I took a few weeks off from these posts around the holidays, but I did write one piece for subscribers to The Athletic over the break, looking at the Chris Sale trade and Lucas Giolito signing.
Over at Paste, I reviewed the games Daybreak, a cooperative game about fighting climate change; and Wandering Towers, the best new family game of last year. Both games were on my ranking of the ten best new board games of 2023.
My free email newsletter will return today (most likely). Several of you have pledged to support me if the newsletter were to go paid; I have no immediate plans to do so, but if that happens 1) I’ll give everyone a ton of notice and 2) I’ll move it off Substack.
And now, the links…
- Writer Tom Scocca’s piece in New York about his sudden, unsolved medical mystery is the best thing you’ll read all week. It’s well-written, of course, and combines the deeply personal with an inherent attack on our broken health-care system.
- President Biden won’t just be facing Donald Trump or another GOP opponent in the 2024 election – he’ll be opposed by the News Corp misinformation machine, too. (Related: The Washington Post’s Philip Bump wrote of how journalism needs to defend itself in the face of bad-faith actors. He might start with his own paper’s opinion section.)
- The New Yorker looks at board games with serious themes, profiling Amabel Holland, a trans woman who co-owns the publisher Hollandspiele and designed the Iron Rails series of games.
- Parenting is hard. It’s been harder thanks to the pandemic. That and other factors have led to the rise of the “accidentally permissive” parent, especially in my age cohort.
- Stuart Thompson of the New York Times looks at how anti-vaxx ghouls latched on to the death of a 24-year-old man, who showed no symptoms of myocarditis after his COVID-19 vaccination but whose parents think the vaccine gave him myocarditis anyway. George Watts, Jr., had an enlarged spleen – over six times the normal size for that organ – which is a sign of long-term heart failure, chronic inflammation in his brain, and signs of late-stage pneumonia in his lungs.
- mRNA vaccines do not cause cancer, and there is no such thing as “turbo cancer.”
- Rep. Ilhan Omar (D) has introduced two bills to block military aid to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates due to both nations’ atrocious human rights records. Omar is Muslim, and Islam is the official religion of both nations. Just imagine a similar scenario with Judaism or Christianity instead of Islam.
- On the coordinated attacks against now former Harvard President Claudine Gay: It was never about plagiarism, but about DEI (from Don Moynihan); American Jews’ moral panic over Gay’s and two other college Presidents’ answers to Congress is misplaced (from The Forward); and Gay’s own editorial in the New York Times on what happened, which I thought was far too reticent.
- Why do pundits like Jonathan Chait and Nate Silver say outrageous things? Because it’s effective, at least when you consider that attention is their goal.
- The science is clear: Masks work to reduce the spread of COVID-19 and similar viruses, no matter what the misinformation merchants tell you.
- The Guardian looks at the unfunny punching-down comedy specials from Dave Chapelle and Ricky Gervais. Chapelle was so groundbreaking at his peak that it’s sad to see him pitching with an 80 mph fastball now.
- A list of all 673 books removed from classrooms in Orange County, Florida. I don’t know how anyone with the means to move could still live there. Even if you send your kids to a quality alternative school, your tax dollars are supporting this anti-education.
- Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds (R) declined federal food aid to provide lunch to schoolchildren over the summer, making a specious argument about obesity. This is free money for the state, and they would rather turn it down than feed poor children in Iowa.
- NYC Mayor Eric Adams (D) has drained the city payroll of over $24 million to pay for 293 “special assistants,” many of them major donors to his campaign.
- Adams (still D) also tried to kill a bill that requires police to report when they stop anyone on the street to ask for identification, promising to restore budget cuts to other programs if council members voted against it. The bill passed anyway.
- Overtime pay for NYPD officers working the city’s subway stations went from $4 million to $155 million between 2022 and 2023, reducing “major crimes” by 2% but primarily leading to more arrests and fines for fare-jumping. That’s a lot of money to fight a handful of skipped $2.90 charges.
- New York bookstore Bluestockings is facing eviction for providing Narcan to save people who have overdosed on opioids.
- Amanda Todd was 15 when she killed herself in 2012 after three years of cyberstalking by a Dutch man who blackmailed her with threats to send nude images of her to her friends and family. He was sentenced to 13 years by a Canadian court, but a Dutch court cut the sentence in half to match that country’s legal standards.
- The Las Vegas Business Journal announced a new editorial policy that it will not publish economic impact estimates for stadium projects and other events unless they can see the methodology and criteria used to reach those estimates (which, in my view, are usually bullshit).
- Francis Howell School District in St. Charles, Missouri, has seen white conservatives take over its school board; the board recently backed off a plan to eliminate all Black History and Black Literature courses after massive opposition, including from the NAACP. The same white conservatives are trying to ban trans students from using the appropriate bathrooms. School board elections matter, folks.
- Speaking of Missourah, a St. Louis cop crashed his car into an LGBT bar, Bar:PM, and then cuffed one of the owners, who was later charged with a felony. The police didn’t do a toxicology test on their colleague, and now they’re trying to hush up any investigation and refusing to release body cam footage to the public.
- Shoegaze had its moment in the early 1990s as a subgenre of alternative music, mostly heard from British acts like My Bloody Valentine, Ride, and Slowdive. It’s had a huge comeback thanks to TikTok.
- The data from Insomniac Games released by hackers shows that big-game video game development is not sustainable, per Nathan Grayson of Aftermath, a great new site covering video and tabletop gaming.
