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Ta-Nehisi Coates on complexity, clarity, and truth

Ta-Nehisi Coates wearing a suit and a collared shirt with no tie smiles while holding a microphone.
Author Ta-Nehisi Coates during the Alight Align Arise: Advancing the Movement for Repair conference on June 7, 2023, in Atlanta, Georgia. | Carol Lee Rose/Getty Images for Decolonizing Wealth Project

I’ve always believed that the world is complicated and that our desire for simplicity is understandable but dangerous. 

But when does the impulse to embrace ambiguity become its own pathology? Sure, the world is complex, but sometimes we have to pass judgment. We have to be willing to say that something is true and something is false, that something is right and something is wrong.

So how do we know when things really are that clear? And how do we avoid the impulse to lie to ourselves when we know they’re not?

Ta-Nehisi Coates is an author, essayist, and one of our most celebrated living writers. He’s just published a new book called The Message that has stirred up quite a bit of controversy because the longest essay in it is about his trip to Palestine.

If you know almost nothing about the conflict between Israel and Palestine, the one thing you’d probably be comfortable saying is that it’s complicated. This is an assertion Coates challenges directly. For him, the moral arithmetic is simple and Israel’s treatment of the Palestinian population is fundamentally wrong.

So I invited Coates on The Gray Area to explore where he’s coming from and why he felt it was important to write this book. But the point wasn’t to have a debate or an argument. I invited Coates because I think he’s smart and sincere and doesn’t write anything without seriously thinking about it. This conversation is really about the role of the writer and the intellectual and what it means to describe the world with moral clarity.

As always, there’s much more in the full podcast, so listen and follow The Gray Area on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Pandora, or wherever you find podcasts. New episodes drop every Monday.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Sean Illing

What’s been the most surprising thing to you about the reaction to this book so far? 

Ta-Nehisi Coates

I’m surprised at the surprise. So, the CBS interview was the first live interview. I was not surprised by the aggression, tenacity, whatever you want to call it. Or, I should say, I knew that was going to happen eventually. I didn’t know it was going to happen there. So I was surprised in the sense that, “Oh, it’s right now.” And it took me a minute to catch up with it and realize that it’s actually happening right now, but this is what it is. 

I’m surprised that people are like, “I can’t believe that happened.” I understand I am going to go into some arenas where you don’t usually say the state of Israel is practicing apartheid. That’s just not a thing that you usually hear people saying in places like that, and so I am going to say that. And what’s going to come out of that, I have no idea, but I hope people understand that this is what’s happening.

Sean Illing

You made a deliberate choice to write about Palestine, which, as you know, is an impossibly charged issue. Why wade into these waters? Why this conflict? Why now?

Ta-Nehisi Coates

I don’t think it’s impossibly charged. This is so clear. It was so clear. And when I saw that — and maybe this is naive, maybe you’re right, maybe it is impossibly charged — but I was just like, “Oh, this is easy.” Not easy like easy to do, easy to write, but the math is clear. You know what I mean? 

The word I used at the time when I saw it was Jim Crow, because it was so obviously Jim Crow. You tell me you got one set of roads for one group of people, another set of roads for another group of people, and the roads you have for the other group of people are impossibly longer. They take more to get from point A to point B. Those roads have checkpoints, and the checkpoints sometimes materialize out of nowhere. This is all fact. 

Whatever you think about it, maybe you think that’s the way it should be, but this is what it is. This is actually what it is. You’re telling me that one group of people has constant access to running water, and the other group of people don’t know when their water might be cut off? 

You’re telling me that that other group of people, depending on where they live, if they’re in a particular area on the West Bank, it might be illegal for them even to collect rainwater? You’re telling me one group of people has access to a civil system of criminal justice, so that when they get arrested, they know their rights, they’re told why they’re arrested, lawyer, etc. You’re telling me the other group has no access to that? That they can be arrested, that no one needs to tell them why they’re being arrested? No one needs to tell their families that if they are killed, you don’t even have to return their bodies? What is that?

Sean Illing

So when you compare Palestine to the Jim Crow South, my reaction is that these are both moral obscenities, but they’re different. And I do think it’s complicated —

Ta-Nehisi Coates

Tell me why you think it’s complicated.

Sean Illing

I think it matters that many Palestinians still support the attacks on October 7. I think it matters that Black people in the Jim Crow South wanted to be treated as equal citizens in a fully democratic America. 

