A short documentary from 1959 in which a young Glenn Gould plays the piano, walks in the woods, and talks about people's "justifiable complaints" with his "platform manner."
Monday headlines: Though this be madness, yet there be breakfast in’t
Scientists say the universe is expected to decay in 10⁷⁸ years, "much sooner than previously thought." / Phys.org
Meanwhile, the United States and China agree to a 90-day pause on tariffs. / Reuters
Regarding the new foreign plane for President Trump, the crypto deals and golf courses—is it all so much corruption-as-entertainment? / Semafor, The Wall Street Journal [+], The Guardian
With a small increase to a tourist tax, Hawaii is set to raise funds to prevent fires like those that devastated Maui—and it's trying to make polluters pay, too. / Heated
A historian says because voting is compulsory in Australia, politicians have to focus on issues. / Bolts
A new Coca-Cola ad, created using artificial intelligence, bizarrely promotes J.G. Ballard and still gets him wrong. / 404 Media
Max Read: AI companies and corporate AI researchers are "orienting themselves entirely in service of private profit." / Read Max
If millions of international visitors visit Los Angeles for the upcoming Olympics, "it will be at their own peril." / Torched
Unrelated: You are statistically more likely to die on your birthday, but it's complicated. / The Pudding
In professional tennis, the Italian Open still doesn't offer equal prize money for men and women. / Bounces
See also: The architects and artists who built the Fascist "Foro Italico" sought parallels with previous Roman empires. / The Second Serve
John Cameron Mitchell goes on tour to teach young people how to be punk. / The New York Times [+]
A man recreates Wallace & Gromit's automated breakfast machine. / The Kid Should See This
Friday headlines: King’s lead hat
"Some of what Trump calls good news, like the falling price of oil, is actually caused by bad news, which is the world expecting the possibility of a global recession." / The Washington Post [+]
Already an ethical catastrophe, Trump's private dinner for top memecoin holders is becoming even suspect, as most of the likely guests are based outside the US. / Citation Needed
"The daughter shrieks another horrible horrible horrible shriek, communicating the non-communicable." Witnessing a federal kidnapping in Worcester. / Welcome to Hell World
A new analysis posits that Kamala Harris didn't lose because Biden voters stayed home, but instead from the influx of new voters who went for Trump. / TouchGrass
"His manager said he was considered the most productive member of the team." When North Korean operatives get jobs as remote IT workers to infiltrate Western companies. / WIRED
The president of the American Federation of Teachers says "college for all" no longer works in the United States. / The New York Times [+]
See also: "College is just how well I can use ChatGPT at this point." / New York Magazine
"If a freshman in college did once what the New York Times does on a regular basis they may be expelled." Plagiarism is just part of mainstream media's business model. / Splinter
A slop farmer explains on a private livestream how he targets women over 50 on Facebook in the belief that they're more likely to cross-post AI garbage to Pinterest. / Futurism
Scientists at the Large Hadron Collider have devised a new method of measuring the transmutation of lead into gold nuclei—which exist for only a fraction of a second. / Phys.org
Fifty years ago today, Brian Eno recorded "Discreet Music," and 50 years later you have an ambient music button on your iPhone. / Andrew Womack
Musical equipment owned by legendary producer and DJ Andrew Weatherall, who passed away in 2020, is currently up for auction. / Soundgas
An ever-growing collection of tiny interactive drum machines. / 10,000 Drum Machines
The magic of kitchen objects, such as "the bowl you keep but can't actually bear to use because it reminds you too strongly of the person who gave it to you." / The Guardian
Thursday headlines: Bread between the lines
In India and Pakistan, both countries "know that the real danger is the specter of uncontrolled escalation." / Dawn
Experts weigh whether India's new rules for satellite internet operators will thwart Amazon's Project Kuiper and Elon Musk's Starlink. / rest of world
Stockholm scoffs at a US letter demanding the Swedish city desist from "DEI" practices. / Newsweek
Female-led businesses in Africa are struggling to raise funds because of President Trump's anti-DEI push. / Semafor
See also: Lully Snake is said to be re-writing the rules of Tunisian rap "for feminist rebellion." / Africa Is a Country
Palestinians seem correct to worry that Israel may be laying plans to annex the West Bank. / The New York Times [+]
"She doesn't even know the donor's name, nor does she want to." Germans are buying kidneys in Kenya. / Der Spiegel
ICE appears to target labor leaders in raids on New York farms. / The Intercept
