We’re getting busy over on the hot stove front, and this week I wrote about the Shohei Ohtani signing, the Lee Jung-hoo signing (plus two Royals signings and the Yanks-Dodgers trade), the impact of the injuries to Ronny Mauricio and Endy Rodríguez, and the Tyler Glasnow trade for subscribers to the Athletic.
At Paste, I ranked the ten best new boardgames of 2023. It was a hard list to make, with probably 20 games I played this year that I liked enough to include, and at least five more I know that I would probably like enough but haven’t played yet. To give you a little more context, a game like Emerge, which I mentioned in my PAX Unplugged writeup, is absolutely fine and I think a lot of casual players would enjoy it. It didn’t stand a chance of getting on this list.
My free email newsletter is alive and well, and more than a hundred new subscribers have joined the list in the last three weeks since I switched platforms, so thank you and welcome. I’m hoping to keep this up as a weekly endeavor again.
And now, the links…
- Longreads first: The New York Times had two outstanding longreads this week. The first is by graphic designer Giorgia Lupi, who has been struggling with long COVID for three years and describes the disorder in prose and graphics that make it one of the most remarkable pieces I’ve read all year. As a companion, you might read Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist/author Ed Yong on how covering long COVID has made him a better writer.
- The second is also an interactive story, about a 1973 expedition to the summit of Aconcagua that left two Americans dead on the mountain while six others returned, with the truth about how the two died still mired in uncertainty. The story resurfaced literally this year as climate change led to the withdrawal of a glacier that exposed one of the dead climber’s cameras.
- The testimony of three university presidents to Congress a few weeks ago that led to the ouster of Penn’s Liz Magill and calls for Harvard’s Claudine Gay to resign has devolved into claims that Ms. Gay “plagiarized” parts of her dissertation. The Harvard Crimson looks at these claims, line by line, and contacts the authors whose work Ms. Gay allegedly stole. (Spoiler alert: This is a bad-faith argument by right-wing trolls.)
- ProPublica looked at one gun store in Indiana that does little to nothing to avoid contributing to the illegal gun trade, and how it impacts communities in Chicago and beyond.
- The Intercept obtained a document showing India’s Hindu nationalist government was specifically targeting Sikh separatists in the west, including Hardeep Singh Nijjar, whom the Canadian government says was murdered by Indian intelligence agents in June.
- Those stories you saw a year or so ago about the ten-figure toll of organized shoplifting gangs? It was all a lie, cooked up by the retail industry’s lobbyists.
- Ben Collins, who spent several years on what he called the “dystopia beat” of online hate and disinformation, writes about how the farce of cable news has reached the end of its lifespan, as younger audiences aren’t falling for the fake debates and dichotomies required by CNN, Fox, and their ilk.
- Cameron County, Texas, located at the state’s southernmost tip, is prosecuting an 11-year-old boy who was arrested and put into solitary confinement for reporting his principal for bullying. Principal Marta Garza has a history of retaliating against any parents or children who cross her, including calling CPS after one district grandparent challenged the goals set for her 5-year-old grandchild.
- The lie of abortion bans was made very clear with this past week’s ruling in Texas against Kate Cox, a pregnant woman whose fetus was nonviable but was denied an abortion under the state’s bogus “to save the mother’s life” exception.
- The Washington Post is laying off experienced journalists – but expanding its increasingly reactionary editorial board, which led to a one-day strike on December 7th.
- Meanwhile, former Post reporter Felicia Sonmez’s lawsuit against the paper reached the DC Appeals Court, where the judges will have to determine whether its editors’ decision to take Sonmez, a sexual assault survivor, off coverage of #MeToo and related stories was discrimination or was a step to maintain objectivity.
- First-time author Cait Corrain had her book canceled by its publisher after it came out that she’d review-bombed numerous other authors on Goodreads with various sock-puppet accounts.
- A pastor in the United Church of the Kingdom of God was caught on film trying to rid a 16-year-old of “evil spirits,” while another former parishioner said the church tried to convince him to use prayer to become heterosexual when he was 13.
- Missouri Rep. Sarah Unsicker (D) has dropped out of the race for the state’s attorney general post after some bizarre behavior, including having a “basil lemonade” with right-wing troll Chuck Johnson and claims that at least one of her opponents is actually an agent of the Israeli government.
- Vivek Ramaswamy has now become the new(est) face of the racist, xenophobic Great Replacement Theory.