Stick to baseball, 12/2/23.

I had one new post for subscribers to The Athletic this week, looking at the free-agent signings of Sonny Gray and Kenta Maeda plus some thoughts on what the Twins might do next. Some readers got very mad that I don’t think Chris Paddack will be a mid-rotation starter when he hasn’t been anything close to that since 2019.

Over at Paste, I ran through eight new board games that would be great stocking stuffers. I’ll do my year-end post for them the week of December 11th. Also, here on the dish, I updated my ranking of my top 100 games all-time.

On the Keith Law Show this week, I spoke with Nik Sharma, author of the new cookbook Veg-Table and the also wonderful cookbooks Season and The Flavor Equation. You can listen and subscribe via iTunesSpotifyamazon, or wherever you get your podcasts.

My free email newsletter is moving from Tinyletter (which Mailchimp is shutting down) to Substack. If you already subscribed as of Tuesday of this past week, you’re fine – I was able to export the subscriber list and import it to Substack with no issues.

And now, the links…

Comments

  1. Brian in ahwatukee

    I thought the Pulitzers this year were excellent. All three were solid choices (are you gonna review rao?) that said the year before was atrocious. All three being terrible. So it’s hard to say a single bad year is indicative of a book prize being dumb. Sometimes we get bad years and that’s part of humanity.

  2. Re: the Harvard Law Review, the obviousness of the repression of Palestinian advocacy has at least been useful in its demonstration of how, broadly speaking, repression in legacy organizations works. With other “forbidden” causes and thought, it’s usually much harder to fully understand how institutions shape what discourse is and is not considered acceptable.

    The framing of the Time article on wellness is bizarre as I see precisely zero citations of the “far left” in the article. The part with Naomi Klein is the closest thing to an argument, but a) it doesn’t really support the headline, and b) the quote in the linked article actually explicitly refutes the headline:

    “Still, Klein is reluctant to give credence to the so-called horseshoe theory, which states that the extremes of the far left and the far right have enough in common that they almost touch. In “Doppelganger,” she cites the work of Quinn Slobodian and William Callison on what they call “diagonalism,” a loose movement made up of people who combine hippie notions of wellness and spirituality and far-right beliefs about individual control. Unlike a horseshoe, a diagonal passes through the middle. Slobodian told me that what unites the diagonalists isn’t just their suspicion of power; it’s also that their demands fit within the well-worn grooves of individualism, entrepreneurship and self-promotion — the capitalist virtues, that is.”

  3. These links are so depressing each week. I’m glad you post them – I want to be aware and informed. But, damn, society is really screwed up. At least, in the United States, anyway.

  4. WTF Florida...

    Florida keeps on Florida-ing…