At the National Institutes of Health, "it's very clear it's all cronyism going forward." / The Atlantic [+]
Bill Gates plans to spend more than $200 billion over the next 20 years to fight poverty, malnutrition, "and other global scourges." / The Wall Street Journal [+]
Trump's proposal for a US sovereign wealth fund repackages his favorite, risky tactic: Borrow heavily against meager assets, then gamble. / The Financial Times [+]
The author behind McMansion Hell names the new White House decor as "Regional Car Dealership Rococo." / Patreon
Unrelated: A new Japanese wrapping paper turns your presents into bread. / Spoon & Tamago
"Internet roadtrip" is a multiplayer online game where the web drives a car together. / Neal.fun
Did you know? Planetariums are one hundred years old. / The Conversation
Wednesday headlines: Parasite squad
India launches missile strikes in several parts of Pakistan and Pakistan-controlled territory. / The Guardian
Pakistan claims to have shot down five Indian jets. / CNN
A hospital bombing raises concerns that South Sudan may return to civil war. / UN News
Immigration advocates warn of a potential mass immigration enforcement operation in DC this week. / NBC Washington
Is President Trump's "100% tariff" on foreign movies all because he didn't like Parasite winning the Academy Award for Best Picture? / GQ
Sam Thielman: The richest nation on earth is now "a racist reality show for one sad old bigot." / Forever Wars
See also: "The AI Slop Presidency." / 404 Media
A technology company announces doughnut-shaped motors that fit directly inside a vehicle's wheels. / dezeen
With Tesla sales dramatically down in Europe, the company's "gigafactory" in Germany seems likely "to be underutilized for some time." / Ars Technica
Food companies dislike an app used by millions, including Robert F. Kennedy Jr, that lets users scan products in grocery stores to learn about their nutritional quality. / The Wall Street Journal [+]
Hot dogs eaten at ballparks are said to taste better because the buns are steamed. / The Takeout
A researcher says to spark creativity, you should read obituaries "and look for distant connections with your own life." / The MIT Press Reader
On YouTube: "48 Things Women Hear In A Lifetime (That Men Just Don't)" and "48 Things Men Hear In A Lifetime (That Are Bad For Everyone)." / Kottke
Tuesday headlines: Slippery pope
Latin America is reportedly the only place right now where traditional right-wing economics is on the upswing. / Semafor
Saudi Arabia's budget deficit jumped in the first quarter of 2025, driven by a sharp drop in oil revenues. / Arabian Gulf Business Insight
The conservative leader Friedrich Merz wins a parliament vote to become Germany's next chancellor. / BBC News
Details from the current conclave in Vatican City—from smear campaigns to dorm life—are said to rival the film Conclave. / The Wall Street Journal [+]
See also: Like model UN, but for pope selection—inside the University of Chicago's Italian Renaissance course where students LARP the conclave of 1492. / The New York Times [+]
An illustrated guide through a typical American home reveals how many products are made in China. / The New York Times [+]
The troubling sentiment at the heart of "Make America Healthy Again" is survival of the fittest—where death is a feature, not a bug. / The Verge
A "turbo roundabout" in California leads to a rise in car accidents. / The Times
Photographs from a 24-hour auto race where the cars can't cost more than $500. / NPR
Photo essay headline of the week? "Crazy Horny Mud Truckers." / VICE
See also: Vintage pictures of people and their underwear. / Flashbak
Contemporary book critics discuss "the sadomasochistic turn in contemporary criticism." / Pioneer Works
Digging into the "Protect The Dolls" conversation as a cultural stress test. / The Trend Report
In our cultural conversation, is the pickle to Gen Z what the avocado supposedly was to Millenials, "a passion and a personality?" / Eater
Monday headlines: Neighborhood threat
Israel has reportedly approved plans to seize control of the entire Gaza Strip and occupy the region for an indefinite period of time. / Associated Press
One of Pope Francis's final requests was to retrofit one of his popemobiles to provide frontline health care "for the children of Gaza." / BBC
Chartered planes are frequently used for deportations, which may explain why the New England Patriots' team plane has been making trips to Guantanamo Bay. / SNAKE
Jia Tolentino on our new fake reality: "There is now a category of things I see online which I register simply as indications that the world is slipping beyond my comprehension." / The New Yorker
A Telegram bot for generating nonconsensual porn is disturbingly popular, with more than 100,000 active monthly users. (Warning: Graphic descriptions.) / 404 Media
In a simulation, a company populated only with AI agents was (unsurprisingly) a disaster, and the best-performing model was "prohibitively expensive." / Futurism
