I had two pieces for subscribers to the Athletic this week, one on the top 20 players under age 25 in the postseason (before the first round began), and one this morning with my hypothetical ballots for the six player awards. I also held a video Q&A for the Athletic on Friday.
Over at Paste, I ranked the ten best games with polyomino (Tetris) tiles as part of their mechanics, which is a fairly common thing in recent games, with a huge run of them hitting the market in 2019-20.
My guest on this week’s episode of The Keith Law Show was Nick Piecoro, who covers the Diamondbacks for the Arizona Republic and a longtime friend of mine, almost since I first got into the writing side of the business. My own podcast is now available on Amazon podcasts as well as iTunes and Spotify.
I’ll have a new edition of my free email newsletter on Monday, now that I have a few more articles to include.
As the holiday season approaches, I’ll remind you every week that my books The Inside Game and Smart Baseball make excellent gifts for the baseball fan or avid reader in your life.
And now, the links…
- Longreads first: In the New Yorker, Patrick Radden Keefe, who won this year’s Pulitzer Prize for Non-fiction for his book Say Nothing, explores the world of the modern private detective, including an anecdote of how PIs helped free Meek Mill.
- By now you’ve probably seen the New York Times exposé on Donald Trump’s near-zero payment of income taxes and extensive use of questionable deductions to avoid paying. I paid more in federal income taxes in the last half of September than Trump did in all of 2017.
- The USL, the country’s Division II professional men’s soccer league, had a serious issue in a game last week between Phoenix and San Diego, where a player on the former used a homophobic slur against a player on the latter. Two of my colleagues at the Athletic have the story on the incident and the fallout, where San Diego coach Landon Donovan pulled his team from the field and forfeited the match.
- Also at the New Yorker, Jane Mayer, author of Dark Money, exposes the real reasons Fox News fired Kimberly Guilfoyle, including harassment and creation of a hostile work environment. Guilfoyle is now one of Trump’s main surrogates on the campaign trail and a big part of his attempts to reach women voters.
- BBC News shows how the oil industry has spent over thirty years working to make people doubt the existence of climate change. It’s worked, and we’ve now lost valuable time we could have spent trying to slow or stop it.
- One man who continued to go out in public for eight days after he first fell ill with COVID-19 has caused a cluster by exposing dozens of other people, at least nine of whom have tested positive, in upstate New York.
- A different man flouted a mask mandate at a hotel frequented by visitors to the Cleveland Clinic, as did members of his family. That man has since tested positive for COVID-19, meaning that his actions last week potentially exposed dozens of people who are in close contact with patients to the virus.
- Senator Chris Murphy (D-CT) tweeted a thread on Russian interference in the 2020 election and the executive branch’s unwillingness to investigate it.
- Editors and staffers at the NYU student newspaper The Washington Square News resigned en masse to protest a hostile work environment created by their faculty adviser, Keena Griffin. Their claims include racial insensitivity and transphobic comments. Dr. Griffin is the president of the College Media Association, and the CMA has announced its own investigation.
- Jonathan Last writes in The Bulwark that President Trump showed in last week’s debate that he’s a sociopath – and that 60 million Americans like him that way.
- Why did the CDC soften a report on safety conditions at meatpacking facilities in April, during the early days of the pandemic?
- There’s a longstanding cultural movement in the two Congolese capitals of Kinshasa (the D.R.C.) and Brazzaville (The Republic of Congo), where people of all ages dress extremely snazzily, regardless of their circumstances or where they live. This BBC photo-essay shows these sapeurs in their stylish clothes, including people who break gender norms and children who found their love of fancy outfits early in life.
- It took Youtube a few days but they finally removed a video by right-wing nutjob Josh Bernstein where he said that Ilhan Omar “should be executed,” referring to her as a female dog.
- I watched the Spanish-language film Monos, which was Colombia’s submission for last year’s Academy Award for Best International Feature Film last year, this past week, and will write about it in the next few days. The Guardian had an interesting article from last October on how brutal the shoot was in the high-altitude jungles of southern Colombia.
- McSweeney’s brings us “Hemingway writes The Baby-sitters Club,” which I appreciated more because I’ve seen the excellent adaptation of the books that debuted on Netflix this summer.
I know paying $750 in taxes is the headline, but the $400 million owed to an unknown entity is to me a bigger deal. Is it a state, is it someone who his policies have been friendly towards as payback?
That same man who flouted mask requirements in Cleveland also spreads a plurality of false information about the virus.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/30/us/politics/trump-coronavirus-misinformation.html
Re: your Paste top-10. Have you played PARIS: LA CITÉ DE LA LUMIÈRE? I would put it up there with Patchwork and Silver and Gold. Playing games exclusively with my partner since March, it’s become a favorite for the both of us.