“The current war is disastrous from the point of view of the modern agricultural cycle.” adamtooze.substack.com/p/chartbook-...
“The current war is disastrous from the point of view of the modern agricultural cycle.” adamtooze.substack.com/p/chartbook-...
Google can now help you find and remove your ID from search results
www.theverge.com/tech/876352/...
Sure did!
The highlight of the “athletes pronouncing their names for the Olympics website” is American alpine skier Mary Bocock, who clearly agrees it’s a pretty funny name
Uber found liable for sexual assault in first of thousands of similar lawsuits
www.theverge.com/transportati...
(to do this I use the Unhook chrome extension)
I had no idea I could block Youtube shorts until now. I don't have to see them in my search results in browser. So happy I know this now! holy moly.
This is what it says: “He does not get regular exercise, in part because he has a long-held theory that people are born with a finite amount of energy and that vigorous activity can deplete that reserve, like a battery.“
This is the paragraph I’m talking about
It was also very special to speak with Francesca for the episode and hear about her experience with anorexia, and the breakthrough after taking psilocybin. My goal with that interview was to humanize anorexia for folks who aren't familiar. Francesca made my job easy open.spotify.com/episode/6UlV...
No medication has ever been approved to treat anorexia. And the standard of care - therapy - often fails. But researchers are hopeful that psilocybin-assisted therapy could change that. And the science that underpins that hope is honestly extremely interesting! open.spotify.com/episode/6UlV...
Apple’s new limited edition iPhone grip is all about accessibility www.theverge.com/news/826081/...
And that's big! So if you have the time this week, and you're able to listen, it would mean a lot to me. @scipsychedelics.bsky.social @prx.org 5/5
open.spotify.com/episode/6UlV...
Listen, I don't know if psilocybin-assisted therapy will be the thing that fills the gap. But while learning about this treatment & speaking to a pediatrician who's running a clinical trial to treat severe anorexia, I felt hopeful about the possibility of better treatments for the first time. 4/5
This episode is also a personal one. I had anorexia in my early 20s. And although that part of my life has long been over, I wonder what recovery would have looked like if I'd had the support of a medication — something that could've jump-started the brain rewiring that's necessary in recovery 3/5
There's a lot that we still don't know, but early research shows promise. And that's a huge deal because there is still no medication that's approved to treat anorexia. So therapy, alone, is still the standard of care, and that often doesn't work. 2/5
Today's episode of Altered States is one I'm especially happy to share: it's about the increasing excitement that eating disorder researchers are feeling around the potential use of psilocybin-assisted therapy to treat anorexia 1/5
open.spotify.com/episode/6UlV...
Well well well, will you look at this.
A revealing tool for my fellow journalists: "The Trans News Initiative is a new project... dedicated to tracking and analyzing news coverage of trans communities across the United States."
transnewsinitiative.org?ref=transjou...
She was 17 and a high school junior in Florida. She was working at McDonald’s. And she was living in and out of a homeless shelter. Hoping to save up to buy braces to fix her teeth, she falsely advertised herself in 2017 as 18 years old on a website that matches men looking for “companionship” with young women looking to make money. What followed would set off a chain of events that would have a dramatic impact on her life and help upend the political career of one of the men she would encounter, Representative Matt Gaetz, the Florida Republican.
The woman whom the House Ethics Committee determined Matt Gaetz paid for sex when she was 17 years old was living in a homeless shelter, working at McDonald's, and needed the money for braces www.nytimes.com/2025/11/13/u...
You can disagree and argue as much as you like but the point of evaluating something scientifically is that not every statement should be given equal credence because evidence matters
Worth watching: How to Be a Good Citizen When Your Country Does Bad Things www.nytimes.com/video/opinio...
ANYWAY if anyone wants a seasoned podcast host with years of video experience for their next "video podcast" --- I'm around lmao
and like... none of this is new. Rachel Maddow was putting out the audio of her talk show out on a podcast feed for like a decade before the practice became mainstream. That's how I accessed her show as a student back in Canada.
I realize that I'm fighting a battle I'll almost certainly lose, but I really do think we lose something when we dilute the audio space and begin to use the term "video podcasts" regularly.
just a thought — maybe instead of "video podcasts"... you could just call them "talk shows"? Because that's really what these things are at this point.
(I say this as a person who has hosted multiple podcasts AND a TV talk show...)
www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/dig...
I'm ready for apologies from pundits and politicians who showed their bigoted asses and suggested we needed to abandon trans people in order to win.
looks like "fairness in girls' sports" wasn't the unbeatable wedge issue you thought it was, was it? kinda makes you look like a dumbass, huh?
But the police very soon had much bigger fish to fry, as out-of-state influencers swooped in to get in on the content-rich environs of the Portland ICE facility. On October 2nd, local police arrested Nick Sortor of Washington, DC, on suspicion of disorderly conduct. After Sortor was released the following morning, he told his 1.2 million followers on X that he had spoken to Attorney General Pam Bondi. (Bondi later opened an investigation into the Portland police.) Sortor, who was also invited to Trump’s roundtable on “antifa,” went on to publicly attack the Portland Police Bureau for being “Antifa-infiltrated,” an allegation that the Trump administration appears to be taking seriously — the word of an influencer being, apparently, much weightier than the thin blue line.
every time I explain to my coworkers that a social media influencer from out of town has convinced the Trump administration that the Portland police are antifa, they look at me like I've sprouted a second head www.theverge.com/policy/81340...