"Quitting has brought a lot of the old joy back." How to—but more importantly, why you may want to—end your relationship with Spotify. / Hearing Things
How MLMs have flourished in the 21st century: "Technology makes it a lot easier to lie about the opportunity of a lifetime at scale." / Read Max
The US Chamber of Commerce is pushing the Trump administration to implement tariff exclusions for small businesses in order to "stave off a recession." / CNBC
See also: Kickstarter is offering creators a tool to add tariff charges to projects that are already fully funded. / 404 Media
"Shadden says the noise is worse at night. That's when the mine runs at full capacity, penetrating her walls with noise up to 106 decibels" Crypto mining is upending life in rural Texas. / The Nation
See also: Elon Musk's Austin neighbors are struggling, except for the one guy who flies a drone over the billionaire's property looking for city violations. / The New York Times [+]
Mark Zuckerberg's company statements "seem meant as matter-of-fact justifications but come across as confessions of the kinds of damage he is prepared to inflict." / Internal exile
Friday headlines: The best trade plans
"At the heart of the 11-page agreement is a joint investment fund that is intended to help rebuild Ukraine once the Russian invasion...ends." What's in the US-Ukraine minerals agreement. / Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
Experts cite a spike in postponed container ships previously set to arrive on the US West Coast as a sign that trouble is already looming. / WIRED
Whether it's seeing tariffs on receipts or, bizarrely, limiting the number of dolls a household can afford, MAGA wants to convince Americans to be happy with less. / The Dispatch
"On average, trade deals signed by the United States take 18 months to negotiate and 45 months to implement." The US is racing against time to solve its trade debacle. / The New York Times [+]
Americans disfavor impeachments because they're a challenge to institutional order—besides, without removal from office, impeachments mean little. / Good Politics/Bad Politics
NIH's autism registry may be scrapped, but the damage is already done, as families cancel medical appointments and ask for records to be destroyed. / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
See also: Misinformation is standard operating procedure for the Trump administration, which now wants to end NIH's research into misinformation. / Science
Trump's new executive order to defund NPR and PBS is not actually a thing that he can do because that money is appropriated by Congress. / WBUR
The Trump administration wants to halt $1 billion in mental health services for school districts, reversing bipartisan legislation with strong Republican support. / NPR
Rhode Island is the only state without a system for decertifying police officers—along with its secretive approach to tracking police misconduct, it's a dangerous combination. / The Public's Radio
"Perhaps it was more palatable to feel like I was losing him in installments; that I could say goodbye to each part as they left. Bye, legs; bye, feet; bye voice." Mariana Serapicos loses her dad to ALS. / Electric Literature
When bland, lookalike technology advertising was the norm in the 1980s and '90s, PC Connection stood out with Erick Ingraham's anthropomorphic raccoons. / Technologizer
Find a sunny cafe with maps that depict surrounding buildings' shade cover right now. / Sunseekr
Thursday headlines: World trade hallucination
Tesla board members reportedly spent the last month looking for a new CEO to replace Elon Musk. / The Wall Street Journal [+]
For its part, Tesla denies the story. / The Guardian
Plunging trade means the port of Los Angeles will see shipping volume drop 35% next week. / CNBC
A tour through the trade question, from bottled water to smartphones, bikes, onions, and tuna. / Scope of Work
See also: What President Trump's first 100 days meant for truck drivers and sex workers in Africa. / Goats and Soda
Los Angeles will pay the largest sex abuse settlement in US history: $4 billion to victims abused as children in county-run foster homes. / BBC News
A man relates discovering the benefits of psychotherapy by describing his traumatic past to ChatGPT. / Consider the Oyster
In recent interviews, President Trump is showing signs of being a hallucinating large language model. / techdirt
For some, using the internet to find friends is their preferred means of human connection, "characterized as 'the perfect people for me.'" / The Free Press
The first 3D-printed Starbucks in the US is located in Brownsville, Texas. / New Atlas
Nike now sells sneakers that are deliberately dirty—and become cleaner the more you wear them. / GQ
Unrelated: A few supposed signs of contemporary "it bars," e.g., "the statement slab." / Punch
Pope Francis was the first non-Italian pontiff not to return to his homeland. "He was too Argentine." / The Buenos Aires Times
Wednesday headlines: The thin red wine
