Tools
Change country:

Here’s what sociologists want you to know about teen suicide

Guidance counselor Jacquelyn Indrisano embraces ninth grader Arianna Troville, 16, outside her office at East Boston High School. | Craig F. Walker/Boston Globe via Getty Images

A new book on youth suicide clusters offers perspective on prevention.

Between 2000 and 2015 in an affluent, predominately white community in the US, 19 young people died by suicide through what’s known as suicide clusters. These clusters refer to an unusually high rate of suicide for a community over a short period of time, often at least two deaths and one suicide attempt, or three deaths. Suicide clusters are an extreme example of youth mental health struggles — an issue that’s been getting more attention since the pandemic and one that’s at the center of an increasingly charged national conversation around social media and phones.

Anna Mueller, a sociologist at Indiana University Bloomington, and Seth Abrutyn, a sociologist at the University of British Columbia, recently published Life Under Pressure: The Social Roots of Youth Suicide and What to Do About Them, which explores why these clusters happened and how to prevent more. The researchers embedded themselves within the community (which goes by the pseudonym Poplar Grove) to understand the social conditions that preceded and followed the teenagers’ deaths.

Senior policy reporter Rachel Cohen spoke with Mueller and Abrutyn about the youth mental health crisis, the crucial role and responsibility of adults, and how kids take behavioral cues from those around them. This conversation has been lightly edited and condensed for clarity.

Rachel Cohen

There’s been a lot of confusing and often conflicting reports about youth suicide trends, especially since the pandemic. Can you outline for readers what we know?

Anna Mueller

Since 2007, rates of youth suicide in the United States have been increasing pretty significantly and substantially. Not all countries around the world are experiencing this, though some others are.

With the pandemic, I feel like I have to plead the fifth since the suicide data is still sort of inconclusive. For some kids, the pandemic was really hard in terms of mental health. For others, it actually took some pressures away.

Rachel Cohen

Do we know why youth suicide in the US started going up in 2007? What are the best theories?

Seth Abrutyn

It’s a complicated question. As you’re probably aware, there’s been some recent very public academics like Jonathan Haidt and Jean Twenge who have been studying the relationship between social media and mental health, especially among adolescent girls. So there’s some argument that that’s part of it. Of course, that wouldn’t explain why it started in 2007, when social media and smartphones were not really ubiquitous in the way they are now, but it probably plays a role in accelerating or amplifying some of the underlying things that were happening prior.

Another part of the explanation might be that efforts to destigmatize mental health have given people greater license to talk about their mental health. So things that may have been hiding are now out there more, though that doesn’t necessarily explain why suicide rates have gone up, but it may help understand the context.

Kids today are growing up in an extremely destabilized environment, and the economy is extremely precarious. Add that to the fact that since 2007, LGBTQ kids have been able to be more freely out, which also then causes more attention to them and invites more backlash.

Anna Mueller

Everybody asks us that, and I’ll be honest with you, it’s my least favorite question because we just don’t have great data to assess any of these theories. A lot of this really just remains speculation. Social media is something important to consider, but I take a little bit of an issue with the theory that it’s what we should solely be focused on. It’s sort of an excuse to ignore other social problems, like the fact that over that same period, rates of school shootings have increased substantially, and now make things like lockdown drills a normal part of our children’s lives.

There’s also been increasing awareness that climate change is a fundamental threat to everyone’s ability to survive and that the cost of college has wildly increased. So we have a lot of pretty challenging things going on.

Rachel Cohen

I was going to ask you about phones — since as you note there’s a ton of debate right now about their role contributing to worsening mental health, but they didn’t really come up in your book. What role did you see phones play in your research on teen suicide?

Anna Mueller

Phones facilitated kids talking privately and in spaces that adults couldn’t access. And they meant kids had access to information that their parents weren’t aware they received, like kids would often find out a friend had died by suicide by text. I think that’s something adults need to be really aware of — it means the burden is on us to have meaningful conversations with kids about mental health, suicide, and how to get help because we may not be aware when our kid gets hit with some information that’s going to be relevant.

Rachel Cohen

But did it seem like the smartphones were causing the mental health problems?

