September 24, 2013: Morning
- Public defender says criminal statutes would be instantly overhauled if middle-class Americans were policed like working-class people.
- Cruise ships wreck havoc on Venice's visitors and vistas.
- California passes first law against "revenge porn," but stigma still blames women for taking nude photos of themselves.
- Bird's-eye images show Hong Kong residents living in closet-sized apartments.
- Photographs of the real streets in Atlantic City that inspired the properties in Monopoly.
- City landmarks assume the size of their social media commentary in geocoded map of London.
- Life after death can mean the survival of other people—but how would you behave if you knew the Earth would end one month after your passing?
- Anyone born before the last decade of the 20th century can forget about seeing the 22nd century.
- Today's ubiquitous T-shirt was invented in 1904 as the "bachelor undershirt."
- Ermenegildo Zegna produces 30 vicuña suits a year—the most affordable model goes for $46,500.
- Tickets to see Pearl Jam in New York City available for more than $5,000.
- A single trader lost between $4 million and $7 million placing a flurry of Intrade bets on Mitt Romney.
- Errol Morris on his new documentary: "It was show-and-tell, with items Rumsfeld had accumulated."
- Portraits of the women of Afrofuturism.
- For knowing that Kobe Bryant is a basketball player, I receive an additional thousand dollars.
- Detroit Tigers first baseman grabs a fan's tortilla chip while trying to field a foul ball.
- FIFA producer says there aren't playable female soccer players because "there would need to be new hairstyles."