Pakistan may reach the global April heat record of 122 degrees Fahrenheit this week. / The Washington Post [+]
India and Pakistan are said to be periously close to military conflict (once again). / Foreign Affairs
India pushes mining groups to pursue reserves in the "lithium triangle" between Argentina, Bolivia, and Chile. / The Financial Times
See also: India is home to over 20% of the world's semiconductor design engineers. / rest of world
A call for artists to contribute to President Trump's "National Garden of American Heroes." / The Art Newspaper
Julia Angwin: Even if DOGE fails to reduce spending, it has successfully built a surveillance state "the likes of which we have never seen in the United States." / The New York Times [+]
Meanwhile, some details on the White House's "war on measurement." / Undark Magazine
"If you use Spotify to book bands, then I don't want to work with you." Why some musicians are saying no to streaming. / Hearing Things
OpenAI pulls a ChatGPT update for being "sycophant-y." / BBC News
Benj Edwards: In the age of AI slop, human creativity needs to be protected as a natural resource. / Ars Technica
Unrelated: On a website with a million chess boards, moving a piece moves it for everyone, instantly. / eieio.games
Every year in the US, the flu kills more than 36,000 people, some of whom were otherwise healthy, then suddenly succumbed to what's typically a benign illness. / The New York Times [+]
In Starr County, Texas, "everybody has somebody in their family" with dementia. / The Atlantic [+]
American girls are starting puberty about a year younger than they did in the 1970s. / The Wall Street Journal [+]
"Apples are unruly, sexually." For common fruits and vegetables, sex and gender are more fluid than the heterosexual gender binary. / Noema
For your weekly wanderlust, a guide to espresso bars in Da Nang, Vietnam. / Sprudge
See also: Restaurants in Paris often serve tourists cheaper wines than what they order. / Le Parisien
Tuesday headlines: Soccer Who
Power is slowly returning after a massive power outage in Spain and Portugal. / The Guardian
Meanwhile, Spain's electrical grid recently ran entirely on renewable energy for the first time. / pv magazine
President Trump's meme coin has "eviscerated the boundary between private enterprise and government policy." / The New York Times [+]
A White House memo authorizes treatment at Guantanamo "that in practice amounts to torture." / Forever Wars
The Trump administration's cuts across government agencies heighten concerns about food security—and into the gap step free grocery stores. / Civil Eats
For non-MAGA types: Five-hundred words to stick on the back of your Tesla. / McSweeney's Internet Tendency
If you find yourself emitting exclamations of distress all day, author Elif Batuman suggests shouting "surfing" instead. / The Elif Life
One way to enact political action? "Become unscammable, an anti-con artist." / The Trend Report
Multiple studies say Gen Z is the worst at discerning fact from fiction on the internet. / Politico
The University of North Carolina encourages its student-athletes to work with consultants who will help monetize their social media. / The New York Times [+]
See also: Soccer clubs owned by American groups are set to sweep England's top three divisions. / The Wall Street Journal [+]
A help desk in Alabama still answers the public's calls after 70 years. / The Oxford American
The aesthetics of Hergé's Tintin are now public property. / College Towns
What it was like to work for Andy Warhol? "All summer I was soaring on a wave of adrenaline, drugs, alcohol and teen hormones." / Granta
Friday headlines: Hot priest summer
HHS says there won't be an autism registry, walking back NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya's controversial announcement from earlier this week. / STAT
As government and fringe groups—kind of the same thing right now—promote the pseudoscience of eugenics, geneticists must take a stand. / Nature
The Dept. of Government Efficiency is anything but: "Firings, re-hirings, lost productivity and paid leave of thousands of workers will cost upward of $135 billion." / The New York Times [+]
See also: By marking nearly four million people dead in SSA databases—without evidence—DOGE shattered the financial lives of many who are very much alive. / The Daily Beast
China is exploring the possibility of building a nuclear power plant on the moon by 2035, as part of its joint effort with Russia to establish a lunar research station. / Independent
This is fine: "Beijing recently asked South Korean companies not to ship products containing China's rare earth minerals to US defense firms." / Reuters
Pope Francis was a music fan—he even blessed one of his favorite shops following a renovation—so NPR made a playlist of his favorite songs. / Instagram, Spotify
See also: Obama Cinema, or a list of films that are "representational of an idealistic world in the mind's eye of American democrats." / Letterboxd