I don’t think it’s generally true that Palestinians want equal rights in a fully democratic Israel. And if they had that they might vote to end its existence as a Jewish State. And you know what? If I was a Palestinian who was pulling my friends and my family out of the fucking rubble, I’d probably vote the same way. I understand that. 

Personally, I hate the idea of a state based entirely on religious or ethnic identity. But I’m not Jewish and I don’t live in Israel and I understand why the people who do live there would have these concerns. And I also think it matters that Jews are indigenous to that land and have nowhere else to go. I just think that complicates the picture in other ways.

Ta-Nehisi Coates

I am of the mind that discrimination on the basis of race, ethnicity, religion is never acceptable. There is nothing in this world that will make separate and unequal okay, and there’s nothing — and I’ll use this word — that makes apartheid okay. That’s not complex for me. It’s like the death penalty is not really complex for me, because you cannot guarantee to me that the state will not execute an innocent person. You just can’t. So I’m against it, period. There aren’t any exceptions to that. 

Sean Illing

I haven’t been to Palestine but I know it’s bad and I know what you saw there is wrong. And I don’t believe there is any such thing as a moral occupation, because whatever the reasons for it, you cannot occupy a people without visiting cruelties upon them. 

But for me, the main question isn’t necessarily the badness of the situation, which is incontestable. It’s how the hell do we end this? And all these complications that I was mentioning earlier, that’s the stuff that has to be accounted for if there’s any hope of a way forward. 

Ta-Nehisi Coates

We are sitting here asking ourselves why we don’t have a workable solution, while we exclude one of the two significant parties, and I guess my politics would say the most significant party, because that’s just where I come from in terms of the oppressed. 

How can you decide what is going to be the solution when every night when I watch reports from the region, I can name only one person who is of Palestinian heritage, who I regularly see articulate a solution or an idea? How do we get to a solution when our journals, our newspapers, our literature that dominate the conversation is not just devoid of Palestinian perspectives, but it’s devoid of Palestinians themselves? 

We are not having a conversation about solutions because we’ve basically prevented a whole group of people from entering into the frame. And so it’s like we’re putting the cart before the horse. We’re frustrated that we don’t have a solution, but we’re not actually talking to somebody. 

Sean Illing

I agree that our moral imagination needs to extend in both directions as far as possible. I understand writing this as a kind of corrective, feeling like there was a lack of empathy for the Palestinian experience because their story hasn’t been told enough, hasn’t been represented enough. I can understand that, I really can. And if I’m being honest, I think if I went there and saw the suffering firsthand, all of this would feel a whole lot less abstract to me and it would hit differently. And I don’t know how that would change how I think about it —

Ta-Nehisi Coates

So when are you going to go, Sean?

Sean Illing

It’s a fair question, and the only honest answer is I don’t know.

Ta-Nehisi Coates

You should go. I know it’s hard. And look, I’m putting you on the spot, but it was extremely hard. First of all, you are a journalist. That’s the first thing. That’s my first case for you going. The second case is this is being done in your name. And we’re going to pay for it. We’re going to pay for it one way or the other. We will pay for this. We will pay for this. 

God, now I think it’s your responsibility to go. I’m sorry, but I really do believe that. I really do believe that because you are someone who is obviously curious, obviously wants to know things. And the reason why I’m pushing you is because that vague sense of injustice is exactly what I had. That is exactly how I felt, man.

Sean Illing

But I’ll push you a little on that because it runs in both directions. If I went to Israel and toured the villages that were plundered on October 7, I’d feel this same kind of indignation and rage.

Ta-Nehisi Coates

You should, though. You should see that, too. I don’t think those feelings are contrary.

Sean Illing

No, I don’t mean to say they’re contrary. I’m just saying I would still be left feeling the sense of hopelessness at the tragedy of it all.

Ta-Nehisi Coates

I think you would know more, though. I think you would know more. You sound like me. This is what I thought. Even on the eve of the trip, I was like, “Boy, this is going to be really complicated.” I thought the morality of it would be complicated. And there’s a reason why I began that chapter in [World Holocaust Remembrance Center] Yad Vashem, and it is because the fact of existential violence and industrial genocide brought to the Jewish people of this world is a very, very real thing. 

