Jul 14, 2021Many male octopuses, to avoid being eaten during mating, will keep their bodies as far removed from the female as possible, extending a single arm with a sperm packet towards her siphon, a manoeuvre known as ‘the reach.’
↩︎ The London Review of Books
Tuesday headlines: That’s that old espresso
US prosecutors indict Indian billionaire Gautam Adani over his alleged lead role in a bribery scheme. / Al Jazeera
The boats behind Mozambique's $2 billion "tuna bond scandal" are up for sale. / gCaptain
The White House says it'll lend $6 billion to help Rivian build a factory in Georgia, part of an effort to lock in climate policies. / elektrek
Tesla factories, including its Austin plant, are found to be flagrant polluters. / The Wall Street Journal [+]
Elon Musk's wealth recently hit $348 billion. "Musk could pay the entire New York City budget for three years, and still have an eleven-figure net worth." / How Things Work
See also: The remarkable house built by Lynda.com. / The Architect's Newspaper
Unrelated: Some antique espresso machines. / Flashbak
The fundamentals of lab-grown meat are pricey—is the future of the business in luxury products? / Undark Magazine
Research shows parts of our bodies start aging earlier than others, "right down to our organs and cells." / The Washington Post [+]
A profile of the man designed an apartment complex for mice to examine the effects of overcrowding. / The Guardian
How the "polyworking" trend has led to "Creator As Expert" culture. / The Trend Report
A look at time capsules scheduled to be opened next year. / Paleofuture
In case you missed it, we dropped the 2025 Tournament of Books long list last week. / The Tournament of Books
Lili Anolik explains her reasons for "killing" Joan Didion and making an enemy of Donna Tartt. / Vulture
Confessions of Cormac McCarthy's "secret muse," whom he met when she was 16. "He asked me why I carried a gun." / Vanity Fair
Monday headlines: Desolate streams
The ICC's warrants for Netanyahu and Gallant sent shockwaves, but don't expect the Court to rock American Exceptionalism, an "assertion of who the rules apply to and who they don't." / Forever Wars
The first known H5N1 infection in a child in the US was confirmed last week, marking the 55th human case so far this year. / CDC
A database of the Federal Reserve board's meeting minutes from 1967 to 1973 uncovers a secret history that's often humdrum, but sometimes nearly disastrous. / Notes on the Crises
Unrelated: "Anyone can buy data tracking US soldiers and spies to nuclear vaults and brothels in Germany." / WIRED
Whether to get rich or simply to make music, people use Suno for different reasons, but one thing seems clear: Copyright laws need updating. / Can't Get Much Higher
If podcasts are your thing, it's because of the people behind the microphones. So how could AI podcasts ever be a thing for anyone? / Internal Exile
How the "cozy gaming" trend is influencing AI device makers, who want us to feel our digital companions are more than tools. / The New Yorker
See also: "Several AI-based study tools are capitalizing on a 'PDF to Brainrot' trend, which will read the text of a document you upload over 'oddly satisfying' videos." / TechCrunch
More than a decade after the Times spent months covering the troubled teens on a Tennessee basketball team, checking in with the Lady Jaguars. / The New York Times [+]
A six-and-a-half-hour supercut of Tom Verlaine's guitar solos stitched together from 50 different bootlegs of "Marquee Moon." / Ty Burr's Watch List
Hundreds of Beavers, the indie slapstick Everything Everywhere All at Once's co-director called "the future of cinema"—is now streaming for free and you need to see it. / AP, YouTube
"How queuing for stuff became just as important as buying it." / The Face
A chilling, immersive remembrance of Kristallnacht through the eyes of those who were there, 86 years later. / Inside Kristallnacht
"This coming Thanksgiving will be the first without her." Alice Brock of Arlo Guthrie's "Alice's Restaurant" dies at 83. / WBUR
Friday headlines: The root of the problem
After 800 years of dormancy, Iceland's geological systems reactivated in 2021; since then, a volcano near Reykjavík has erupted 10 times. / Reuters
The discovery of a mummified saber-toothed tiger cub is providing scientists a first-ever glimpse of the species, and providing answers to long-held questions. / National Geographic
To understand the debate over fluoridated water, look to Portland, Ore., where the water remains fluoride-free, and the locals are still divided on the topic. / The Washington Post [+]
It may be nice to think science should be apolitical, but at this moment it isn't, and that's why the removal of Scientific American's editor-in-chief is such a loss. / Defector
