After the US Open, a History of Racial Caricature By Danielle Jackson In the wake of an Australian cartoon about the U.S. Open historian Brooke Newman traces a history of racial caricature.
The Myth of the Singular Voice By Danielle Jackson Ahistorical narratives of racial uplift and singular heroes deny complexity and are devoid of real politics.
Facebook Isn’t the Same as “The Internet” Except When It Is By Michelle Weber What happens when a tool created by a bunch of developers in California becomes the main news source of a country 7,000 miles away? Nothing good.
There’s No Discrimination in Baseball! By Katie Kosma Historically pushed toward softball, Baseball for All keeps young girls in the game.
Do You Want to Know a Secret: The Untold Stories of Paul McCartney By Krista Stevens “Imagine realizing one day that you’re a Beatle. Think about how you might decide to handle that for the next 50, 60, 70 years.”
A Mystery Shrouded in an Enigma Wrapped in a Snazzy Tie and Smothered in Inherited Wealth By Michelle Weber Who is Tucker Carlson?
Let Them Eat Pancakes By Michelle Weber Employer loyalty is nice, but people can’t actually their pay bills with it.
Florida, White Privilege, and Racism By Krista Stevens My origin story—as a son, and later a father and a husband; as a citizen, a racist— has always begun in a crumpled car at the side of the highway. May 30, 1982.
The Columbine Generation Isn’t Going to Take it Anymore By Krista Stevens The Parkland survivors are teaming up with urban youth dedicated to ending gun violence, united by Dr. Martin Luther King’s six principles of nonviolence.
SuperShe Island: Where Finding Your Inner Light is Priceless By Krista Stevens Apparently there is no shortage of women who want to apply to pay $5000 to find their inner light.
The Deep, Confounding Joys of Music By Aaron Gilbreath Even the greatest philosophical minds can’t figure out why music gives us such pleasure, only that music does.
‘Mami’s biggest lesson’: On Storytelling and the Weight of Words By Danielle Jackson The author learned how to tell stories from her psychic mother.
Inside the Belly of the Beast: How the Burmese Python is Decimating Bird and Small Mammal Populations in Florida By Krista Stevens If you live in Florida, you better keep tabs on your cat, lest it fall prey to the invasive, 18-ft long Burmese python hiding under your bushes.
Take Two $275 Herbal Supplements and Don’t Call Me in the Morning By Michelle Weber Looks like you’ve got late-stage Patriarchal Medicine Syndrome. I’m so sorry.
A Cover That Could Launch a Million Retweets By Aaron Gilbreath What does a magazine cover mean in the digital age?
Graduate School is Wonderful and We Are All Very, Very Happy By Michelle Weber Avital Ronell is both product and perpetuator of an abusive academy.
The Africans Who Suffer in a Deportation Purgatory By Aaron Gilbreath Under the Trump administration, African immigrants are experiencing increasing deportations, though these deportees receive less media attention than deportees from Mexico and Central America.
Pathologizing Black Communities: Chicago Violence Receives the Wrong Attention By Katie Kosma Homicide rates in Chicago’s black communities receive a disproportionate amount of media attention in an ongoing tendency to sensationalize and pathologize their residents.
Viagra: The Happiest of All Happy Accidents? By Krista Stevens How a happy accident has gone on to make men happy the world over.
Russian Malware Is Really Killin’ It Lately By Aaron Gilbreath When Russia attacked Ukraine with sophicated malware in 2017, it caused over $10 billion dollars worth of damage and revealed the whole world’s vulnerabilities.
When Arnold Schwarzenegger Was the Newest Member of the Gym By Ben Huberman From his earliest days in California, Arnold was a polarizing, impossible-to-ignore figure.
Breast Implants, Beyond Real and Fake By Ben Huberman Nell Boeschenstein reflects on the culturally fraught discourse around post-mastectomy reconstruction.
‘I was pain incarnate.’ By Krista Stevens As she lives with terminal cancer, Teva Harrison reflects on how fentanyl is helping her make the most of the time she has left.
The Man Without a Nose By Krista Stevens Cancer may have claimed Steve Bean Levy’s nose, but not his sense of humor.
The Case of the Poisoned Calves By Catherine Cusick Someone poisoned eighteen of Buck Birdsong’s calves in the past four years. But who? And why?
Pair These Wines With Armageddon and Veal By Aaron Gilbreath A California cult had more success producing award-winning wine than sustaining their religion, so why are thousands of bottles gathering dust in a storeroom?
The Scientist at the Center of a Heated Scientific Feud By Aaron Gilbreath When one female scientist’s thirty years of research contradicted the established theory of dinosaur extinction, people started calling her a bitch that should be burned at the stake.
North Carolina’s Military Toxic Waste Negligence By Katie Kosma A reporter’s North Carolina hometown water supply contaminated millions of people, including her mother and two of her now-deceased brothers.
‘I’d Rather Import Water Than Export Children’ By Catherine Cusick Growth advocates in St. George, Utah want a billion-dollar pipeline to support a rising population. Conservationists don’t.
Appropriation in the Land of Enchantment By Aaron Gilbreath In New Mexico, cultural appropriation by newcomers is fueling Indigenous activism over colonialism and property rights.