And it’s like, how do you confront that and reconcile that with Israel? Because you want that group of people to be okay. You feel like maybe that group of people is entitled to certain things. And I mean that in the best kind of way. They’re entitled to a kind of safety, given what happened to them. You feel deep, deep sympathy. And so before I went, I was like, “Wow, this is going to be morally dicey.”

I think you should go. I’m not even saying you’re going to agree with me. I’m not saying you’re going to end up where I ended up, but I think you should go.

Sean Illing

Do you think both sides of this conflict can tell a story about it that makes them right and the other side wrong? Because there are so many victims and perpetrators on both sides, because the cycle of violence and retaliation stretches back so far.

Ta-Nehisi Coates

I don’t think it stretches back that far. It’s 1948. It’s not even 100 years. I mean, I interviewed people that were very much alive in 1948, so I don’t even think it’s back that far. I think that when we say things like that, no disrespect, but I think we say things like that to make it harder than it actually is. It’s a lifetime that is not even over yet. And what I would say is my opposition to apartheid, to segregation, to oppression, does not emanate from a belief in the hypermorality of the oppressed or even the morality of the oppressed.

The civil rights movement kind of fooled us with this because it was kind of a morality play and it was a very successful strategy. But whether Martin Luther King was nonviolent or not, segregation was wrong. Even when Malcolm X was yelling “by any means necessary,” segregation was still wrong. It was still wrong. So for me, it’s not even a matter of sides being right. The system that governs both sides is wrong.

Sean Illing

I remember once hearing you talk about the vulgarities of punditry. Pundits are not in the truth-seeking business. Pundits make pronouncements. That’s the whole stupid, mindless game. But you’re not like that. You have never been like that. 

One reason I retreated into podcasting is that I don’t feel that pressure to pronounce in that way, and even doing it in a serious way for me felt futile. But I don’t have your stature and I don’t have your reach, so it’s different for you, I imagine. Do you think you can make a real difference here? Or is that not even part of the calculus? 

Ta-Nehisi Coates

I needed to write what I saw. This is uncomfortable to say, but I think this moment matters. I was talking to a good friend yesterday, a colleague, a very intelligent and sharp young writer. And we were actually sitting around a table. It was a Muslim woman and another writer there, and we were all in sympathy in terms of our politics. And she’s making the point that this thing that’s happening right now, it actually matters, it’s making a difference. And I was saying, I want out. 

I’m doing this book tour and then I’m out of here, man. I’m going back to my French studies. I’m out. And I’m not out because I’m scared to say what I want to say. I’m not out because of the heat. I am out because it just feels unnatural. And part of it feels unnatural because I’m not Palestinian, but it also feels contrary to writing, which is always seeking, always trying to learn, always trying to figure it out, always asking questions.

So when you’re making these pronouncements, as I admit I am now, you wonder, am I actually betraying the craft? Should I have just written a book, put it out, and be done with it? There’s always that voice in the back of your mind. But when I was over there, man, what they said to me over and over again was, “Tell them what you saw.”

Sean Illing

I come on this show every week and I praise the virtues of doubt and uncertainty and I believe in that. But refusing to describe things simply and clearly can become a kind of moral and intellectual crime. You’re right about that. And I still think sometimes things really are complicated and not so neat and maybe the challenge of being a writer and or just a human being is being honest and wise enough to know the difference. But it is hard sometimes, and I do think this situation is complicated, and it’s also true that sometimes withholding moral judgment can be its own kind of cowardice. 

Ta-Nehisi Coates

Yeah. And again, I just want to take it back. When that day comes, when the Palestinians are back in the frame, when they’re invited to tell their own stories, when they’re invited to take their place at the table, I have no doubt that what will come out of that will be quite complicated. 

South Africa’s complicated. They defeated apartheid, but did they change the basic economic arrangements? My understanding is not as much as a lot of people would’ve wished. Better than apartheid, but it’s not done. It is indeed quite complicated. The victory is indeed quite complicated, but the morality of apartheid is not.

What is hard for me is I’ve been on a couple of shows now where I’ve had some debate about this with people, and they never challenge the fact of what’s going on. So when I say half the population is enshrined at the highest level of citizenship and everyone else is something less, they don’t say, “Ta-Nehisi, that’s not true.” But perhaps this is just where I sit. It’s like when your parents grew up in Jim Crow, when they were born in the Jim Crow, that is an immediate no-go. I feel like I don’t know what comes after this, but that is wrong. That’s wrong. You know what I mean? What is after that might be quite complicated and quite hard, but that is not the answer at all. 