Related: Do California teachers have the right to slam Donald Trump? / Los Angeles Times
"The backlash against incumbents is real, but it is only indirectly related to factual information about inflation and the economy." / Econbrowser
A Q&A with the author of a book about the secret worlds that exist only for the super-rich, who make their own laws and rarely abide by them. / Coda
Did AI art just pass the Turing test? Only if you're comparing AI output to "JPEGs of photographs of paintings." / Read Max
See also: A visit to the Met's staff art show, "the most enjoyable exhibition I've seen in recent memory." / The Loaf
New to us, but, German Chocolate Cake isn't German and Baker's Chocolate isn't for bakers—both were instead named after people. / Kottke.org
You know the disclaimer movies include that states the film isn't based on anyone living or dead? It's there because of a lawsuit over the death of Rasputin. / Interconnected
"You experience a decrease in dopamine and norepinephrine, due to the decreased activity of the reward system cells." The neuroscience of heartbreak. / Mapping Ignorance
Rooster fans rejoice: Here it is, the 2025 Tournament of Books long list. / The Tournament of Books
"All you could see were toys, toys, and toys, like a fabulous toy land." New Yorkers recall shopping before the internet. / New York Magazine
Thursday headlines: War and peace (finally)
The International Criminal Court issues arrest warrants for Israel's prime minister and former defence minister, and Hamas's military commander. / BBC News
A recap of Gaza resolutions the UN's Security Council has voted on since last October. / Al Jazeera
Consulting firm McKinsey is said to have a client list "that reads as the 'whodunit' of the climate crisis." / The Guardian
Unrelated: Confessions of a repentant Wagner disinformation agent from the Central African Republic. / Le Monde
Roughly 57% of the world's population is now connected to the mobile internet, though the rate of growth is slowing. / rest of world
An investigative journalist who's never had a smartphone considers getting one that was previously only available to the military. / 404 Media
Regarding yesterday's news about robot dogs, one just completed a full-course marathon. / The Register
See also: A developer released what he's billing "the world's first AI street hawker." / Ted Benson
In the 1930's young, working women divided a week into "48 hours working, 56 hours sleeping, 31 hours on home obligations, and 24 hours eating or running errands." / The One Percent Rule
Explaining what the "women in male fields" TikTok trend is about. / Screenshot
A video report from Europe's recent Tramdriver Championship. / YouTube
The great sports writer Louisa Thomas on Rafael Nadal's legacy: "No match was over until it was over; and then it was over." / The New Yorker
Footage from 1910 shows Leo Tolstoy's final days, right to his deathbed. / Open Culture
See also: A calculator can tell you a famous person's "net elevation" from birth to death. / Avi Bagla
Wednesday headlines: Deco and the bunnymen
Negotiators at COP29 are stalled on how much money to raise for climate action in developing countries, "and how to raise it." / Semafor
A new generation of cheaper batteries is increasingly popular with EV automakers. / Canary Media
The TSA expects to screen 18.3 million travelers next week. / The Points Guy
Singapore is said to be the only global city that meets the "3+30+300 rule" for greener and more heat tolerant cities. / The Conversation
Trump wants to expand fossil fuel production—a breakdown of how he can accomplish it. / Vox
See also: A new gas plant is being proposed to power a $5 billion Louisiana data center. / floodlight
Some old and new theories on whether we're accidentally building a planetary brain. / Noema
"AI pimping" refers to AI-generated influencers that are created from videos of adult content creators. / 404 Media
Unrelated: Mar-a-Lago is being patrolled by robot dogs. / BBC News
A Magritte painting sells for $121 million at Christie's. At Phillips, a Basquiat self-portrait doesn't sell at all. / artsy, The Art Newspaper
What is it like to be an art detective? "When they find out you lied to them, they shoot you." / Atlas Obscura
When is it okay to send wine back? When "it smells like a waterlogged cellar." / Esquire
From September, what if the United States had stuck with Art Deco? "It was the last ornamental architectural style before an infestation of austere cubes." / Fashionably Late Takes
A photo series highlights horse culture in South Africa. / Booooooom
San Marino, the world's bottom ranked soccer team, wins its first away game ever. / BBC Sport