- I own a fantastic sweater and very warm hat from Quince, specialists in inexpensive cashmere clothing items. It turns out that cheap cashmere has a stark environmental cost.
- The seams on a baseball have a higher-than-expected effect on the trajectory of the ball in flight.
Oh yeah love seeing some St. Louis/St. Charles news making the links.
Speaking of stadium/arena relocations, did anyone else see the comically high estimate of “new jobs” being created by moving the Capitals and Wizards from Chinatown in DC (probably the perfect location for an area in the DMV all things considered) to Potomac Yard all of 4 miles southwest (and in a much worse location considering transit issues)? Those aren’t new jobs being created aside from the temporary ones created for construction. Those jobs are being moved from DC to Virginia. If you’re interested in reading a ton of bs, here’s the best spin the neighborhood paper could put on it. https://patch.com/virginia/delray/arena-alexandrias-potomac-yard-could-create-29k-jobs-report Just for context, every Metro line in the DMV stops at or within a half mile of Capital One Arena. Just two of them stop at the recently opened Potomac Yard station (all others would require a change 3 or 4 stops away) and the operators claim it wouldn’t have game day capacity as set up. There’s also a massive traffic issue given that there are only two main roads near it (no room to add any either) which is problem already during rush hour and you have airport traffic (DCA is less than a mile from the proposed site).
I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry when I saw that. Admittedly, it has been a decade and a half since I worked in Alexandria, and a few years longer since I left DC/Arlington for the Baltimore suburbs; but traffic was atrocious along Rt 1 that long ago, when Target was the big draw at Potomac Yard.
I can’t imagine flying into DCA anytime near the end of a Caps/Wiz game, and I pity everyone involved during what I’m sure will be a charming mix of fans leaving the game and getting caught up tourists who didn’t know not to fly in at that time and are trying to figure out metro with large suitcases.
I live in Brooklyn, and I felt like I was an old man yelling at clouds during the mayoral election telling people to ensure they didn’t even include Adams on their ranked choice ballots. He’s just the most awful, corrupt person, and certainly up there with Rudy in the pantheon of bad mayors we’ve had. (I had Garcia, then Wiley, and then I forget the order of the rest.)
It takes quite a person for one to pine for the days of big doofus Bill de Blasio, but at least he set up the ferry system and free pre-K, and didn’t call you racist for calling him out for his many deficiencies.
https://www.theonion.com/de-blasio-well-well-well-not-so-easy-to-find-a-may-1847151201
I feel like I break this one out almost as much as the Clickhole “Heartbreaking” post.
I pledge my support if you decide to go a pay route for your newsletter/content, I’m just reluctant to share my credit card information with Substack.
Did you know Nate well from when you both worked in baseball? Was he always this way? Saying outrageous things for attention is one thing but he’s been getting very basic facts about economic statistics and government structure wrong, getting dunked on and then just trying to tweet his way through it. Those are supposed to be his areas of expertise (other than epidemiology obviously). How could this possibly help someone whose whole brand is supposed to be “I’m the smartest”?
And it’s bizarre coming from someone whose image in 2008 through 2012 was as the anti-pundit. He’s lived long enough to become the very thing he claimed to despise. 2012 Nate Silver would be mortified at the 2023 version of Nate Silver.
Regarding Ilhan Omar:
Good.
I would like to know why the U.S. is sending military aid to those two countries in the first place?
Oil. A reductive answer but also a correct answer.
I think the most shameful part of the whole Harvard thing (stiff competition, I know) is how it existed largely as a smokescreen to distract from ongoing atrocities in Gaza. You can see it right there in Gay’s NYT column, apologizing for not genuflecting to bad faith concerns about a hypothetical genocide while an actual genocide is being perpetuated, with our full permission. Just unforgivable for everyone involved
Holy heck, Florida banned Friday Night Lights? That came out when I was in high school. I read it and wrote a review for my school newspaper. Of course, that’s not as funny as banning The Firm. What, a story about a law firm that’s a front for the mob hits a little too close to home? I’m probably not the first person to elicit surprise that Fahrenheit 451 is not on the list.
Regarding Iowa and the EBT program. There is now such thing as free money. Either the federal government has to borrow it or reduce spending elsewhere. My local school district stopped taking federal money for the high school lunch program several years in response to the changes mandated by the federal govt. Students that would have qualified for free lunches still receive them by way of a daily amount that they are allowed to spend. The change has been a tremendous success. The cafeteria went from a money loser to a money maker. On top of that, the amount of food wasted has decreased significantly as kids are no longer required to take fruit that would then be thrown out.
Why does a school cafeteria need to be a “money maker”?
I never said there was such a thing as free money. I said it was “free money for the state,” which is true. You completely ignored the qualifier.
And let’s not pretend Iowa is trying to save the federal government’s money here. I don’t see them turning down other federal funding.
Providing assistance so that children don’t go hungry should be about turning a profit now? Next time the state deals with extreme weather let us all know if they refuse federal aid.
Mike and Mat Ji,
At no point does my post say that a school cafeteria should turn a profit. I only mentioned it as a positive since the district discontinued the federal lunch program that was operating at a deficit. The profits from the cafeteria can be used to offset the cost of or expand educational programs.
My apologies Keith, I missed the qualifier “for the state”. Although, according to the article, the state would have to pay for half the administrative costs. While still an excellent return, not completely free.