I’m sitting in a cave in the South Hebron Hills [in the West Bank] with a group of people, and they’re telling me about their fears of being evicted out of a cave, man. When I look at — “Hey, that’s complicated” — when I know full well it’s not. What to do about it is probably complicated. But you begin from the basis that this is wrong and the very difficult work of figuring it out can proceed after that.

Listen to the rest of the conversation and be sure to follow The Gray Area on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Pandora, or wherever you listen to podcasts.


Read full article on: vox.com
Trump Breaks Down Onstage
Is Donald Trump well enough to serve as president?The question is not temperamental or philosophical fitness—he’s made clear long ago that the answer to both is no—but something more fundamental.The election is in three weeks and Pennsylvania is a must-win state for both candidates, but during a rally in Montgomery County, northwest of Philadelphia, last night, Trump got bored with the event, billed as a town hall, and just played music for almost 40 minutes, scowling, smirking, and swaying onstage. Trump is no stranger to surreal moments, yet this was still one of the oddest of his political career.“You’re the one who fights for them,” gushed Kristi Noem, the South Dakota governor and animal-abuse enthusiast, who was supposed to be moderating the event. But it soon became clear that Trump wasn’t in a fighting mode. 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Her reaction is self-interested, but she’s right that he really may not be okay. A presidential race is exhausting for even a young and vigorous person, which Trump, 78, is not. He has campaigned far less this time around than he did in his past two runs. In the last few weeks, as the election has neared, he has ramped up his time on the trail, and the wear is showing. His rallies have been so scattershot and rambling that even major outlets that long shied away from questions about Trump’s fitness have had no choice but to address them. In the wee hours of the morning yesterday, he used Truth Social to demand that Harris take a cognitive test. He’s lacing into his own donors at private events. He has been blocked from his usual outlet of playing golf because of security concerns after two assassination attempts.[David A. 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Last night, he might have been sending a pointed message to himself, with the help of an Andrea Bocelli and Sarah Brightman hit: “It’s time to say goodbye.”
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The Transparent Cruelties of Diddy’s Entertainment Machine
For decades, the hip-hop mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs has been one of the most influential men in the music industry. Last November, the singer Cassie Ventura, Combs’s former partner, filed a staggering 35-page lawsuit accusing the rapper of raping, drugging, and physically abusing her over the course of a decade. He and Ventura settled the suit out of court just one day later, with Combs not admitting to any wrongdoing. Six months later, after CNN published a graphic hotel-surveillance video that shows Combs assaulting Ventura in 2016, he claimed “full responsibility.”In the weeks after Ventura’s accusations came out, several other women filed lawsuits accusing Combs of sexual assault, which he categorically denied. And in September, the singer Dawn Richard, a former member of two musical groups started by Combs, filed a 55-page lawsuit accusing him of sexually assaulting her, depriving her and her fellow Danity Kane bandmates of basic needs while requiring them to remain under his watch, and routinely refusing to pay his artists wages or royalties. (In a statement responding to the lawsuit, one of Combs’s lawyers said Richard had “manufactured a series of false claims all in the hopes of trying to get a payday.”) Last month, Combs was indicted and arrested on federal charges that include sex trafficking, forced labor, kidnapping, and racketeering. Combs, who pleaded not guilty to all the charges, is now detained in New York City after being denied bail twice.Central to Richard’s lawsuit is Combs’s alleged behavior during Making the Band, the competition series that he produced and hosted from 2002 to 2009. The MTV series attracted millions of viewers during its run; Richard’s lawsuit references numerous incidents that were filmed for the show, and included in the final product. Along with Ventura’s allegations, the suit prompts a broader reassessment of Combs’s cultural power—and pushes audiences to reconsider the hostile behavior that he often willingly broadcast to the public.Though the worst of Richard’s allegations about Combs’s behavior were not depicted on Making the Band, the series did help lay the groundwork for many of the invasive, burdensome expectations of the modern music industry. Today’s young artists readily anticipate that their fans—and, more pressing, their record labels—want them to entertain the masses with their lives, not just their