"I'm not a very superstitious person, but you took it to the next level." Roger Federer sends Rafael Nadal a nice note for his final tournament. / NPR
Tuesday headlines: Proxy murmurs
Ukraine fires "longer-range" ballistic missiles into Russia on the 1,000th day of war. / CNN
Volodymyr Zelenskyy says his country may face 100,000 North Korean troops. / The Guardian
How has the Assad government maintained control in Syria despite 13 years of civil war? By becoming a "narco state" dependent on captagon. / The New Yorker
China is moving quickly to ramp up domestic production of semiconductors. / Nikkei Asia
AI-generated police reports are said to be a sign of what's to come. / MIT Technology Review
Related: A leak shows what "Graykey," a phone-unlocking tool used by law enforcement, can get from your iPhone. / 404 Media
"Planet Nine" refers to a potential planet orbiting 10 times farther from the sun than Neptune. / Phys.org
Three trends to explain a supposed decline in scientific innovation—and the answer is "epistemic anarchy?" / City Journal
A Utah forest of 47,000 aspen trees—named Pando—is actually a single interconnected organism. / Nature
See also: Audio recordings from the world's first certified "wilderness quiet park" in Ecuador. / Quiet Parks
Americans aren't just buying more toys for their kids than they used to, "they're also buying them differently." / Vox
Allison Willmore: Men are unwell, but they deserve better than Gladiator II. / Vulture
Unrelated: Photos of Eric Wareheim's loft apartment. / Domino
Layered photographs of starling murmurations. / Colossal
An explanation for how magician David Copperfield made the Statue of Liberty disappear in 1983. / Open Culture
Monday headlines: Doing things to do things
In trade journals, agriculture experts worry Trump's combination of RFK Jr. and tariffs could chill their $1.5 trillion industry. / NPR
See also: Under Trump, the future of Medicare drug price negotiations—one of Biden's key domestic policy achievements—is now uncertain. / Roll Call
Polls indicate Americans favor deporting undocumented immigrants—but only when the question doesn't mention people who've lived here a long time, work, and have no criminal record. / CNN
"Apparently some people think it makes us look like Nazis." Trump allies have been told to stop referring to their planned immigration detention facilities as "camps." / Rolling Stone
There must be merits to boredom; after all, examples abound for all the ways capitalism treats it as a threat to society. / The Flaw
See also: From an OSS handbook, how ordinary citizens can disrupt enemy operations—or, the art of doing dumb shit. / ZINE
"There are just too many people walking too slow, filming themselves, or waiting on long lines that I have to push past because they want to try some mid bagel place." Missing a lonely New York. / The Melt
It's estimated that around four percent of the world's population hear the Hum—a persistent, rumbling noise that remains a mystery to scientists. / The Independent
A new solar-powered desalination system provides drinking water at lower costs by adjusting to changes in sunlight, requiring no extra batteries. / MIT
Genetic analysis of the quaking aspen tree Pando, one of the world's largest and oldest plants, shows it's between 16,000 and 80,000 years old. / Nature
Fifty years after scientists transmitted the Arecibo Message to prove a radio message could traverse the galaxy, it's still on its way to the star cluster Messier 13. / JSTOR Daily
In a single day, more music is released now than it was in all of 1989, and music software companies are cashing in through recurring subscriptions. / MusicRadar
See also: Re-listen to the Hood Internet's mashup of 50 songs from 1989 into a single three-minute track. / YouTube
Clips from TV pilots that didn't make it past the first episode, even with some really big names attached. / Ironic Sans
Screenshots of personal epiphanies in the Notes app. / Dirt
Friday headlines: Go wild in the country
A bankruptcy judge has halted The Onion's purchase of Infowars, claiming concerns over the transparency of the auction. / Bloomberg Law
How the planned construction of a Trump golf course near Hanoi might affect Vietnam's relations with the incoming administration. / The Diplomat
Now that the election is over, lifestyle influencers are free to admit they were MAGA all along. / Defector
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear warns Democrats against abandoning LGBTQ causes in hopes of winning over voters. / them
Between 2020 and 2023, about 63% of counties classified as rural or in small metros saw an increase in arrivals aged 25 to 44, compared to 27% between a decade prior. / Business Insider
"For science to be effective, it simply cannot be efficient." When efficiency experts come for science, science doesn't happen. / Slate