A seasteading enthusiast spends 120 days living in a fixed underwater habitat, breaking the previous world record of 100 days. / The New York Times [+]
See also: A reading list on the perpetual dream of floating cities. / Places Journal
How do conservation teams move endangered black rhinos? By dangling them upside down from a helicopter. / ZME Science
"I'm wondering if we're going to have an Endangered Species Act in four years." Anatomy of an extinction. / Mother Jones
If you've listened to the Telepathy Tapes podcast—or people have urged you to listen—you may be interested in an article basically debunking it. / The Cut
Thursday headlines: Kite of the living dead
Russia hits Kyiv with missiles and drones, one of the deadliest attacks on the capital since last year. / The Kyiv Independent
A tunnel between Denmark and Germany will link 90 individual segments, piece by piece, "like Lego bricks." / BBC News
Italy's transformation into "a recycling powerhouse" is credited to "individual change, collectivized." / Grist
A video from Norway shows a tree being turned into an eight-oared rowing boat using traditional methods. / aeon
See also: Los Angeles is said to be facing a massive tree crisis unless private interests step up. / Torched
GitHub code repositories support a whistleblower's allegations that a DOGE worker surreptitiously downloaded sensitive NLRB data. / Krebs on Security
Simon Goldstein and Peter N. Salib say the best path for both the US and China is to jointly back the world's best AI lab. / Lawfare
A new datase reveals how many African workers are "indirectly employed" by Big Tech, doing content moderation, customer service, and data annotation for AI models. / rest of world
Making the case for predistribution, i.e., sharing the wealth before AI-driven inequality takes hold. / Noema Mag
Unrelated: An interactive exercise in flying kites based on places' weather patterns. / A Cursor Is a Kite
Some thoughts about analyzing the different mobility patterns of women and men when it comes to designing shared mobility systems. / Knowable Magazine
After experiencing the downsides of contemporary dating, a woman puts a $100,000 bounty on her marriage. / Knowingless
Reading psychiatrist Irvin Yalom suggests we all have meaningful lives, "but we're just not sufficiently aware of them." / 3 Quarks Daily
See also: Some beautiful travel notebooks full of exquisite details. / Colossal
"An aesthetic once dismissed as 'metro' was now emblematic of self-optimization." The menswear guy explains the roots of the manosphere look. / Bloomberg [+]
The brief story of a missing Banksy painting—and the museum employee who stole it when he retired. / The Art Newspaper
Wednesday headlines: Child detective services
The trade war between Washington and Beijing looks good for African nations. / Semafor
From February, a round-up of China's top trading partners on the continent. / China Global South
Fourteen reasons why tariffs won't bring manufacturing back to the United States—among them: "most Americans are going to hate manufacturing." / Molson Hart
See also: Stefanie Stantcheva wins the John Bates Clark Medal in economics. / The American Economic Association
David Gate says El Salvador's mega-prison, aka the "Terrorism Confinement Center," should be called a concentration camp. / A Rebellion of Care
Markets respond to President Trump saying he'll back down on China (and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell), while Elon Musk steps away from DOGE. / The Wall Street Journal [+], Politico, NPR
Measles has infected more than 600 people in Texas and killed two school-aged children. / The Texas Tribune
American scientists submitted 32% more applications for overseas jobs in the last quarter than during the same period last year. / nature
Unrelated: Examples of scientists amusing themselves with papers like "Strapless Evening Gowns." / Ironic Sans
Half of American teens say social media has a negative effect on their peers, but only 14% think it negatively affects them personally. / Pew Research Center
A guide to deleting personal information on the internet using a free tool from Google. / The Wall Street Journal [+]
People are becoming popular on TikTok for reading out celebrity lawsuits line by line. / The Atlantic
Pinterest discourages young people from using its app during school hours. / The Verge
See also: Diane Keaton's "Pinterest house" in Los Angeles is up for sale. / Uncrate
In Victorian England, Scotland Yard was originally formed as a means to prevent crimes from happening. / Crime Reads
How did Athens become such a muddled concrete sprawl? Basically, by modernizing too quickly. / BBC News
Photographs of men and boys in cramped spaces. / It's Nice That
Tuesday headlines: Desert witness
The dollar falls to a three-year low, as a trade war and threats against the Federal Reserve drive "Sell America" trades. / Semafor
Andrew Burmon: If the fig leaf of prestige falls, the upper middle class will discover how angry it is at "the misalignment of their expectations and their circumstances." / GQ