Seth Abrutyn

Social media didn’t even really come up in the book. When we were in the field [back in 2013–2016], Instagram was out, but it was really more a photographic, artistic thing. Instagram wasn’t about influencers, and Facebook, Vine, and Snapchat were around but kids didn’t all have smartphones yet. Flip phones were still quite available.

I think in our original fieldwork, a lot of the young adults were far more impacted by the internet, like they sat at home on a laptop or something like that. In our new fieldwork, what we see are kids who carry the internet on their phones wherever they go. Quickly we’ve habituated to the ubiquity of smartphones and social media.

Rachel Cohen

In your research, some of the teenagers who died by suicide had loving parents, friends, romantic partners. They didn’t necessarily have mental illness. Can you talk about what you learned with respect to risk factors and protective factors?

Anna Mueller

In the community where we were working, it was a lot of popular kids who had seemingly perfect lives who were dying by suicide. Some of them probably did have undiagnosed mental illnesses, you know, there was some evidence that they were struggling with things like deep depression or eating disorders or other things. But it was never visible. And so what the community saw was this perfect kid just gone for no reason.

It is tough, because on the one hand, what we learned was that this community had really intense expectations for what a good kid and a good family and a good life looked like. And so for kids who didn’t have a lot of life experience to know that there are a lot of options out there for how else to be in this world — they really struggled. Things that helped were having family or other adult mentors who could put things in perspective.

Rachel Cohen

Life Under Pressure is about youth suicide clusters, and I wanted to ask if you could talk more about this idea of “social contagion,” which comes up several times in your book. It seems community leaders were really nervous about saying or doing the wrong thing in the wake of a youth suicide for fear of contributing to another teenager deciding to take their own life. What does the research on social contagion in this context look like?

Anna Mueller

Exposure to suicide, either the attempt or death of somebody that a kid cares about — whether they admire them, identify with them, or really love them — can be a pretty painful experience. Suicide is often about escaping pain, and so seeing people role model suicide can increase that vulnerability for kids. Our work suggests that it’s not just pre-existing risk factors, there’s something uniquely painful about exposure to suicide that can introduce suicide as a new way to cope.

Seth Abrutyn

If we take a step back, suicide is just like almost anything else. Smoking cigarettes, watching television, all the things that we end up doing and liking — a lot of it we’re learning from the people around us. And people are exceptionally vulnerable to influential others. That could be someone that’s very high status that we look up to like a popular kid in school, or it could just be a really close friend that we trust a lot.

In the community, where there are these high-status popular kids dying by suicide, if the messaging is not done correctly by adults, if we don’t have adults who can actually help talk through what’s going on and help kids grieve appropriately, the story can easily become, well, for kids who are under pressure and feel distressed, suicide is an option.

Rachel Cohen

The idea of social contagion has been coming up a lot in debates around youth gender transition too. Some adults say kids are being unduly influenced by their friends and social media regarding things like taking puberty blockers or pursuing gender-affirming surgeries. Other research contests the idea that social contagion is a factor, and some advocates say even the suggestion that gender identity may be susceptible to peer influence is offensive. Does your research in this area offer us any insights here, any more nuanced ways to think about this?

Anna Mueller

I’m not answering this. We can’t answer this. Sorry. We have ongoing work, and we can’t go there. And I don’t know the literature and we can’t go there.

Rachel Cohen

Okay, so you don’t think it’s applicable — the social contagion research you’ve studied in the youth suicide context — to other contexts?

Seth Abrutyn

The only thing I would say is I think the word “contagion” is the word that’s problematic. We’ve tried to actually change that in our own research, and there’s pushback because it’s relatively accepted. It has a sort of folk meaning that everybody can kind of grasp on. The problem is it sounds like how people get the flu in a dormitory, right? But just because everyone shares a heating system and air conditioning system doesn’t mean it will spread like wildfire.

Sociologists don’t think of it that way. When behaviors and beliefs spread, it’s usually because people talk about them with each other, or watch people do something and then talk about it. And then they can text that to their friends and talk about it with each other, and in that sense it is contagious, if you want to call it that. I would call it more like diffusion.

Rachel Cohen

Part of your book is about the need to talk more openly about mental health issues. There’s been this public conversation recently about whether there’s been inadvertent consequences in the push to destigmatize mental illness, with one being that young people may now have become so familiar with the language and frameworks of psychiatric illness that youth can get locked into seeing themselves as unwell.

Oxford professor Lucy Foulkes coined the term prevalence inflation to describe the way that some people consume so much information about anxiety disorders that they begin to interpret normal problems of life as signs of decline in mental health, and she warned of self-fulfilling spirals. Psychology professor Darby Saxbe also noted that teenagers, who are still developing their identities, may be particularly susceptible to taking psychological labels to heart. I wanted to invite you to weigh in on these questions and debate.

Anna Mueller

I’m not sure that I find that idea to be really useful. One of the problems with adults right now is that we’re not listening to the pain that kids are experiencing, or taking it seriously. If I were to advocate for something, I would advocate for seriously listening to kids about their struggles and sources of pain, and working to build a world where kids feel like they matter. Obviously, helping kids build resiliency is incredibly important. We can do a better job at helping our kids navigate challenges, and I’m an advocate of letting kids fail, the road shouldn’t just be perfectly smooth. But I’m pretty fundamentally uncomfortable with not listening to kids’ voices.

Rachel Cohen

I don’t think anyone’s saying don’t listen to kids, but they’re saying that if you encourage kids to think of themselves as anxious, and if you give kids those certain frameworks to diagnose or understand their problems, and as you noted earlier a lot of this information is coming from social media —

Anna Mueller

We think of frames as ways for kids to express themselves. As adults, it’s our job to dig deeper into how they’re framing their lives. Can suicide be an idiom of distress? Yes. Research has shown that some kids use the language of suicide as a way to express themselves to the adults in their lives. Similar things with anxiety, but then our job is to unpack that and discover what does that mean.

Seth Abrutyn

I think what Anna is trying to say, and what our book is trying to say, is that adults are really responsible for the worlds these youth inhabit. And these anxiety frames maybe are something that spreads around on TikTok, but it’s also something that’s being generated by adults, and it’s actually something being generated from real things in their lives, like school shootings.

The way that we talk about them, and the way that we don’t listen to them, is maybe not helpful to kids. As a sociologist, we’re sitting there thinking how do we make schools better places? Well, what are adults doing? How are we making schools safer spaces so that this anxiety frame is not something kids are talking about?

Rachel Cohen

What are the big questions researchers are still grappling with when it comes to youth suicide?

Anna Mueller

I know one thing that emerged for me and Seth after our book is how can we look at how suicide prevention is enacted in the school building, so that we’re catching kids before they get to that? Since we did the fieldwork for Life Under Pressure, our research has involved working collaboratively with schools to strengthen kids’ ability to get meaningful care. We have begun to see some differences in how schools approach suicide prevention that are actually really salient to whether the school experiences an enduring suicide problem or recurring suicide clusters.

Seth Abrutyn

Most schools know that trusted adults are a really important part of the school building. And so thinking about how do we get teachers to do little things, like one school building made sure every teacher between classes was outside of their room for five minutes, just standing in the hallway, just saying hi, smiling, and pointing out that you were there. We often think those things don’t make a big impact, but it does. If a kid is not having a good day, maybe they’re not the most popular kid, but if they see that someone remembers them, someone knows them, it makes a real difference.


Read full article on: vox.com
  1. HAMAS Issues Statement on Iran President's Raisi's Death "We express our shared feelings of grief and sorrow," the Palestinian group backed by Tehran said.
    newsweek.com
  2. Donald Trump Fires Back at Claims He 'Froze' During Rally Joe Biden's campaign team said a 30-second video clip shows Trump having "glitched out and froze."
    newsweek.com
  3. London court to decide whether WikiLeaks founder Assange is extradited to the US WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange faces a court hearing in London that could end with him being sent to the U.S. to face espionage charges, or provide him another chance to appeal his extradition
    abcnews.go.com
  4. ‘Mr. Raider’ Jim Otto, Football Hall of Famer, Dies at 86 Jim Otto, a Hall of Fame center known as “Mr. Raider” for his durability through a litany of injuries, is considered one of the AFL’s all-time greats.
    time.com
  5. FDNY firefighter who nearly died fighting NYC house fire released from Bronx hospital Firefighters from the Bronx and Queens were on hand to greet the 38-year-old who shook hands with each of his fellow Bravest during the touching moment, FDNY footage shows.
    nypost.com
  6. Who Will Lead Iran After Ebrahim Raisi’s Death? Long-Term Impacts of the President’s Passing The death of Ebrahim Raisi, who was expected to succeed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has consequences for the future of one of the most powerful positions in the Middle East.
    time.com
  7. What a blast to work at NASA. Space agency is sky-high again in latest survey of federal employees Exploring the cosmos makes for happy employees, federal workers like to work from home like everyone else, and an agency that has struggled with low morale is showing improvement
    abcnews.go.com
  8. UNICEF: crece 40% el tránsito de niños por la jungla del Darién en lo que va de 2024 Esa cifra forma parte de los más de 139.000 extranjeros que realizaron esa ruta en lo que va de 2024, la mayoría de ellos venezolanos, haitianos, chinos y ecuatorianos.
    latimes.com
  9. Oakland locals blame homeless encampment for city removing traffic lights to stop copper thieves The lights had been working on and off for months due to criminals tampering with the electricity and stealing the wires, the report said.
    nypost.com
  10. Presidente iraní y otros son hallados muertos en sitio de choque de helicóptero, dice prensa estatal El incidente se produjo en medio de tensiones en Oriente Medio por la guerra entre Israel y Hamás
    latimes.com
  11. Raiders legend, Hall of Famer Jim Otto dead at 86 Longtime Raiders center Jim Otto died at 86, the team announced Sunday night.
    nypost.com
  12. Timberwolves overcome 20-point deficit to stun defending-champion Nuggets in Game 7 The Minnesota Timberwolves were down 20 points at one point in their Game 7 matchup against the Denver Nuggets, but they overcame the deficit to reach the Western Conference Finals.
    foxnews.com
  13. The List of Potential Suspects in the Mysterious Death of Iran’s President Raisi President Ebrahim Raisi’s helicopter crashed in the northwest of Iran on Sunday, May 19.
    time.com
  14. Saudi Crown Prince MBS Postpones Japan Trip Amid Concerns About Saudi King’s Health Saudi Arabia’s Mohammed bin Salman, who handles most day-to-day affairs in the kingdom, is next in line to the throne.
    time.com
  15. Tom Thibodeau wants to stay with Knicks as extension talks loom: ‘Where I want to be’ With no extension, Thibodeau, 66, would enter next season in the final season of his five-year deal and coaches typically don’t make it to lame-duck status.
    nypost.com
  16. Knicks’ late rally spoiled by costly turnovers in Game 7 downer Even with their roster hurting and their available players somehow dwindling further, the Knicks cut into what had been a 23-point hole and climbed within seven points during Sunday’s third quarter.
    nypost.com
  17. Cruz Azul pierde con Monterrey, pero avanza a la final del Clausura donde se citará con el América Después de perder en temporada regular con América, el entrenador argentino de Cruz Azul, Martín Anselmi dijo que le gustaría volverlos a ver más adelante.
    latimes.com
  18. Alex Rodriguez couldn’t contain excitement for Timberwolves’ upset of Nuggets: ‘Let’s f–king go’ Multiple shots of A-Rod during the TNT broadcast showed just how ecstatic the former MLB star was for the Timberwolves to advance to the Western Conference Finals with a win over the defending NBA champion Nuggets. 
    nypost.com
  19. Iran's President Raisi killed in helicopter crash, state media confirms Iran's President Ebrahim Raisi has died in a helicopter crash, Iranian news agencies have reported. Follow for live updates
    edition.cnn.com
  20. Iranian Prez Feared Dead as Rescuers Locate Remains of Crashed Helicopter Anadolu/Anadolu via Getty ImagesA search-and-rescue team looking for the remains of a crashed helicopter carrying Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi found the heavily damaged aircraft early Monday morning—but reported “no signs of life” were detected in the area and that “no survivors” had been found, according to state media.No official death announcement has been made as of midnight Eastern Time, though one official told Reuters that Tehran was rapidly losing hope that Raisi, Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian, and the seven other people on board were still alive—especially given the harsh terrain and freezing conditions in the northern mountains near the country’s border with Azerbaijan, where the helicopter went down.“President Raisi’s helicopter was completely burned in the crash ... unfortunately, all passengers are feared dead,” the official said.Read more at The Daily Beast.
    thedailybeast.com
  21. Watch -- Biden Delivers Bleak Commencement Address: Black Men 'Being Killed in the Street' President Joe Biden delivered a bleak commencement address this weekend, characterizing America as a racist place that does not love black people. The post Watch — Biden Delivers Bleak Commencement Address: Black Men ‘Being Killed in the Street’ appeared first on Breitbart.
    breitbart.com
  22. Reed Garrett steps in for struggling Edwin Diaz to save Mets’ win Reed Garrett pitched a scoreless eighth inning to protect a one-run lead and returned for the ninth after the Mets added insurance. He was credited with a two-inning save in the Mets’ 7-3 victory over the Marlins.
    nypost.com
  23. Europe Wants to Build a Stronger Defense Industry, but Can’t Decide How Conflicting political visions, competitive jockeying and American dominance stand in the way of a more coordinated and efficient military machine.
    nytimes.com
  24. Patricia Heaton defends Chiefs kicker following graduation speech backlash: 'He's not a monster' Patricia Heaton showed support for Harrison Butker after the Kansas City Chiefs kicker was criticized for the commencement address he gave at Benedictine College.
    foxnews.com
  25. Mets’ Edwin Diaz upbeat after reason to hope he’ll get right quickly with closer role en flux A few days after Edwin Diaz admitted that he was having some confidence issues, the Mets pitcher was in a better head space on Sunday.  Diaz has struggled immensely this season with things coming to a head on Friday when he blew a four-run lead in the ninth inning against the Marlins at LoanDepot Park...
    nypost.com
  26. Drone video shows apparent crash site of Iranian president's helicopter Iran's President Ebrahim Raisi is believed dead after "no survivors" were found at the crash site of the helicopter carrying him, according to Iranian state news channel IRINN and semi-official news agency Mehr News.
    edition.cnn.com
  27. Knicks’ Isaiah Hartenstein didn’t score a point in Game 7 dud Other insights into the Knicks' 130-109 Game 7 loss to the Pacers on Sunday.
    nypost.com
  28. 'Martyred': Iranian Media Declare Raisi Dead; 'No Sign' of Life at Helicopter Crash Site There was "no sign" of life after search teams found the site where a helicopter carrying Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi crashed on Sunday. The post ‘Martyred’: Iranian Media Declare Raisi Dead; ‘No Sign’ of Life at Helicopter Crash Site appeared first on Breitbart.
    breitbart.com
  29. Kid Rock Waves Gun in Rolling Stone Journalist’s Face: Report Stephen J. Cohen/Getty ImagesBob Ritchie, a.k.a Kid Rock, will readily admit he lives in his own world—“and it’s great,” as he insisted to a Rolling Stone journalist in a recent interview. The rules of that world, though, apparently dictate that Ritchie can do as he likes, including get “belligerently” drunk in front of someone with a tape recorder. After switching from white wine to bourbon and Coke midway through a sitdown with Rolling Stone, the MAGA-loving rocker began “shouting” at the journalist, David Peisner, who reports that his subject proceeded to pull out a handgun and wave it in his face. “And I got a fucking goddamn gun right here if I need it!” he writes Ritchie yelled. “I got them everywhere!” To be fair, the preceding two hours of the interview were also pockmarked with bizarre exchanges, including a moment where Ritchie railed against immigrants before crying out “9/11!”Read more at The Daily Beast.
    thedailybeast.com
  30. Dominican President Luis Abinader is headed to reelection as competitors concede early Dominican President Luis Abinader is headed to a second term following general elections.
    latimes.com
  31. Chinese Firms Face Authoritarianism at Home and Hostility Abroad The experience of TikTok’s owner, ByteDance, in Beijing and Washington shows how much the ground has shifted for China’s entrepreneurs.
    nytimes.com
  32. Julian Assange’s Extradition Appeal Hearing: What Could Happen? A hearing on Monday will determine whether Julian Assange has any more recourse in the British courts to appeal his extradition to the United States.
    nytimes.com