According to a new study, poorer nations will need at least $1 trillion a year to cut emissions and deal with climate disasters. / The Guardian
On an expedition to the Solomon Islands, scientists have discovered what's thought to be the world's largest coral—it's about the size of five tennis courts. / ABC
In 1916, just one year after the first transcontinental phone call, the first teleconference occurred, simultaneously connecting 5,100 engineers across the US. / IEEE Spectrum
See also: "When she got home in the morning it indicated that she had danced enough to cover thirty-one miles." Pedometers were once a form of surveillance tech. / The MIT Press Reader
The Texas Funeral Service Commission says a state medical school's practice of liquefying cadavers after training and research is illegal. / NBC News
Unrelated: Families spread loved ones' ashes at college football stadiums more often than you think. / ESPN
"We did have a new album come out this year, and I feel like it's detracting from that." When musicians realize AI slop is masquerading as them on Spotify. / The Verge
Music critic Philip Sherburne finds a fraudster has been using his name in attempts to bilk money from new artists. / Futurism Restated
Inside the origins of Makaton, a trademarked version of British Sign Language, and the fight to end the commodification of deaf communication. / The Baffler
"Library employees can read people as fluently as bartenders." Elizabeth McCracken visits every branch of the Austin Public Library. / Texas Highways
Thursday headlines: The heart of war
India's Supreme Court forbids "bulldozer justice," i.e., when the government demolishes someone's home affter they've been accused of a crime. / BBC News
The GOP retains its House majority, giving Republicans full control of Congress and the White House. / Politico
Some Republican Senators seem alarmed by some of Donald Trump's nominations for key posts. / NBC News
Young people are avoiding the red heart emoji (❤️) for fear of seeming MAGA. / Usermag
Jia Tolentino on the far right's new phrase "your body, my choice" and how "posting now creates political reality." / The New Yorker
Sex educators say parents need to counterprogram against pornography. One possibility is a family "sex scene night." / The Cut
The "great stuff transfer" refers to Baby Boomers passing things down to their children who often don't want them. / Metafilter
John Jervis: I love mid-century modern, but it makes me sad. / dezeen
A new infection called "Valley fever" may be caused by unchecked development in desert landscapes. / Noema
"It is likely that his psychotic visions had something to do with his professional exile." Some notes on Carl Jung's midlife crisis. / Noted
Some theories on why people often didn't smile in early photographs. / Upworthy
Unrelated: From September, how to combine 143 World War II movies into a 12-hour series. / ww2supercut
An essay to explain what it's like to be a professional outdoor gear tester. / Patagonia
How Machiavelli described his evening reading hours: "I feed on the food that alone is mine." / Public Domain Review
See also: One example of how to write a story entirely in monosyllables. / Futility Closet
Wednesday headlines: That child-free lifestyle
Russian lawmakers vote to ban all content that promotes "a child-free lifestyle," including social media. / Semafor
Since the 1990s, deaths have nearly always outnumbered births in Russia. / The Washington Post [+]
What can President Biden do prior to Donald Trump's new term? "Use his clemency power to empty the federal death row." / Slate
Tim Snyder on Trump: "We should expect him to try to cling to power until death, and create a cult of January 6th martyrs." / The New Yorker
See also: An updated guide to protecting yourself from government surveillance. / WIRED
Wealthier nations want Saudi Arabia, China, and the private sector to contribute more to help lower-income countries adapt and cope to the climate crisis. / The New York Times [+]
Pakistan's smog is visible from space. / Goats and Soda
Global sales of electric and plug-in hybrid cars are up 35% from October last year. / Reuters
Unrelated: Fourteen percent of urban road miles nationwide are under state control, but two-thirds of all crash deaths in the 101 largest metro areas occur there. / Vox
The iconic SS United States, "once the pride of America's maritime fleet," is about to become the world's largest artificial reef. / gCaptain
What is it like to experience polar night in the world's northernmost town? "I savor the calm it brings." / Smithsonian Magazine
A history of Black Mountain College's weaving tradition. / Hyperallergic
