This week, I released an audio essay on Donald Trump. And in a way, it was about Donald Trump’s mind and the peculiar ways in which it works, the degree to which he moves through the world without inhibition and the ways in which that is potentially worsening as he …
Read More »Halloween’s Mutation: From Humble Holiday to Retail Monstrosity
On Nov. 1, 1876, The New York Times declared Halloween “departed,” destined for the grave. In 2024, consumers are expected to spend $11.6 billion celebrating the holiday, up from $3.3 billion in 2005. Perhaps it is time to eat some crow. Halloween, steeped in tradition, has transformed from a pagan …
Read More »Hard News and Honky-Tonks: How to Cover the American South
Times Insider explains who we are and what we do and delivers behind-the-scenes insights into how our journalism comes together. A presidential campaign. A hurricane. A cult-favorite cabbage slaw. For Emily Cochrane, a reporter who covers the American South for The New York Times, no day is ever the same. …
Read More »Most Voters Have Been Offended by Trump. It’s Not Always a Deal Breaker.
The vast majority of voters across the United States say they have been offended at some point by former President Donald J. Trump. But a sizable number of those voters say that has not stopped them from supporting him. Overall, 70 percent of voters said that the former president had …
Read More »5 Takeaways From Vance’s Interview With The New York Times
JD Vance keeps showing up. The Republican vice-presidential nominee and first-term senator from Ohio is talking to reporters at campaign rallies. He is scheduling network and cable interviews. And he is sitting down with The New York Times. Something has shifted in American politics when it is noteworthy that a …
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