In Hawaii, a shortage of vehicles to rent means tourists are driving U-Hauls. Last month, the cheapest car went for $722 a day.
Breaking down the "copyright nightmare" of an NFT being sold by Emily Ratajkowski—that's also trolling "art troll" Richard Prince.
In ancient Rome, the justice was based on personal responsibility, though Tiberius "was basically a wannabe Fox Mulder."
"How I draw is how I draw." An interview about process with illustrator Amy Moss.

In 1930 the Indiana Bell building was rotated 90 degrees, and supposedly no one inside felt it move.

Over a month, the 22-million-pound structure was moved 15 inch/hr, all while 600 employees still worked there. There was no interruption to gas, heat, electricity, water, sewage, or the telephone service they provided.

The pandemic did not create these conditions. It simply made them even more impossible to ignore—and created scenarios in which some workers (not all, but some!) have been empowered, perhaps for the first time in their working lives, to opt out.

You’ve heard that restaurants and retail shops are struggling to fill jobs—perhaps because the economic model is broken.

↩︎ Culture Study
9h
A new way to catch novel coronaviruses: focus on people who are constantly in contact with animals.
A collection of astronauts' photos of the Earth, digitally restored.
Photos of the desolation left by a coal mine in Poland, by Michal Łuczak.
The numbers are in on redistricting, and California and New York are among the states that lost a seat—as Texas picks up two.
An interactive map of the world's Indigenous lands.
America's Covid deaths are "on track to surpass the toll of the 1918 pandemic, which killed an estimated 675,000."
On Saturday, hundreds of people named Josh gathered in Lincoln, Neb., to fight with pool noodles over the "right" to the name.

At this point, we figured that when someone paid a company like RepZe to get a post removed, RepZe then paid the complaint site to delete it. But our understanding turned out to be incomplete at best.

A deep dive into the symbiotic relationship between slander sites and reputation management companies.

↩︎ The New York Times
1d
"Republican elected officials...have been trying to make it easier for certain people to run over certain other people."
A real-time map of the space junk that's floating around Earth.
Hollywood is America's least diverse business sector—a systemic bias that costs the industry at least $10 billion a year.
Serene paintings of islands far removed from city life, by Stephen Wong Chun Hei.
Yahoo's deletion habit is why it's now most known for "the sheer amount of destruction they’ve done to the historical record."