A review of a new biography of writer Sanora Babb, known for her bad luck "of now-legendary proportions." / The New Republic
Tracing the King James Bible's influence on Ernest Hemingway's "principle of the iceberg." / Slant Books
RIP, Alvin Ailey star and artistic director Judith Jamison. / The New York Times
See also: During the pandemic, different Ailey dancers performed Ailey's "Cry." / YouTube
Tuesday headlines: Serenade the sheep from the goats
Israel says there will be no ceasefire or pause until its war objectives are met. / The Times of Israel
A video round-up of what's happened in northern Gaza siege since the US gave its 30-day warning a month ago. / Al Jazeera
Between news-averse voters and Twitter disinformation, "Donald Trump was returned to power by the most badly informed electorate in modern American history." / The Philadelphia Inquirer
See also: The mirror of fascism in big tech. / Dead Simple Tech
Hannah Ritchie: The fact that researchers can't keep up with developments in low-carbon energy is, in many ways, a good thing. / Sustainability by numbers
Difficult-to-pronounce names are found to be negatively related to the probability of landing academic jobs. / American Economic Association
A scientist with breast cancer self-experimented with lab-grown viruses—and though the treatment was a success, she doesn't recommend just anyone try it. / Nature
Only 0.8% of American women live in an area that has an abortion facility that doesn't also have a nearby anti-abortion "crisis pregnancy center." / NBC News
"Spiritual bars"—alcohol plus tarot readings—are said to be booming in China. / Radii
More migratory birds passing through New York City means more skyscraper collisions. / The Guardian
Unrelated: Some thoughts about rethinking your commuting route. / The Los Angeles Times
Authorities dismantle a criminal group responsible for forging over 2,000 artworks attributed to more than 30 known artists. / artsy
A review of a $420,000 electric car says the best feature is the sound it makes. / The Verge
Watch: A short film about the custodians of an emergency airport in Australia. / Colossal
Residents of Coulsdon, England, find their Facebook posts deleted by an algorithm that flags the word "LSD" in their town's name. / Inside Croydon
Is social media an oral culture? "I actually don't know if any of this is right." / X
Baby boomers think the love song is dying—and they're wrong, but that's because the categories have changed. / The Pudding
Friday headlines: Fight or flightless
For the first time in history, every incumbent party in a developed nation this year lost vote share in elections. / Financial Times
See also: A German far-right party won a regional election in September, which hasn't happened since the Nazi era—a result of 30 years of ignoring a lurking problem. / The Baffler
The good news is that the US political system is too complex for Trump to destroy it. The bad news is he's going to try anyway. / The Guardian
We blamed Facebook for Trump winning in 2016, so it tracks that we'd blame TikTok this time around—except the squirrel thing was not nothing. / Read Max
An explanation of 4B, the South Korean feminism movement that bans men, and that's been taking hold this week among American women. / Vox
"Ten percent of American workers today are union members, meaning that 90% of 'the working class' are not union members." To unfuck politics, create more union members. / How Things Work
Life after landing your dream job as a lighthouse keeper on a remote Australian island, where your only company for a month at a time is a colony of penguins. / BBC News
See also: From an 1860 John Ruskin letter, "One feels everything in the world so sympathetically ridiculous, one can't be angry when one looks at a Penguin." / Instagram
An emperor penguin has arrived on the southern coast of Western Australia, the furthest north the species has ever been recorded. / ABC
Ten years after legislation to curtail stores' and restaurants' seafood mislabeling, an investigation finds 18% of salmon sold as wild is actually farmed. / Gizmodo
Unrelated: Webfishing, a game that combines fishing, relaxing, chatting, and little else, could not have come at a better moment. / VICE
Or if smashing fascists sounds more appealing, the allure of Wolfenstein remains. / Kotaku
See also: From 1941, "It is an interesting and somewhat macabre parlor game to play at a large gathering of one's acquaintances: to speculate who in a showdown would go Nazi." / Harper's
A vibrant journey through the colorful world of mushrooms, comprising more than 800 shades. / Mushroom Color Atlas
Thursday headlines: O patria mia
Cuba's power grid fails again as Hurricane Rafael crosses the island. / The Guardian
Germany's ruling coalition collapses, triggering political chaos in Europe's largest economy. / DW
