The lack of a diversity in GIRLS launched a thousand thinkpieces. One thing I always thought was behind the resentment a certain kind of woman of colour writer had for Dunham: the freedom she had to lovingly savage her own milieu, to poke fun without the burden of representation.
this week in THE CRITICS newsletter @NYMag, some oscars counterprogramming: i spoke to @JDavidsonNYC about the met's new production of a five-hour wagner opera. i WILL be going
"There has always been infighting among Iranians in the diaspora. What has changed is more atmospheric: the speed of polarization, the way people whose politics you thought you knew have arrived at positions you did not see coming" https://t.co/FzMCrz1jXy
“The world is dumber, and we all know it,” Lane Brown writes. It’s not just that children have been bombing their standardized tests or that more than a quarter of U.S. adults now read at the lowest proficiency level. It’s also that in nearly all aspects of life, we’re opting for routines, entertainment, and entire belief systems that ask less and less of our brains. For our Cover Story, Brown writes about our recent cognitive diminishment — and proposes a counter-intuitive theory of what’s causing it: https://t.co/FJLqZ8AtRz
“I hate all these stories about Condé Nast,” New Yorker writer Susan Orlean tells writer Madeline Leung Coleman. “It implies that everybody was an idiot who wanted to fly the Concorde and eat caviar.’ https://t.co/PHnQKIfWND
"I hate all these stories about Condé Nast! It implies that everybody was an idiot who wanted to fly the Concorde and eat caviar." I profiled Susan Orlean, whose first memoir, Joyride, is out today @NYMag