music. However benign a viral TikTok trend may seem now, Making the Band was an early experiment in training audiences to enjoy watching just how much control record labels wield over vulnerable musicians. The series laundered Combs’s open hostility toward a group of young women he was responsible for as an eccentric style of artist management—and his label, Bad Boy Records, profited from viewers’ interest in his abrasive displays of authority.By 2005, when Richard joined Making the Band 3, Combs had already formed (and disbanded) a coed group that featured in an earlier iteration of the show. During the first run, Combs subjected contestants to outlandish, demoralizing tasks that had nothing to do with making music. One, which was later parodied in a famous Chappelle’s Show skit, required the artists to walk more than five miles to fetch him cheesecake from a Brooklyn restaurant. “Honestly, my feet felt broken and my knees felt like all the cartilage was gone,” one former band member told Essence in 2017. When they returned to the Midtown Manhattan studio to find that Combs had left, she said, “I wanted to cry.”With Making the Band 3, Combs attempted, for the first time on the show, to create an all-female group—and his ruthless approach to artist development seemed to take a darker turn. Richard’s suit contends that the show’s environment enabled Combs to maintain alarming control over the young women, and that a TV-friendly version of his cruelty was projected to millions of viewers. One accusation is that Combs routinely made “disparaging gender-based remarks such as calling them ‘fat,’ ‘ugly,’ ‘bitches,’ and ‘hoes’” throughout filming and after the group was formed. Revisiting the show and how Combs promoted it at the time, I’m struck by just how often Combs tossed around similar language. Even when he used less objectionable words, he nonetheless conveyed the message that the women were not his equals. “I don’t think no human being has been able to just figure out the woman,” he told the Associated Press ahead of a season premiere, adding that he anticipated great TV because the female competitors would all need to deal with “having their monthly cycle coming together, and emotions and moodiness and competitiveness.”[Read: The cruel social experiment of reality tv]Making the Band 3 spent an inordinate amount of time focusing on the young women’s bodies, and how Combs saw them. He treated the contestants’ physical presentation as alternately a disqualifying embarrassment, a reflection of his own star-making prowess, or an invitation to leer. The very first time Richard appears on-screen, during a group audition, Combs points to her as though he’s eyeing a romantic interest. “With the jeans on—she’s exceptional,” he says. After every stage of the selection process for the girl group, which ended up being called Danity Kane, Combs attempted to police how the women looked. For example, once the contestants made it past auditions and into a smaller cohort, the remaining contenders were constantly corralled into the gym, having food taken away from them, and belittled for not having six-pack abs. (It’s notable that not even five minutes into the first episode, one young woman swears, “I’ll work out ’til I kill myself.”)Even after the final group was chosen, Richard alleges, Combs continued to exert authority over the musicians’ bodies. When she or “her Danity Kane bandmates requested meals or rest, Mr. Combs refused and chastised them with derogatory comments like ‘you bitches don’t want this’ or ‘y’all are not hungry enough’ or ‘I’m paying you bitches to work,’” the lawsuit claims. Although some of his belittling comments made it onto the air, Combs’s casual delivery belied the apparent severity of his off-camera control over the women’s basic needs: Richard alleges that Combs often sent his associates to wake the Danity Kane members in the middle of the night so that he could watch them rehearse; the studio sessions sometimes went on for three to four days, during which the singers felt forced to choose between eating and sleeping.Part of why Combs’s televised mistreatment of Making the Band contestants didn’t draw much mainstream pushback at the time is that he was hardly alone in his valorization of hard work—and he was adept at reframing workplace abuse through the language of artistic self-sacrifice, often by referencing his own career. “It’s a blessing to be in the recording industry … but there’s a lot of misconceptions,” he says at one point. “A lot of times when people get into this, they don’t realize how hard they’re gonna have to work to achieve the goal.” As Combs’s business empire expanded in the new millennium, he presented himself as the bootstraps exemplar—a poor Black boy from Harlem who’d hustled his way into becoming a multimillionaire. (In a statement issued after his arrest, Combs’s lawyers leaned on some of these tropes, defending their client as “a music icon, self-made entrepreneur, loving family man and proven philanthropist who has spent the last 30 years building an empire, adoring his children and