A round-up of how global leaders are responding to Donald Trump's reelection. / NPR
Related: The return of Trumponomics gets markets excited "but frightens the world." / The Economist
Yesterday, Democratic Senate candidates outperformed Harris—or, put another way, Republican Senate candidates are doing worse than Trump. / Vox
California plans to lead "the liberal resistance" against the new administration. / The Los Angeles Times
Heather Cox Richardson recalls the pamphlets supplied to soldiers in WWII explaining fascism. / Letters From an American
See also: Remembering the Guerrilla Girls' call for a return to "traditional values" on abortion. / Guerrilla Girls
Recent studies suggest the presence of armed officers has no impact on school safety or day-to-day crime. / Undark Magazine
A study finds cancer cases and deaths are expected to rise by 77% and 90% in 2050, respectively. / JAMA Network
Interviews with more than 100 older Japanese women and men suggest working less during your life leads to a much better retirement. / The Conversation
Scientists find that rainforests can rapidly regrow if left alone. / Grist
Some thoughts on what people lose by no longer relying on their memory. "I suspect we're losing a lot." / The Base Camp
Researchers spot a black hole that appears to have been "feeding" at 40 times the theoretical limit for millions of years. / Ars Technica
A diminutive Japanese satellite made of wood makes it into space. / Quartz
For some weekly wanderlust, TMN's Rosecrans Baldwin bike-tours an island off southern Japan. / Travel + Leisure
Do dogs know what art is? "Canine perception is collaborative. Dogs are pack animals; they are always among." / The Paris Review
An exclusive Italian club devoted to Verdi requires a member to die before a new one can join. / The New York Times [+]
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Wednesday headlines: Morning portrait
Also, some fashion illustrations from the roaring twenties in Très Parisien magazine. / Flashbak
(Fwiw, today's clothes are made using enormous amounts of petrochemicals and fossil fuels.) (Clothes have long been political.) / The Walrus, X
Donald Trump wins the American presidency despite a 34-count felony conviction and two assassination attempts. / Politico
Susan Glasser: Rule number one in politics is never underestimate your enemy. / The New Yorker
Trump is also the first Republican to (likely) win the popular vote since George W. Bush's reelection in 2004. / The Hill
Unrelated: Let's begin by assuming that "no 'cosmic purpose' or divine intention is at work." / Plankton Valhalla
Non-white non-college-educated voters moved 13 points toward Trump. It was the GOP's best presidential performance among Latino voters in modern times. / ABC News, Slate
The new president will have a Republican Senate, and possibly a GOP House. / BBC News, The New York Times
Meanwhile, a right-wing site allows anyone to search for a voter's physical address and party affiliation. / 404 Media
Seven ballot measures protecting abortion rights also won. For Democrats, six reasons to feel hopeful. / Vox, The Cut
See also: A few short fantasy stories about strangers joining forces to save each other. / Metafilter
Tuesday headlines: Kiss or cut bait
A fascinating story about an Israeli college student who wound up in a prisoner swap because of her Instagram stories. / The New York Times [+]
The United States is spending an estimated $1.7 trillion to advance its nuclear arsenal. / Undark Magazine
See also: A pair of physicists and an animator have created a new way to visualize the atomic nucleus. / Kottke
A guide to poll closing times, vote counting, and races to watch in US elections. / 538
A layman's guide to being a political junkie today. "Do not—under any circumstances—turn on a TV prior to 6pm." / Matt's Five Points
Something we didn't know: The only major social media platform with an explicit ban on phony voter fraud posts is Snap. / Platformer
New York Times reporters recently accused their editors of "sanewashing" Donald Trump. Meanwhile, the editorial board embraces "hypertextual writing." / Semafor, Kottke
Unrelated: A cruise ship medic fact-checks Ryan Murphy's new series Doctor Odyssey. / The Points Guy
A longstanding survey in Japan finds a record fall in teenagers having their first kiss. / BBC News
"Longevity concierges" are said to be trending in Silicon Valley. / The San Francisco Standard
Half a dozen innovative products—a solar cow, a trash can that sterilizes itself—from Seoul Design 2024. / dezeen
Making the argument that a muralist in Sussex, England, was a bit of a 12th-century Ai Weiwei. / Keith McGowan
An aerial depiction of the (maybe someday) Los Angeles-San Francisco high speed rail route. / YouTube