Bill Maher's recent account of his dinner with President Trump gets spoofed by Larry David. / The Guardian
Larry David: I can't stand having to remember every detail of every conversation. Hitler said he could relate—he hated that, too. / The New York Times [+]
Related: The story of how London's Imperial War Museum came to own an official portrait of Adolf Hitler. / The Art Newspaper
Scientists say they've discovered a new color called "olo." / LiveScience
An investigation finds the California Department of Motor Vehicles routinely allowing dangerous drivers to renew their licenses. / CalMatters
One way restaurants still get a boost from Covid? People ordering takeout, which shows up as higher productivity for kitchens. / NBER
"Ganking" spreads from China to the US: city dwellers attempting to forage in public parks. / Semafor
Unrelated: A new "sleepwear concept" from Japan uses embedded sound and lighting to promote sleep. / dezeen
Investors wonder if a buzzy autonomous-robot startup in Silicon Valley is hot air. / The Wall Street Journal
Some examples of human aesthetics that are already AI-seeming. / artdev
What's it like to have a Neuralink chip embedded in your brain? "It did feel like magic at first." / Men's Health
New York City's Frick Collection reopens to the public. / artsy
Pictures of street protests in New York from 1980 to 2000. / Flashbak
A new exhibition documents American photography's first 70 years. / BBC News
For your weekly wanderlust: A story of three friends who revitalized a crumbling desert resort and saved a town in the process. / Travel + Leisure
Monday headlines: All mod cons
Pope Francis has died at 88, "the first [pope] in generations to make the Vatican feel less like a fortress and more like a field hospital." / Migrant Insider
The Bush administration argued Guantanamo should be beyond the reach of the courts; CECOT is the Trump administration's attempt at making that goal a reality. / Forever Wars
See also: El Salvador won't let a US senator inside its prison, but influencers are welcome to enter and film propaganda videos. / X
An investigation into the crypto grift Trump and his family are undertaking right now, along with signs that show it's going to get much worse. / Citation Needed
See also: "A little-known firm with investors linked to JD Vance, Elon Musk and Trump could get a piece of the federal expense card system—and its hundreds of millions in fees." / ProPublica
The faculties at the Big Ten consortium of US universities are aligning to create a "mutual defense compact" against Trump's attacks on higher education. / The Hill
In cases of aspiring tyrannies and the masses that oppose them, the group that's better coordinated wins out. / Programmable Mutter
What happened to the DOGE "five things" emails: Apparently nothing, except in one case where an employee responded with profanities. / The Washington Post [+]
"We will toast to our freedom and everything he did in that nameless era." How a famous Chinese author befriended his censor. / The Guardian
A study of texting habits finds that correspondents who use shorthand abbreviations are deemed "less sincere and far less worthy of a reply." / Fast Company
Unrelated: Sam Atman says users who include "please" and "thank you" in their ChatGPT messages cost OpenAI "tens of millions of dollars" in computing power. / Futurism
The iPhone has been losing its luster in China, where consumers are embracing Chinese brands for the tech or for patriotism, or at least to appear patriotic. / Rest of World
On last week's news about a distant planet's atmosphere containing signs of biological activity: Other researchers in the field of exoplanet biosignatures say the claims are far-fetched. / Nature
Rising CO2 levels from climate change can increase the amount of arsenic in rice, though the varieties you buy and how you cook it could reduce your exposure. / BBC
The latest in American preppers' home bunkers, which are replete with all modern conveniences, and often that means a concealed gun range. / The New York Times Magazine [+]
Thursday headlines: The bulk stops here
Chinese President Xi Jinping wraps up a Southeast Asia tour to strengthen already robust trade relations. / The Associated Press
Goldman Sachs says a decoupling of the United States and China may cost the US $2.5 trillion. / The South China Morning Post
The World Trade Organization expects trade of merchandise between the two countries to drop by 80 percent this year. / axios
The CEO of a consumer products company says he's alarmed by anticipated shortages of transformers, air conditioners, and other complex goods. / X
Unrelated: Scientists in Sweden develop a battery that has the texture of toothpaste. / Gizmodo
An interactive guide to changes in the White House press briefing room. / The New York Times [+]
What if scrolling on social media is more "akin to an alcohol-induced blackout?" / Luke Burgis
