My book may not have been turned into a movie, but it had a cameo role in one, about which there has been some mystery, until now.
The backstory: there’s a scene in “High Fidelity” in which the character ...
My book may not have been turned into a movie, but it had a cameo role in one, about which there has been some mystery, until now.
The backstory: there’s a scene in “High Fidelity” in which the character ...
Remember those generous and sensible promises to rebuild Afghanistan, so that it would not become, after the dismissal of the Taliban, a black hole of chaos and violence? The Washington Post reports that a marquee ...
If you grew up in Los Angeles, as I did, you just lost a close friend. Chick Hearn, the play-by-play announcer of the Lakers, died yesterday. He broadcast 3,338 consecutive games, from 1965 until last year, and invented phrases ...
U.S. officials are taking a second look at the oil kingdom, according to The Washington Post: “A briefing given last month to a top Pentagon advisory board described Saudi Arabia as an enemy of the United ...
I admire Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. He encourages out-of-the-box thinking and is effective at implementing unconventional plans, such as the Special Forces-led war in Afghanistan. In fact, I admire him so much that I think he should resign. His unusual skills are needed at the State Department ...
Newspaper editorials are boring; I spend little time reading them. But the main editorial in today’s New York Times is worth the effort, because it demands, concisely, an honest debate about the merits of invading Iraq. Its most controversial passage:
“One argument for war often floated ...
We’ve had our share of economic bubbles—the Internet, NASDAQ, the Dow—so why not a political bubble? Today’s Washington Post reports the Bush Administration has failed to provide evidence that Iraq has any factory making biological, chemical or nuclear weapons. A few days back, ...
Got your attention, didn’t that? Nearly a decade ago Jeffrey Eugenides wrote The Virgin ...
If we can spend billions of dollars (estimated) invading Iraq, might we spend a few million dollars teaching useful foreign languages to our diplomats and students? The New York Times has a brilliant story about a shortage ...
Their name is Gogol Bordello and they are a gypsy punk band/cabaret. Seeing is believing.