working to uplift the Black community.”)On Making the Band 3, Combs sometimes praised the contestants’ vocal abilities—but more often, he reminded them that any natural artistic inclination mattered far less than a Sisyphean work ethic. By creating a false dichotomy between talent and dedication, Combs justified the show’s grueling demands of contestants, his role as their kingmaker, and his explosive anger when the women failed to meet his expectations. Combs appeared to relish the opportunity to degrade the women, often criticizing them in front of one another and then pausing to let the harsh words sink in for the whole group. “Some of you are gon’ be broken on your own; some of you are gon’ step up to a challenge and shine,” he warned them after showing up unannounced in their dormlike living quarters one night.[Read: What did hip-hop do to women’s minds?]Making the Band purportedly offered the young women a clear, albeit grueling, path to stardom. But in practice, the show seemed to prioritize providing Combs access to them: In his host commentary, Combs gleefully remarked on the fact that he had “19 girls under one roof!” In hindsight, his blithe delivery accentuated his seeming confidence that neither MTV executives nor the show’s audience would raise significant concerns about his televised mistreatment of the young musicians. During the show’s run, Combs’s on-screen cruelty was all but unremarkable: Hip-hop, and the music industry more broadly, has a long history of devaluing women as expendable sex objects. Women who raise objections to alleged abusive conditions have often been met with indifference, skepticism, or outright hostility, including being shut out from work. When Combs equated the breaches of his artists’ autonomy with the pressures of making it in music, he played directly into this familiar dynamic.Competition shows such as Making the Band also tapped into a much more widespread belief that fame—or the chance to attain it—justifies any pains that may be suffered as a result. When the series premiered, it joined a growing number of reality-TV programs that drew viewers in by glamorizing the benevolent tyrant chosen to host—and by disguising the soul-crushing takedowns they regularly meted out to contestants under the guise of constructive criticism. Richard’s suit alleges that Combs’s behavior created “an atmosphere of uncertainty and intimidation.” That assessment could have been applied to other reality-TV judges, on shows such as America’s Next Top Model, The Apprentice, The Biggest Loser—and there’s no shortage of clips in which a host excoriates a young participant over something trivial.For viewers who consumed a relentless stream of media that surveilled and antagonized celebrities, perhaps the judges’ treatment of the artistic hopefuls seemed to be part of life in the public eye. Some of these audience attitudes persist today, despite the evidence of how damaging such environments can be for contestants: Former cast members from several modern reality series have filed lawsuits alleging that the production staff on their respective shows subjected them to inhumane working conditions, depriving them of sleep, food, and other basic needs to make them more vulnerable to camera-friendly conflict. Now, 15 years after Making the Band ended, it’s clear how the series—and Combs’s star power—was key to ushering in an era of entertainment predicated on humiliating young people as they pursued their artistic ambitions.Combs’s apparent disdain for the aspiring musicians on his show still pervades multiple spheres of culture, including newer platforms. Audiences who tune in to vocal-competition series may not run major record labels, but they have their own kind of power now: Because algorithm-driven social-media feeds function as de facto audition stages for entertainment-industry hopefuls, individual listeners can change the trajectory of an artist’s career just by proselytizing online. And dedicated fans are not the only ones wielding these newer tools. Stirring up negative sentiment about an artist, especially through baseless mockery, has become its own pastime, rewarded by the thrill of a negative feedback loop. And on modern reality-TV shows, participants often find themselves navigating destructive conditions optimized to extract drama for viewers’ amusement. If there’s anything that Making the Band proves now, it’s that suffering is easy to ignore when an entire industry treats it like a joke.
theatlantic.com
New panda pair finally arrive in DC, months after US returned Washington icons to China
Eleven months after the zoo sent its three wildly popular pandas — Mei Xiang, Tian Tian and their cub Xiao Qi Ji — back to China, a new pair of bears arrived in the United States on Tuesday.
nypost.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Anatomy Of Lies’ On Peacock, A Docuseries About The Elaborate Lies Told By ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Writer Elisabeth Finch
The three-part docuseries is based on a 2022 Vanity Fair article by Evgenia Peretz.
nypost.com