  33. Social Security, Export-Import Bank among survey’s worst federal workplaces A survey of more than 1 million federal employees reflects the low morale of many workers.
    washingtonpost.com
  34. Ask Amy: I don’t feel connected to my late birth mom’s family Letter writer doesn’t want to force a relationship with their late birth mom’s family.
    washingtonpost.com
  35. Carolyn Hax: Is it selfish or self-care to cancel plans, ‘etiquette be damned’? A reader wonders whether it’s wrong to put ourselves first, instead of hosts, when we want to skip events we agreed to attend.
    washingtonpost.com
  36. Miss Manners: My husband ignored another Mother’s Day and my birthday Her husband ignores her birthday and Mother’s Day yet again. What kind of example is he setting for their sons?
    washingtonpost.com
  37. Iran President Raisi Presumed Dead in Crash After State Media Reports Iranian state media reported no evidence of survivors emerged from the site of Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi's helicopter crash.
    newsweek.com
  38. Knicks’ ‘next man up’ resilience finally hit its breaking point For the Knicks fan, there is no greater euphoria than the basketball team you love defending the Garden the way Willis and Clyde defended it in the biggest possible Game 7 54 years ago. Sunday was no 7th Heaven. Hell instead.
    nypost.com
  39. 'No sign of life' at crash site of helicopter carrying Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, other leaders: report There was "no sign of life" reported Monday at the crash site of the helicopter that was carrying Iran's President Ebrahim Raisi and other officials, according to Iranian state media.
    foxnews.com
  40. Trump’s legal team can ask hush money trial jury to consider misdemeanor charges ahead of closing arguments The main reason Trump's camp would use the legal option is the far-lighter sentencing guidelines attached to the misdemeanor charges, according to Greenberg.
    nypost.com
  41. WATCH: NASCAR Drivers Kyle Busch and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Fight it Out in Wild Melee You were mistaken if you thought the fireworks were over after the NASCAR All-Star in North Wilkesboro, North Carolina. The post WATCH: NASCAR Drivers Kyle Busch and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Fight it Out in Wild Melee appeared first on Breitbart.
    breitbart.com
  42. Knicks’ defense against Pacers in Game 7 was historically horrid New York’s strength all season, it cratered to end their postseason. They were bounced from the Eastern Conference semifinals by Indiana in a horrid 130-109 loss at the sold-out Garden on Sunday.
    nypost.com
  43. Aaron Judge goes shallow for his seventh homer in 13 games for Yankees Judge visited the short porch in right field for his 13th home run of the year to finish off the Yankees’ 7-2 win over the White Sox.
    nypost.com
  44. 3 Americans among 50 detained after failed coup in DR Congo Those who were captured were currently facing interrogation by specialized services of the country’s armed forces, Ekenge, also told Reuters.
    nypost.com
  45. Dog Owner Charged After Decapitated Bulldog Mix Found in Florida Park The man allegedly adopted the dog one day before killing the pet, according to the local sheriff's office.
    newsweek.com
  46. ‘No sign of life’ as crews reach burnt helicopter that was carrying Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi Search crews reported "no signs of life" as they found the mangled helicopter that was carrying Iran's hardliner President Ebrahim Raisi, the "Butcher of Tehran," before it crashed in a remote region of the country on Sunday.
    nypost.com
  47. Bryson DeChambeau hopes ‘disappointing’ PGA Championship near-miss propels future major success Bryson DeChambeau, who birdied 18 Sunday to get to 20-under and tie Xander Schauffele, forcing him to birdie the last to win, said he thought 18-under par was going to be enough to win.
    nypost.com
  48. The Podiums Trump—and His Rivals—Should Use to Avoid Another ‘Senior Moment’ Photo Illustration by Thomas Levinson/The Daily Beast/GettyMost podiums don’t jiggle jiggle—they stand firm and proud, as much a testament to American craftsmanship as they are a metaphor for American exceptionalism, ready at a moment’s notice to shield a speaker’s lower half from a rapt audience, no doubt as spellbound by the lectern’s lacquer finish as its lecturer’s sparkling rhetoric.But one errant podium wiggle wiggled for sure at one of Donald Trump’s recent stops along the campaign trail, bringing shame down upon the good name of soapboxes everywhere as the former president leaned slightly too hard on it mid-speech, causing it to buckle under his weight.“What a crappy contractor this was,” Trump quipped to laughter at the annual Minnesota GOP dinner, observing that his podium “keeps tilting to the left—like too many other things.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
    thedailybeast.com