Despite all of yesterday's details about Elon Musk manipulating the known and unknown mothers of his children, what remains unclear "is how many other women Musk has approached on Twitter to have his kids." / The Wall Street Journal [+], Jezebel
Some Relationship lessons from Erich Fromm's 1956 The Art of Loving. E.g., "wanting the other person to unfold 'as they are.'" / Philosophy Break
Unrelated: We are all living in the world porn made. / The Atlantic
For the first time, a colossal squid has been filmed in its natural habitat. / YouTube, NPR
Photographs from a trip through the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge by pack raft. / Patagonia
Photographs of Lenny Kravitz's lavish home in Paris. / Architectural Digest
An heir to the Porsche fortune stokes a class war over plans to build a private tunnel to his "cavernous" underground garage. / The Wall Street Journal [+]
Notes from a visit to Costco in Europe. "I don't see someone in France buying that much mustard at once." / David Lebovitz Newsletter
Wednesday headlines: Spies like us, they really like us
A day in the life in northeastern Ukraine, where there are no signs Vladimir Putin wants to end his war. / The New York Times [+]
A whistleblower explains that as DOGE staffers exfiltrated data, someone in Russia followed them through the door. / NPR
Related: The EU issues burner phones to officials traveling to the US for fear of espionage. / The New Republic
From last month, a list of things possibly in store for us if President Trump keeps running the show. / Terra Nullius
An economist rates who's up and who's down right now in American politics. / The Pursuit of Happiness
A former congressman explains what representatives do all day. / Understanding Congress
Those gold medallions now hanging in the Oval Office are strikingly similar to items available on Alibaba for between $1 and $5 (before tariffs). / Sherwood
Companies that make their goods in the US struggle to sell Americans on domestic manufacturing. / Business of Fashion
Related: Fifty "Made-In-America" clothing and footwear brands. / Gear Patrol
The National Weather Service stops translating radio alerts for non-English speakers. / The Associated Press
Timothy Snyder: "It is easier to move people away from law than it is to remove law from people." / Bluesky
A timeline for how Israel has used humanitarian aid to punish Palestinians in Gaza for the last 17 months. / Al Jazeera
Tesla's 50-day average share price falls below its 200-day measure, aka a "death cross." / Semafor
Research suggests girls are being hit by a mental health crisis, but the problem is overshadowed by boys' struggles. / The Guardian
Explaining how "you won, Jane" became the UK's new "Keep Calm and Carry On." / Experimental History
Unrelated: "Ultra-poptimists" are said to believe that celebrities should always be profitmaxxing. / Culture: An Owner's Manual
Some photographs from the chaotic Minecraft Movie screenings in theaters. / Instagram
Portraits of Texas ranching communities by Alex Bek. / Booooooom
Some thoughts on the appeal of running a marathon. "When you go to extremes, new things happen?" / Interconnected
Tuesday headlines: Ghost-structuralism
The Nile's migratory birds are threatened by tourists' poaching habits—"Maltese hunters take everything in sight." / The New Arab
New technologies are helping to regrow Arctic sea ice, but they remain controversial. / Grist
El Salvador President Nayib Bukele says he can't return a mistakenly deported Maryland resident. / axios
On the same matter, the White House is following the Supreme Court's ruling "by ignoring it completely." / The Atlantic [+]
President Obama condemns President Trump's freezing of federal funds for Harvard. Steven Pinker calls it "truly Orwellian." / The Guardian, The New York Times [+]
Alex Ross: The word that best describes what the Trump regime is trying to do to Harvard is gleichschaltung, or, "bringing into line." / The Rest is Noise, Wikipedia
Trump's crackdown on foreign students is changing college journalism. / Inside Higher Ed
The IRS's top technology officers resign, seemingly over a plan to share data with the Department of Homeland Security. / NextGov
See also: "I wasted years of my life under the delusion that people could be convinced by rational argument." / Trying to Understand the World
Chick-fil-A, Instagram, and Nike are among teenagers' favorite companies. / businesswire
Philippe Starck says design is being taken over by "toxic" trends. / dezeen
From March, bad design sometimes makes people trust a website more—and buy more stuff. / Web Designer Depot
What if we made advertising illegal? "The machinery of mass delusion would lose its most addictive and toxic fuel." / Simone
Unrelated: Some theories on why AI company logos look like buttholes. / VelvetShark
An abandoned nuclear power plant gets repurposed as an advanced acoustics testing facility. / The Verge
An ode to roadside attractions: "Exactly how we found Dinoland is lost to me." / The Paris Review
Sixty minutes of observing people around a reservoir. "It's hard to get into any emotion when you got got." / Meditations in an Emergency
A round-up of purportedly haunted accommodations for people who love the paranormal. / Atlas Obscura
Monday headlines: Stay information
The man arrested for breaking into and setting a fire in the Pennsylvania governor's mansion planned to beat Gov. Shapiro with a small sledgehammer. / AP
The Trump administration is privately discussing how to "denaturalize American citizens and deport them to other countries, including El Salvador." / Rolling Stone
In an agreement among major shipping nations—the US was notably absent—ships that emit greenhouse gases over certain thresholds will incur additional fees. / AP
"We need a right to remember." By deleting entire government databases, the Trump administration is intent on imposing control through data loss. / The New York Times [+]
A look at the US Naval Academy library's book purge: "The Bell Curve, which argues [Black people]...are genetically less intelligent than white people, is still there. But a critique of the book was pulled." / The New York Times [+]
See also: Among the studies purged from the National Institute of Justice's website is one that found undocumented immigrants commit crimes at far lower rates than US citizens. / Bluesky
Yes, DOGE is chaotic and dangerous, but it's also been wildly ineffective in its stated aim of saving money—and in some cases has increased the costs of governing. / Intelligencer
With its company town in coastal Texas now all but imminent, SpaceX also wants the county to cede its authority in deciding when to close a nearby public beach for launches. / KUT News
"A manifestation of power and wealth meant to communicate that power and wealth to others as explicitly as possible." When a McMansion looks like the White House. / McMansion Hell
Compared to a year ago, travel to the US is down from nearly all regional markets—the UK has dropped by 15% and Germany by 29%. / Forbes
The menswear guy breaks down how tariffs infiltrate the pricing formula for a pair of Nikes that's made overseas, shipped to the US, sold to Foot Locker, and then purchased by you. / Bluesky
A new book explores the important role teeth have played throughout history, from facilitating animal diversity to aiding post-mortem analysis. / London Review of Books
Job- and date-seekers are leaving notes inside Waymos. / The Washington Post [+]
See also: Photos of notes left on Los Angeles windshields. / The Morning News
"Picture it: A grown man lying on the carpeted floor of a living room, legs up on the couch, listening to music on headphones in the dark for an hour." I learned to listen from my dad. / Hearing Things
Friday headlines: Rolling blunder
"The Trump administration believes it has what game theorists call escalation dominance over China... [but] it is China that has escalation dominance in this trade war." / Foreign Affairs
The EU and China are in talks to set minimum prices on Chinese-made EVs, six months after Brussels raised tariffs on the vehicles to as much as 45.3%. / Reuters
See also: A new US Senate bill aims to prevent Chinese vehicles from entering the US market. / The Detroit News
Even with the revised tariffs, the average US household will lose $4,700 in 2024 dollars. / The Budget Lab
According to the US Economic Uncertainty Index, concerns about financial futures right now far surpass what was reported at the onset of the pandemic. / Bluesky
Related: Estimate how much the tariffs will affect your grocery list. / The Cost Index
Jamelle Bouie: Trump's insistence on making every interaction a zero-sum game means he won't be satisfied until everyone bends to his will—US citizens included. / The New York Times [+]
After Nvidia's CEO spent $1 million for a dinner at Mar-a-Lago last week, Trump loosened restrictions on the company's China exports, threatening America's hopes for AI dominance. / Platformer
See also: Trump's deportations are hampering the nation's bird flu strategy; farmworkers are terrorized and fearful of talking with health outreach workers. / KFF Health News
The White House moves to classify thousands of living immigrants as dead to cancel their Social Security numbers and pressure them to "self-deport." / AP
"How do I love thee? Let me count the ways: First, there is your executive order saying that it's illegal not to." Poetry revised for 2025. / McSweeney's
A visual guide to the Christian nationalist flags representatives display outside their offices in the US Capitol. / Baptist News Global
The National Park Service updates to the Underground Railroad website that removed Harriet Tubman and downplayed Black abolitionists has been restored to its original text. / Hyperallergic
"Each frame of integral film is a small, square machine with an even smaller chemistry set inside of it, working at a pace of any time but now." On Polaroids and time. / The Georgia Review
From March, a list of the world's best eating cities says the top three are New Orleans, Bangkok, and Medellín. / TimeOut
Push notifications, a simulation. / xkcd