Fat Joe admits to using Ozempic after 200-pound weight loss
The “Flow Joe” rapper made the admission after revealing in a July 2023 interview that he once weighed in at 470 pounds.
nypost.com
I Haven’t Dated in Years. Now My 11 Year Old Son Has a Strange Idea About My New Boyfriend.
My usual strategy here has backfired.
slate.com
Iran terror proxies amass on Israel’s borders in 'Ring of Fire’
Iran has developed the so called "Ring of Fire" around Israel to further expand its influence throughout the region. Experts note that violent terror groups sit across the Jewish state's borders.
foxnews.com
Fighting Florida’s Invasive Python Problem One Step at a Time
How shoe brand P448 became an unlikely ally in the battle to tackle invasive species.
time.com
Dem fundraiser ActBlue stole GOP strategist’s identity to make donations: lawsuit
Mark Block, former chief of staff to Republican 2012 presidential candidate Herman Cain, says that a total of $884.38 was given in his name and without his knowledge between May and October.
nypost.com
Tamra Judge, 57, discovers she’s on the autism spectrum during first therapy session
The "Real Housewives of Orange County" star is predicting a "rough few months" as she undergoes "a lot of huge changes" in her life.
nypost.com
Vanessa Williams, Pamella Roland detail ‘tough challenge’ of creating ‘The Devil Wears Prada’ musical wardrobe in just 2 months
The designer and the "Ugly Betty" actress worked together to fashion Miranda Priestly, the Anna Wintour-esque editor in chief of Runway magazine, for the stage.
nypost.com
Detroit pastor 'offended' by Kamala Harris' strategy to woo Black male voters: 'We're not political infants'
Detroit Pastor Lorenzo Sewell slammed Vice President Kamala Harris for playing into 'identity politics' as she struggles to shore up support with Black male voters ahead of Election Day.
foxnews.com
Yankees shout out Taylor Swift after Juan Soto home run in Game 1 of ALCS: ‘Feelin’ 22′
The Yankees are in their Taylor Swift era.
nypost.com
'Ruining our car industry': Biden-Harris EV regs prove flashpoint in Michigan Senate debate
Republican former Rep. Mike Rogers and Democratic Rep. Elissa Slotkin argued over EV mandates, abortion, immigration, and gun control during a tense debate in Michigan.
foxnews.com
Mets-Dodgers NLCS Citi Field ticket prices are dropping fast
The Amazins are back in the Flushing groove.
nypost.com
40% of Americans pretend to be travel influencers on vacation, new survey says
Two in five Americans pretend to be influencers on vacation (39%), according to new research. A survey of 2,000 social media users found that these respondents would take vlog-style videos, post more than when not on vacation and caption their posts creatively. Most respondents see using social media when traveling as a good thing (58%)...
nypost.com
Tesla’s walking, talking Optimus robots were partly controlled by humans: report
In one video posted to X, a bartending bot at the event told a guest: “Today, I’m assisted by a human. I’m not yet fully autonomous.”
nypost.com
Paul George suffers injury scare in 76ers preseason game
The NBA regular season hasn't even begun and the Philadelphia 76ers are already dealing with major injury concerns.
nypost.com
Teacher who left claw marks on a teen’s back after sex as other students were ‘lookouts’ gets sweetheart sentence
A former Missouri math teacher who pleaded guilty to having sex with a 16-year-old student while other students served as her "lookouts" may only spend about three months behind bars.
nypost.com
Why You Should Eat a Dense Bean Salad Today
We asked health experts what they like about the trendy salads—and how to make a really good one.
time.com
Nicole Kidman and Salma Hayek’s awkward Paris Fashion Week moment explained after ‘silly’ backlash
In a viral clip, the "Perfect Couple" actress appears to push Hayek's hand away while posing for photos with Katy Perry.
nypost.com
The Guardian deletes review of Oct. 7 doc after backlash for complaining film depicts Hamas too negatively
UK Outlet "The Guardian" deleted its review of a Oct. 7 documentary following backlash it earned for stating the film was too harsh on Hamas and Palestinians.
foxnews.com
Georgia judge rules certification of election results is 'mandatory'
With just weeks to go until the presidential election, a Georgia judge has ruled that certification of election results by county officials in the state is "mandatory."
abcnews.go.com
Harris and Trump tied in battleground Michigan, Senate race on razor's edge: AARP poll
A new AARP poll finds that Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are tied in the 2024 battleground state of Michigan, with voters split along generational and gender lines.
foxnews.com
One cop dead, four other people wounded in suspected terrorist attack in Israel
The shootings occurred on Highway 4 near Yavne, with the assailant neutralized by an armed citizen.
nypost.com
Giant pandas have returned to D.C. Meet Bao Li and Qing Bao.
The National Zoo’s two new giant panda, who arrived Tuesday after an 8,000-mile flight from China, will now settle into their new home before going on display.
washingtonpost.com
Guy Gansert Becomes Second ‘Golden Bachelorette’ Contestant To Have Order Of Protection Filed Against Him 
Gansert has addressed the situation, calling it "a very low point in my life."
nypost.com
Maryland grandfather spreads joy with daily "bad dad jokes" on his front yard sign
For the past 1,640 days, Maryland grandfather Tom Schruben has written a "bad dad joke" on a sign in his front yard. He started this tradition during the pandemic to lift his spirits and it has become a community favorite.
cbsnews.com
Trump says 'I don't care when you vote' in new House GOP ad urging voters to turn out early
House Republicans' campaign arm is out with a new digital advertisement reminding voters that the election is 21 days away.
foxnews.com
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce pack on the PDA at Yankees vs. Guardians game
Travis Kelce took Taylor Swift out to a different kind of ball game! The couple was spotted keeping a low-profile at Game 1 of the American League Championship Series. Despite their attempt to blend in, people couldn’t help but notice their PDA as they were spotted being affectionate with kisses and hand holding. Watch the...
nypost.com
‘Morning Joe’ Rips GOP Gov. Glenn Youngkin for Downplaying Trump’s ‘Fascist’ Threat
MSNBCMSNBC host Joe Scarborough slammed Virginia’s Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin Tuesday for attempting to downplay Donald Trump’s comments about using the military against his political opponents.The former president spoke in a Fox News interview Sunday about potentially using the National Guard or the military to deal with “the enemy from within”—a group which Trump characterized as “sick people, radical left lunatics”—when asked about his expectations for Election Day. In an interview with CNN the day after, Youngkin insisted Trump wasn’t really saying what he appeared to be saying. CNN’s Jake Tapper pointed out that Trump later specifically named Adam Schiff as one of the “lunatics”—as a congressman, Schiff led the first impeachment trial of Trump. Tapper became visibly frustrated as Youngkin continued to claim Trump was not talking about his political enemies, accusing Tapper of “misinterpreting and misrepresenting” the Republican nominee’s words.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Get 3 months of Audible for just $3 with this limited time deal
Three books for $3? You can't beat this deal.
nypost.com
Goldman Sachs profits surge as dealmaking rebounds on Wall Street
Goldman Sachs reported a 45% surge in quarterly profits on Tuesday, boosted by a rebound in dealmaking that beat analysts' expectations.
nypost.com
Democrats in Congress are planning for the next Jan. 6
Democrats on a low-profile House committee have been meeting and designing a plan against any attempt to interfere with the Electoral College certification on Jan. 6, 2025​.
cbsnews.com
Man Rescued Near Pacific Waters After 67 Days Lost at Sea
Xinhua News Agency/GettyA man whose boat had been missing for more than two months has miraculously been found alive, though the ordeal sadly claimed the life of two of his relatives.Authorities in the Far East region of the Russian Federation announced on Tuesday that they had located a catamaran-style sailing boat in the Sea of Okhotsk, a roughly 610,000-square-mile expanse off Russia’s easternmost coast and north of Japan.Inside officials discovered a 46-year-old man, identified by Russian state media as Mikhail Pichugin, and two bodies, according to CNN. The waters in which the vessel was found are reportedly considered the coldest in East Asia.Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
‘Live’: Kelly Ripa Calls Out “Habitually Irritable” Mark Consuelos On “National Grouch Day”
"You are the grouchiest!"
nypost.com
Before His Netflix Hit, Tim Robinson Made One of the Best Sitcoms of the Decade
Tim Robinson and Sam Richardson’s brilliant show Detroiters feels ripe for a rediscovery.
slate.com
Trump Leans On Creative Bookkeeping to Keep Up in Cash Race
Donald J. Trump’s official campaign committee has a payroll of fewer than a dozen and has found ways for another account to pick up the tab for his rallies.
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nytimes.com
Jets to acquire Davante Adams in blockbuster trade with Raiders: reports
The New York Jets are set to acquire wide receiver Davante Adams in a blockbuster trade with the Las Vegas Raiders, according to multiple reports on Tuesday.
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foxnews.com
Russian whale watcher rescued after 67 days at sea on inflatable boat, found with brother and nephew’s corpses
" It truly is a miracle," one expert said.
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nypost.com
Alex Wolff Tells Drew Barrymore He Got “Hazed” By A Fraternity To Prepare For His New Movie: “It Was Kind Of A Culture Shock”
Wolff's new movie, The Line, does a deep-dive into the toxic hazing culture at fraternities.
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nypost.com