Some examples of "camera trap photography" in Southern California. / My Modern Met
Related: Photographer of the week, simply because we like her work: Patricia Voulgaris. / Patricia Voulgaris
"It's always hot girl summer at Jacksonville Zoo and Garden." Museums and tourist attractions are marketing themselves to Gen Z. / artnet
Monday headlines: Election nearing
There could be more continents than you think. Case in point: New Zealand may be part of its own continent, separate from Australia. / The New York Times [+]
The Greenland Ice Sheet temporarily stores a large amount of meltwater in the summer, a discovery that may aid in accurately forecasting future sea-level rise. / Phys.org
"Where can I get crystals that are less toxic, locally sourced, and ethical?" / Sierra
Small farms lose out as billionaires prove to be the "ultimate beneficiaries" of the EU's farming subsidies. / The Guardian
See also: Jeff Bezos's justification for a non-endorsement is another in a long sequence of evidence for why the future of journalism can't be billionaires. / 404 Media
In an election that's been rife with misinformation, Perplexity AI's new election hub is a bad idea at the worst possible time. / Gizmodo
See also: "Washington has to wake up and realize that in fact, Silicon Valley is in the midst of a huge power grab." How technology ruined democracy. / Foreign Policy
In election predictions: Polymarket wants you to think it has all the answers (it doesn't); and we are 100% certain that anything could fucking happen. / The Baffler, McSweeney's
Unrelated: "If you can become lucid during a nightmare you can change your response or do something that empowers you in real time and improve your capacity to cope." / Atlas Obscura
From 2021 and so necessary this week: Yuki Kawae's meditative zen gardens are an antidote to doomscrolling. / Colossal
"Google says I need an abortion." Diana Weymar's abortion embroideries document the state of post-Roe America. / Hyperallergic
According to a new investigation, dental chains are pulling healthy or treatable teeth in order to profit from implants. / KFF Health News
"What once looked like a generational change to public space in the American city has instead returned to a bunch of curb parking." Why NYC's outdoor dining fell apart. / Slate
Typical habanero peppers reach 100,000 to 350,000 units on the Scoville heat scale, while a newly created variety tops out at 1,000. / Oregon Public Radio
"Where was 'the hexagram of the heavens' I loved from the opening verse of the album?" Listening to Joni Mitchell's demos and hearing a narrative evolve. / Dada Drummer Almanach
Friday headlines: Yours for a song
More than 200 people have now died from the flooding in Valencia, Spain, in Europe's deadliest weather disaster since the 1970s. / Reuters
Long a crime that targeted Black and Latino people, jaywalking is now legal in New York City. / HuffPost
"Even liberal yuppies in my Brooklyn neighborhood lined up at a community board meeting in May to complain that there were just too many migrants at local shelters." The crime of human movement. / The New York Review
See also: Contrary to what Republicans are campaigning on, Biden and Harris worked behind the scenes to get the border crisis under control. / The New York Times [+]
The history of Electrical Audio, legendary recording engineer Steve Albini's studio, which is searching for a way forward after its founder's death. / Inc.
See also: "Anyone who has streamed a song on their phone for free can sense that something has changed." The decline of the working musician. / The New Yorker
Instagram allows male nipples but not female nipples—but in cases of transition when and how is that distinction drawn? / 404 Media
In response to a fake, AI-generated ad, thousands of people showed up for a Halloween parade in Dublin that never happened. / Engadget
Retail stores may soon have access to facial-recognition technology that can detect shoppers who "sweetheart" workers in hopes of scoring discounts. / Gizmodo
Mathematicians calculate there's not enough time left in our universe for monkeys to ever randomly type out the complete works of Shakespeare. / BBC News
Black plastic kitchen utensils contain high levels of fire retardants, which have a nasty habit of leaching into food. / The Atlantic
Legalized gambling is turning football upside down for fans, gamblers, and players alike. / Wide Left
It's the end of an era as the last in-flight magazine for a major carrier goes digital-only. / Columbia Journalism Review
"In a quiet, unremarkable town in Ohio, everything has begun to disappear: first shoes, then street signs, then pets." A links-based mystery game. / Question Mark, Ohio
Thursday headlines: Happy Diwalloween!
