Frank Andrews did readings for John Lennon, Princess Grace and other celebrities. At 83, he is still talking to ghosts, providing “weather forecasts” and making friends. Source link
Read More »Team Behind Starface Pimple Patches Takes On Fentanyl Test Strips
The founders of Starface took the shame out of blemishes. Now, they’re hoping to make it less risky to use recreational drugs and alcohol. Source link
Read More »Who Will Replace Kyle Kuzma as the King of NBA Tunnel Walk Fashion?
Kyle Kuzma unleashed an arms race of pregame N.B.A. style. Now he plans to wear a bland sweatsuit to every game. Will others follow suit? Source link
Read More »Whole Body Deodorants, and Their Ads, Inspire Online Debates
No. But body odor is a hot topic on social media as companies try to provide what one dermatologist called, “the answer to a problem people didn’t even know they have.” Source link
Read More »Tiny Modern Love Stories: ‘The Day of the Dead Had Never Felt More Alive’
Modern Love in miniature, featuring reader-submitted stories of no more than 100 words. Source link
Read More »Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 Review: When War Becomes an Aesthetic, Nobody Wins
There are fun missions in Call of Duty: Black Ops 6, set during the U.S.-Iraq war of the 1990s. But the conspiratorial plot refuses to engage actual politics or history. Source link
Read More »Public Art Leader to Step Down
After steering the art program in Madison Square Park for 11 years, Brooke Kamin Rapaport is turning her focus to research on democracy and civic space. Source link
Read More »Two Climate Change Plays Keep the Flames of Hope Alive
“Hothouse,” at Irish Arts Center, fends off despair with loopiness; “In the Amazon Warehouse Parking Lot,” at Playwrights Horizons, is a fuzzy world lacking depth. Source link
Read More »Zombies Are Real? A Museum Tries to Bury a Hollywood Myth.
The undead monsters we know from movies and TV are distortions of a figure with roots in the religious practices of Haiti. Source link
Read More »Lewis Sorley, 90, Who Said the U.S. Won (but Then Lost) in Vietnam, Dies
His Pulitzer Prize-nominated history of the war was warmly received by the Pentagon, but rejected elsewhere for ignoring what many said made the war “unwinnable.” Source link
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