometimes mixed with synthetic fibers for extra stretch, and comes in every hue—khaki being the go-to. Since what feels like time immemorial (but really since the late 1800s), the style has been an integral part of a man's wardrobe. In other words, we all need to cop chinos. And when we do, the place to look is—drum roll, please—Amazon. What's more, all are $100 or less, because we like to make life that much easier for you. |
|
|
Gearing up for the 2024 Summer Olympics, these are the hottest places to stay in the city of lights. |
| Sometimes a matching set is just the way to go. |
|
|
Luka Dončić is a big car guy. The star Dallas Mavericks point guard is such a car enthusiast that he brings not one but five of them to our interview. We meet at a paved bluff on the southern edge of Dallas's Trinity River, under an open sky filled with golden end-of-winter light. Out here, Dončić—reserved, contemplative, almost reverential among the cars—is the exact opposite of who he is on the court. Yes, the 25-year-old point guard is in constant physical action, barging toward the basket with a relentless, almost looming force. But he's also animated and heated between drives; the guy is not afraid to provoke and rile. As for his basketball IQ, Dončić's ability to read a play, to predict the defense, and to anticipate the entire ebb and flow of an exchange…well, it's mighty. |
|
|
Everybody's favorite running brand has some major deals this April. |
| The best looking, most comfortable sofas on the market. |
|
|
It all started with a handshake, or at least it was supposed to. For as long as anyone can remember, contract negotiations between the United Auto Workers and Detroit's Big Three have kicked off with a ceremonial handshake between union leaders and the CEOs of GM, Ford, and Chrysler (now Stellantis). A genial show of decorum. This past July, though, Shawn Fain, the newly elected president of the UAW, wanted to set a different tone. Standing in front of a news camera outside a plant before a meeting with CEOs, Fain announced he was snubbing the traditional make-nice. "We don't see a reason to shake hands," he said before cataloging what he decried as two decades' worth of unfair contracts, abusive treatment, and gross inequity. |
|
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment