Tools
Change country:

Why libraries need librarians

A hand reaches for a book on a library bookshelf
Beyond books, some public libraries offer everything from musical instruments to seeds for patrons to check out. | Ho Ming Law/Getty Images

Vox reader Alexia Cherry asks: I work at a public library and I think a lot of the talk about libraries is generally uninformed about what librarians actually do. So many people that I interact with are shocked that you need to have a master’s degree to be considered a professional, and many people don’t know about the wide variety of library jobs available.


People do indeed seem to find librarians oddly mysterious! In August, Western Illinois University laid off its entire librarian faculty and at the same time insisted the university would still have “adequate coverage in the library.” The school seemed to be operating under the belief that librarians are only warm bodies who exist to check books in and out, and that they only have master’s degrees in order to artificially jack their wages up. Anyone, this line of thinking goes, could keep a library running without much work. They just need to know how to scan a barcode. 

But then, libraries are undervalued in general, perhaps because they are such radical institutions. The truism is that if you tried to invent the public library today, the right would never let you get away with it — giving so many things to the public for free, and subsidizing them all with taxes, imagine. How many other spaces do we have left where a person can go and spend hours on end and still not be expected to buy anything? 

Perhaps on a subconscious level, we tend to undervalue libraries culturally in order to keep them from reaching their full potential. If we pretend that they’re bizarre federally subsidized bookstores, we don’t need to think about how they’re enormous warehouses full of knowledge available to anyone who walks in, staffed by professionals highly trained in sorting, extracting, and preserving that knowledge.

What do librarians actually do?

Let’s take a brief look at what libraries need and how librarians provide those needs. 

All libraries, from the public to the academic to the corporate, need to be cataloged in order for anyone to know what books are in them, where each kind of book is, and what those books are useful for. In the library sciences, cataloging is its own highly esoteric specialty, closer to coding than anything else, and it requires careful technical training. Catalogers describe each notable aspect of a book, then classify each aspect so it’s searchable. To do it, you have to learn not just multiple classification systems, but also get training in how to describe a book you may have not read, what parts of it are most important, and which categories will supersede others depending on the library you’re classifying for. A cataloger must make judgment calls on whether to code in spoilers (do you classify a spy novel as “double agent” even if that’s the big twist at the end?) and how far down you should keep subdividing.

Cataloging is such a rigorous and precise form of information processing that it’s one of a librarian’s most lucrative skill sets in the information era. Some librarians, after grad school, go off to work in corporate archives, where they catalog and preserve information about the company’s history for internal usage. (Not a particularly glamorous job, but the private sector tends to pay better than the public.) Fresh library school graduates can use the same skill set to process papers at historical archives, but there they’ll also need to know how to handle fragile antique documents without damaging them, and potentially how to repair books at the end of their lifespans.

All libraries also need acquisition specialists, who are the ones facing heavy scrutiny in our book-banning era. The acquisitions department is responsible for deciding where the holes in a library’s collection are and how to fill them. They make the call as to whether it’s a good idea to bring in a book full of errors — say, a book on creationism — if patrons are requesting it, or whether it’s worth it to keep around a book on a controversial subject — say, teen sex ed — if patrons are protesting against it.

Most libraries need research specialists who can help patrons figure out how to access what they’re trying to look up. If you’re trying to flesh out your family tree, a research librarian can usually tell you what newspaper archives to consult, and get you access to those archives free of charge. If you’re trying to write an academic paper, a research librarian can walk you through the process of which databases best serve your specialty and how to navigate them.

How are public libraries different?

Public libraries require all these specialties, too, and more. Most public libraries have a mandate to serve the communities in which they exist, and so they offer more resources than many people are probably aware exist. 

Public libraries in places with a large immigrant population will frequently offer free ESL and citizenship classes. Many libraries help connect patrons to social workers, food banks, public health, and legal resources. Many others will let patrons check out things like cooking equipment, musical instruments, board games, and even seeds

Because public librarians are one of the only third spaces left that don’t charge money, librarians find themselves working as de facto social workers for unhoused people — in addition to the literal social worker that many libraries now have on staff. Many libraries train their staff in using Narcan to revive people overdosing on opiates. Some offer hygiene kits and clean clothes for unhoused people. All of that is despite the low salaries public librarians can expect. The average salary at the New York Public Library system is just around $52,000 per year, under the $69,000 estimated to be the cost of living in New York

A library is both a vast, complex technology designed to preserve and organize information and a physical space that exists in order to serve its community in whatever ways it can. The people who work there have to go through enormous amounts of training in order to do both — even if their labor is often invisible to those of us who enjoy its fruits.


Read full article on: vox.com
Will Trump’s win finally break Democrats from the fever they’ve been living in?
Celeb-spotters at the nation’s airports have been disappointed this past week.
6 m
nypost.com
Garrett Crochet to draw in big haul for White Sox
White Sox star lefty Garrett Crochet seems certain to go in trade this winter.
nypost.com
Migrant teens busted in heist of designer duds from NYC Macy’s store: sources
Alan Bello, 18 – and a 17-year-old boy whose name has not been released because he is a minor – swooped up a stash of name-brand clothing during the heist at the Fulton Street and Lawrence Street heist just after 9 p.m., cops said. 
nypost.com
Jets kicking carousel takes wild twist after Harrison Butker’s Chiefs injury
No sooner had the Jets finished singing Spencer Shrader’s praises than he was gone from their roster.
nypost.com
Special education teacher resigns, apologizes after viral video threatening Trump voters sparks backlash
A Connecticut special education teacher has resigned after posting a politically charged video on her social media where she threatened violence against Trump supporters.
foxnews.com
Trump names Dean John Sauer as US solicitor general
President-elect Trump announced Dean John Sauer as his pick for solicitor general of the United States.
foxnews.com
Cameron Diaz, Jamie Foxx team up for ‘Back in Action’ trailer after rumors that his on-set meltdown caused her to quit acting
Diaz and Foxx portray two former CIA agents who give up their life of espionage to build a family.
nypost.com
Martha Stewart’s prison ‘best friend’ claims she ‘blew me off’ after promising $1M payment: report
That's not a good thing.
nypost.com
May 13, 2024 Israel-Hamas war
The Biden administration has assessed that Israel has amassed enough troops on the edge of Rafah to move forward with a full-scale incursion in the coming days, but senior US officials are currently unsure if Israel has made a final decision to carry out such a move.
edition.cnn.com
Meet the doorman, waitress, taxi driver and other NYC commuters who could be forced to pay more than $2K in congestion pricing tolls
It’s going to take a toll. Many working-class New Yorkers aren’t buying Gov. Kathy Hochul’s pitch for her revamped congestion pricing plan. The governor’s office cast the $9 daytime base toll — down from $15 as originally — as “putting commuters first,” but Midtown workers who spoke to The Post Thursday said it would still...
nypost.com
Staten Island bakery customers batter Whoopi Goldberg for dubious claim she wasn’t served over liberal views: ‘Bulls–t’
New Yorkers aren't letting Whoopi Goldberg's sourpuss spoil their favorite spot for sweet treats.
nypost.com
22-year-old reveals the question that saved her life just moments before assisted suicide
Seconds before a young Dutch woman was about to voluntarily end her own life, she changed her mind.
nypost.com
Susan Collins intends to run for reelection in one of GOP’s toughest 2026 Senate races
Moderate Sen. Susan Collins confirmed Thursday that she intends to defend her seat and vie for a sixth term in what is widely expected to be a tough cycle for Senate Republicans.
nypost.com
Exercising like this could give those over 40 extra years of life, research says
Exercising​ like the most active 25% of Americans can help those over 40 add an extra 5 years to their life on average, according to new research.
cbsnews.com
‘Thursday Night Football’ Tonight: Start Time, Where To Watch The Eagles-Commanders ‘TNF’ Game Live Online For Free
The two top teams in the NFC East collide on Thursday night!
nypost.com
Bluesky feels more like old Twitter than X does
In the two years since Elon Musk bought Twitter and turned it into X, the platform has become crowded with deceptive ads and unchecked misinformation. Now, with President-elect Donald Trump heading to the White House and Musk joining his administration, countless people announced their departure from X. Rival social media site Bluesky told Vox that 2.25 million new users have joined in the last week alone. And they’re having a blast. Bluesky looks a lot like the old Twitter you knew and loved. It’s a reverse chronological feed of posts, including images, videos, and links that you can like and repost. Like old Twitter, your feed is not ruled by an algorithm. Meanwhile, Bluesky’s open source, decentralized framework gives you a lot more control over how your feed works than X or even Threads, the X alternative Meta has been pushing onto Instagram users.  In addition to the technical differences, there’s also a different vibe on Bluesky. It’s overflowing with weird memes and digital art thanks to early users who hurried to recapture that fun and serendipitous feeling of the original Twitter. But with an influx of a million users in the last month, Bluesky is growing fast and bracing for some sort of evolution. The people arriving from X seem like they’re having fun so far, too. You can also expect to see a lot less Elon Musk on Bluesky, if only because he doesn’t own the place. If the good vibes continue, there’s a chance that Bluesky could usher in a brighter future for social media, one that gives users more power over their experience. Theoretically, the company’s model could give people a way to hang out on the social web outside of algorithmic feeds stuffed with targeted ads and ruled by trillion-dollar tech companies. For now, at the very least, Bluesky is a welcome breath of fresh air. Why people are fleeing X This isn’t the first time people have flocked to Bluesky. When Twitter accepted Elon Musk’s $44 billion bid to buy Twitter in April 2022, a lot of people freaked out about the possibility of the billionaire changing the platform into a place where trolls and grifters could run free — all in the name of free speech. Those initial anxieties turned out to be correct. After Musk changed the name to X, what used to be Twitter filled up with white supremacists and became overrun with harassment, AI slop, and election misinformation.  This overhaul turned into a huge opportunity for open source, text-based social networks, like Mastodon and Bluesky. Early on, it looked like the decidedly decentralized Mastodon would be the Twitter alternative of choice, but after it saw an initial burst of interest, some people felt like Mastodon was just too confusing. As a federated network, Mastodon let people set up their own servers, which functioned as independent but interconnected communities within the larger network. It’s related to the larger concept of the fediverse, where a single protocol could allow information to be exchanged between all social media platforms. The fediverse, like Mastodon, is very confusing. Bluesky took this idea of a federated network and made it easy to use. It started back in 2019, when Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey announced that Twitter would fund a small team that would build an “open and decentralized standard for social media.” The ambition — which would eventually result in Bluesky — was to work toward an open social media ecosystem, where users could control how content appeared in their feeds and take their data and followers with them when they moved platforms. Bluesky registered as its own public benefit company in February 2022, just a couple of months before Musk offered to buy Twitter. The first Bluesky app launched in beta about a year later, and it looked a heck of a lot like Twitter, down to the blue logo, which would become a butterfly rather than Twitter’s bird. Rather than require you to figure out which server to join, as Mastodon does, Bluesky initially centralized the user experience on one server so users could see one feed, just like on Twitter. Within a few months, some prominent Twitter users, including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Chrissy Teigen, had set up Bluesky accounts. Bluesky has only gotten easier to use since its early days. While the company announced it was federating earlier this year, allowing users to store their data on their own servers, the Bluesky user experience remains very straightforward and Twitter-like, down to the look and feel of the app and website. Honestly, if you’re not paying attention while you’re scrolling your feed, you might think you’re on Twitter circa 2021. That said, the future of Bluesky is supposed to be transformative. While social media platforms like Twitter and Facebook have been plagued by content moderation problems, Bluesky wants to put users and communities in control of those policies. The same goes for what shows up in people’s feeds. Bluesky says that instead of one algorithm to rule all users, it will let developers create all kinds of different algorithms and empower users to choose their own experience on the platform.  “I’m really excited that folks can choose the social media that’s right for them. I’ll say for me, I like small social media where I talk to barely a dozen people,” Rory Mir, associate director of community organizing at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said of Bluesky’s open source architecture. “And then if folks want a really big audience and to really blow up that’s also available.”  This is not how Bluesky works for everyone quite yet. You can just set up an account, follow a bunch of people, and then see their posts. But looking ahead, Bluesky has an optimistic vision for a near future in which social media doesn’t make people so miserable. For new users, Bluesky’s appeal is all about the culture  Timing has proven crucial to Bluesky’s current position as the X alternative du jour — that is, it’s had a significant amount of time to gather momentum leading to what seems to be this tipping point moment.  When the platform launched over 18 months ago, it was as an invite-only space, prompting extremely online types and various public figures to flock to try to get in. (The fact many of those early adopters were journalists didn’t hurt in terms of building hype.) That long period of limited entry served to build FOMO, of course, but it also served to allow a niche group of users time to help shape what the dominant modes of communication, moderation, and platform etiquette would be.  “The health and positivity of Bluesky’s community is very important to us, and we’ve invested heavily in Trust and Safety,” Bluesky spokesperson Emily Liu told Vox in an email. “Last year, Bluesky required invite codes to sign up — not to build hype or exclusivity, but rather so we had time to grow the network responsibly and build our Trust and Safety team.” “​​When Musk first bought Twitter, the first things he did were rolling back moderation on transphobia on the platform and because of that we were the first group to leave Twitter in numbers,” journalist Katelyn Burns told Vox. “Because of that, a large group of funny, talented trans posters were the earliest adopters of Bluesky and were able to forge the platform into what it is today: funny, frequently horny, and with very strong moderation tools. If you like Bluesky’s vibe right now, thank a trans person.” When the platform finally opened to the public in February, this culture was already well-established: Lots of shitposting passed down from the days of Weird Twitter (including various Alf memes that recently led to some confusion); a seemingly inevitable leftist tilt; a subcommunity of NSFW posters; and, perhaps most important, an emphasis on proactively curating your own experience using Bluesky’s robust moderation tools.  The centrality of these tools are arguably the defining trait that allows Bluesky to stand out, especially compared to Twitter, which struggled for its entire existence to properly deal with bad actors on the site (until Musk more or less jettisoned that struggle altogether). Bluesky not only allows you to block and mute various people, words, and tags, it also allows you to hide individual posts on feeds, and allows users to subscribe to curated block lists directly from the platform that blocks users en masse.  “To me the biggest difference between Bluesky and every other social media platform I’ve ever been on is the close relationship between the user base and the (quite small!) team of developers,” journalist and longtime Bluesky shitposter Miles Klee told Vox.  “When people first joined, it was very bare bones, and the devs pursued new features according to what they heard users wanted. Because a lot of people were looking to escape the toxicity of X, that meant they ended up prioritizing safety and accessibility,” Klee said. “On Bluesky, many users feel that they’re building something new together, and that gives them a feeling of ownership, control, community.” “I adore Bluesky,” author and Bluesky user Debbie Ridpath Ohi told Vox. “While so many other new platforms chased user numbers, Bluesky focused on user safety first, and that made a huge difference. I am having fun using social media again.” Bluesky does have one significant drawback. Because the platform is federated, accounts can’t be “locked” away from public view the way they can on X. Still, for many people, that’s likely a feature rather than a bug; after all, X’s easily accessible public interface and ease of searching and surfacing content made it indispensable to many users, especially the many journalists who used it and still continue to use it. These are all features that Bluesky replicates — without, so far, the endless trolls that came with X’s recent era. What it means to leave Twitter For people who have spent many years on Twitter — which launched in 2006, enough time to grow into an impossible teenager — it may be sobering to contemplate actually leaving the platform. This is, after all, the supposed “hellsite” that many of its most active users were all but glued to for everything from live events to hilarious viral incidents that found us all united through the power of a virtually instantaneous, public, and collective social media. Yet for the vast majority of users, the thought of leaving X now probably feels much more plausible and realistic a possibility than it did a year ago, when Vox first declared that X was in its death throes. That’s not unusual; social media platforms very rarely die instantly.  For the most part, platforms don’t suddenly shut down and strand all of their users. That only happens in extreme cases when a platform’s systems collapse, or it’s seized by the government, or the owner kills the site — situations that just don’t really happen to modern social media with complex infrastructure. The inverse scenario, in which all of a platform’s users simply give up and leave en masse overnight, doesn’t happen at all.  Instead, as we’ve seen across various internet platforms, including mass migrations away from LiveJournal, Tumblr, Facebook, and now X, the exodus takes years and involves multiple inciting incidents that push people out of their comfort zone and off the platform in incremental movements. All of these steps shift users slowly and inevitably toward the decision to fully leave a platform — sometimes before they even realize they’ve made it. “Social media is, by definition, social,” Bluesky early adopter Maura Quint told Vox. “People want to be at places where they get something from other users, and where the tools the site provides help them have the experience they’re looking for. If people are miserable in a space, they leave.” “Elon Musk made sure to design his version of Twitter to be an unpleasant, dull place,” Quint continued. “Why choose an awful room run by the worst guy you’ve ever met when there’s an alternative where cool people are hanging out, telling jokes, creating their own goofy lore, and engaging on issues they care about?” As a platform slips into decline, those inciting incidents often become more and more frequent and close together. X has had multiple such inciting incidents this year, including a major ban in Brazil that sent 500,000 users to Bluesky in a single weekend in August, a crucial step in jolting X’s massive international fandom community out of its complacency. Then came the twin announcements in October: first, that X would be allowing third-party AI companies to scrape all user data, and then that blocking a user would no longer prevent them from being able to see your content — a change that arguably nullifies the point of blocking to begin with. Most recently came the US election and Musk’s unabashed weaponization of the platform in service of Trump and the far right.   This latest inciting incident seems to have been the final straw for many users to not only leave X for Bluesky, but begin deleting all of their content from X. (Some extensions and apps allow you to import all of your content over from X to Bluesky first before you delete.) Still, while these actions suggest that momentum has well and truly shifted toward Bluesky, the newer site will likely have growing pains as old users adjust to newcomers and the platform itself grapples with the strain of millions of new users. “Our infrastructure is holding up!” Bluesky’s Liu told Vox. “We’ve prepared our infrastructure to be able to handle this demand, though there are definitely a lot of new users signing up right now.” She added that the site is building a subscription model to aid sustainability, though the site will always be free to use. Despite the rapid growth, users are optimistic about the future. “Every influx of users brings with it more voices, some with good intent and some with bad intent, but Bluesky is responsive to the people who use it in ways that encourage people to stick around,” Quint said. “When you compare that to sites where white nationalists organize mass attacks, spending money lets anyone drown out real discussion, and mass disinformation spreads at the whim of a billionaire, Bluesky is clearly the place to be.”
vox.com
Megan Rapinoe says Democratic Party 'missed the mark on some things' in election loss
Former USWNT player Megan Rapinoe has called on the Democratic Party to take a closer look after she says it "missed the mark on some things" this election cycle.
foxnews.com
Trump nominates former Rep. Doug Collins for secretary of veterans affairs
President-elect added Doug Collins, a former congressman from Georgia, to serve as the secretary of veterans affairs, adding another name to his transition team.
foxnews.com
Autism is soaring— and the ‘medicalization of misbehavior’ bears blame
An autism diagnosis is the path of least resistance when teachers and doctors are confronted with a child's bad behavior — and once parents buy in, they don’t see it as their problem anymore.
nypost.com
NL West rivals at center of Roki Sasaki sweepstakes
The Dodgers are looking into ace free agents Blake Snell, Corbin Burnes and Max Fried, and word is that assuming they land Roki Sasaki, they’ll try for one more big pitcher.
nypost.com
Citigroup probed by feds over ties to sanctioned Russian billionaire Suleiman Kerimov: report
Kerimov was sanctioned by the US in 2014 and 2018 in response to Russia's actions in Syria and Ukraine.
nypost.com
Riley Gaines repeatedly tears into AOC for taking pronouns out of X bio after advocating for trans athletes
Former college swimmer Riley Gaines repeatedly mocked Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., on social media on Thursday after it was revealed that the congresswoman took her pronouns out of her bio.
foxnews.com
Trump picks ex-Georgia congressman Doug Collins for Veterans Affairs secretary
Collins, 58, represented rural northern Georgia for eight years before retiring from Congress.
nypost.com
Woman told House ethics panel that Matt Gaetz had sex with her when she was 17: report 
The woman, who is now in her 20s, was subpoenaed by the ethics panel over the summer and testified that Gaetz had sex with her when she was a minor and still in high school, according to a report.
nypost.com
Man caught on video bragging about Fairfax County killing sentenced to life
Jordan Cochran was convicted of killing 18-year-old Kebbren Leigh-Gaye and blinding another man in a pair of 2022 Fairfax County shootings.
washingtonpost.com
Baby boy found dead in the Bronx died of cocaine intoxication: ME
Cops found the victim, little Ariel Gonzalez of Eagle Avenue, unconscious and unresponsive at about 9:15 p.m. on Aug. 10 after someone called 911 for help, the NYPD said Thursday.
nypost.com
Zach Bryan won’t be charged over Oklahoma arrest amid nasty breakup with Brianna Chickenfry
Zach Bryan has one less trouble.
nypost.com
Trump names his personal criminal defense attorney Todd Blanche as deputy attorney general