North Korea launches an intercontinental ballistic missile, perhaps looking for attention prior to the US presidential election. / USA Today
The Economist magazine endorses Kamala Harris, saying "being independent and being opinionated" aren't in conflict with each other. / Semafor
Election officials in battleground states are trying—and mostly failing—to fact-check Elon Musk in real time. / CNN
An argument that social scientists don't seem to know how to incorporate the nonlinearity of chaos. / Aeon
Unrelated: Dodgers fans set a Metro bus on fire after their team wins the World Series. / KTLA
Facebook is auto-generating militia group pages. / WIRED
Users report still being able to use Microsoft's controversial AI-powered gender classifier. / 404 Media
Schools are banning Crocs because the shoes are said to be a distraction, and dangerous. / Fortune
Related: How the font Comic Sans became the Crocs of typefaces. / FastCompany
An eating tour of eastern France's choucroute garnie, pretzels, and pork knuckles. / The Financial Times [+]
Diwali and Halloween overlap this year, producing "Diwalloween." / The Washington Post [+]
An annual favorite, a round-up of "mundane" Halloween costumes from Japan. / Spoon & Tamago
Wednesday headlines: Banana wit
Foreign interference in this year's election is said to be far more sophisticated, and far more difficult to track. / The New York Times [+]
China is considering approving $1.4 trillion in extra debt to revive its economy. / Reuters
Related: If "Xi Jinping Thought" is not a vision for a genuine socialist movement driving toward a communist utopia, what is it? / China Books Review
An explainer for why forecasts continue to miss the pace and persistence of falling birth rates. / The Financial Times [+]
The United States' Nuclear Emergency Support Team (NEST) is a group of volunteers who have high-level security clearances. / NPR
Personal assistants for billionaires earn around $250,000 a year—and the job is a logistics nightmare. / The Cut
Related: "Private rail cars were, and still are, very much a high-end luxury." / Why is this interesting?
Regarding yesterday's news about the art market, Maurizio Cattelan's Comedian—a banana fixed to a wall with duct tape—is estimated to sell for $1.5 million. / Artsy
A brief video about the tumbleweed's 19th-century arrival in America. / YouTube
A short film about two brothers traveling alone from Boston to the 1967 World's Fair in Montreal by pony cart. / The New York Times [+]
Britain's cheese world suffers the loss of over £300,000 worth of clothbound Cheddar. / NPR
How do different species respond to death? "In ways that are learned rather than instinctive, not rigidly responsive to specific stimuli, and highly variable." / The New Yorker
European scientists develop an algorithm capable of interpreting pig sounds. / Reuters
Examples of people who cultivate "divine discontent." "The tendency to revise, in particular, seems especially common." / Personal Canon
Tuesday headlines: Radio on the TV
Saudi Arabia and Iran conducted a joint military drill last week in the Sea of Oman. / TRT World
A good summary of current conflicts in the Middle East from Spencer Ackerman. / Forever Wars
Oren Yiftachel: "Apartheid is not only a moral abyss and a crime against humanity; it is also an unstable regime." / +972 Magazine
President Biden waits in line for 40 minutes to cast his vote in the election. / The Associated Press
Philadelphia's District Attorney sues Elon Musk over his million-dollar sweepstakes for voters in battleground states. / Deadline
Unrelated: SpaceX wins a new round of military contracts worth $733 million. / Ars Technica
The term "clippers" refers to people influencing the political news cycle by making snappy videos for social media. / CNN
Related: A brief online test to check your susceptibility to misinformation. / University of Cambridge
A deep dive into how Chinese firms are evading US controls on advanced technologies. / Semianalysis
Collectors spent roughly a third less on art in 2023 than in 2022, with the largest decrease in spending at the highest levels. / Artsy
A book review connects recent novels about women's midlife crises to older stories about witches. / The New Yorker
United Airlines prints its final in-flight magazine, the last connected to a major US carrier. / Columbia Journalism Review
See also: A short film about the States' last fabric flower factory. / YouTube
Analysis of baseball's minor leagues finds persistent bias against Black and Latino players dating back to 1950. / The Guardian
An argument for enjoying the World Series aurally: "Listening to baseball on the radio requires a patience—and provides a catharsis." / GQ
Confessions of a Spotify vandal. / Hearing Things
Some thoughts on what exactly is human spirit. "Our energies often come from a combination of neurotic drive and positive response." / Lapham's Quarterly