Kaboom

Illustration by Tomer Hanuka    Aaron Greene is sitting in a white plastic chair in a visiting room at Rikers Island prison. He is lantern-jawed and handsome, with several days of stubble,…
PUBLISHED: March 24, 2013
LENGTH: 3 minutes (907 words)
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Proust Wasn’t a Neuroscientist. Neither was Jonah Lehrer.

(Photo: Nick Cunard/Eyevine/Redux) We are all bad apples,” wrote Jonah Lehrer, in probably the last back-cover endorsement of his career. “Dishonesty is everywhere … It’s…
PUBLISHED: Oct. 28, 2012
LENGTH: 3 minutes (855 words)

We Must Be Superstars: In Defense of Pop (and Maybe Narcissism, Too)

Here, for instance, is a chilling fact about the nineties: In any given week of the decade, there was a 10 percent chance the No.1 song was by Boyz II Men. Add Whitney Houston, Mariah Carey, and Bryan ­Adams, and chances hit 24 percent. Americans spent a quarter of a decade listening to this sort of thing: big, lavish ballads, built to charm middle-aged and middle-school listeners alike. Try to picture an environment or purpose for these songs, and the mind drifts to graduations, school-gym talent shows, Olympics montages.
PUBLISHED: July 11, 2011
LENGTH: 8 minutes (2200 words)
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