President-elect Donald Trump named his personal criminal defense attorney Todd Blanche as deputy attorney general.
foxnews.com
Black and Latino families reach tentative settlement with Palm Springs over razed homes
The Palm Springs City Council will vote tonight on the settlement offer. It comes decades after city employees and the Fire Department destroyed an estimated 197 homes on tribal land downtown.
latimes.com
Hvaldimir unmasked: Identity of ‘Russian spy whale’ finally revealed in BBC documentary
The world-famous beluga whale thought to have been trained as a Russian spy and later found dead under fishy circumstances is now starring in his own documentary — which reveals his true identity. “Secrets of the Spy Whale,” which aired this week on BBC Two, tells the story of Hvaldimir — the friendly, 2,700-pound aquatic...
nypost.com
Trump's Cabinet picks will test Senate independence
President-elect Donald Trump's picks for his Cabinet and other high-profile posts will be a test for the new Senate. Will it approve all his appointees or push back?
latimes.com
The $50,000 dog-cloning business is booming — and has a five-month waitlist
"Cloning is growing as fast as we can effectively manage the growth,’’ said Blake Russell, the president of ViaGen and ViaGen Pets.
nypost.com
Los actos musicales de la Premiere del Latin Grammy se inclinaron hacia la electrónica
Estos son los artistas que actuaron durante la Premiere del Latin Grammy en Miami
latimes.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘A Reason for the Season’ on Hallmark Mystery, In Which A Big City Heiress Finds Purpose And Love In A Small Town Over The Holidays
When a spoiled rich kid's inheritance is on the line, you know something big is about to go down. 
nypost.com
After two stamp hikes, the USPS lost nearly $10 billion in 2024
The U.S. Postal Service's loss widened in fiscal 2024, although revenue rose slightly after two stamp hikes this year.
cbsnews.com
Co-founder of conservative Federalist site, Benjamin Domenech, slams Matt Gaetz as ‘vile’ sexual predator
“The man is absolutely vile. There are pools of vomit with more to offer the earth than this STD-riddled testament to the failure of fallen masculinity."
nypost.com
Gwen Stefani aiming to 'protect' her kids despite releasing scathing song about their dad
Gwen Stefani wants to protect her three sons she shares with ex-husband Gavin Rossdale, but that isn't stopping her from writing brutally honest music.
foxnews.com
NBA Rookie of the Year odds: 76ers’ Jared McCain favored over Hawks’ Zaccharie Risacher
The NBA Rookie of the Year race is wide open. 
1 h
nypost.com
Top MLS analyst Taylor Twellman removed from broadcast after physical altercation with producer
The former MLS star was on the air for the second game of the series but was pulled for the deciding game last weekend.
1 h
nypost.com
Tilda Swinton hints at retirement, says ‘Room Next Door’ might be the ‘last film I make’
"I feel The Room Next Door is the last film I make. Let’s see if anything else happens," said Tilda Swinton.
1 h
nypost.com
Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie’s bitter winery war heads to trial — but the case could rage through 2026
This month, a Los Angeles Superior Court judge shot down Jolie's attempts to have the case tossed, paving the way for the case to go ahead.
1 h
nypost.com
Craig Melvin held back tears, vowed to represent ‘Today’ show ‘like Hoda has,’ after being named as Kotb’s replacement at NBC
Staffers chanted, "Craig, Craig, Craig!" at a staff meeting when Savannah Guthrie welcomed them to the "Craig era!"
1 h
nypost.com
Putin cuts payouts for wounded Russian soldiers as casualty counts surge
Russian dictator Vladimir Putin is slashing payments to Russian soldiers wounded in Ukraine in the face of rising casualties and mushrooming war costs.
1 h
nypost.com
Protests erupt in Paris over pro-Israel gala organized by far-right figures
The event, intended to raise funds for the Israeli military, included Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich among its invited guests.
1 h
latimes.com
After Trump's White House visit, Charlamagne asks how Biden went from 'threat to democracy' to 'welcome back!'
Podcaster Charlamagne Tha God spoke once again about President Biden's abrupt change in rhetoric regarding President-elect Trump after the election.
1 h
foxnews.com
The Christian Bale Batmobile is being built for home use — but you need Bruce Wayne money to own it
Holy sticker shock, Batman!
1 h
nypost.com
Trump announces pick to replace federal prosecutor targeting Mayor Adams
President-elect Donald Trump revealed plans Thursday to replace the prosecutor targeting Mayor Adams, announcing he will tap his former Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Jay Clayton as the attorney for the Southern District of New York. Jay Clayton That post is currently held by Damian Williams, who has gone after Adams and a number of...
1 h
nypost.com
How Small Businesses Can Help Tackle Climate Change
One way to get past some of the headwinds is to focus on tackling climate change from the ground up.
1 h
time.com