Last summer in Eastern Texas, a horrific tragedy struck. Three young siblings were pulled out of a neighbor’s pond dead, and believed to have drowned. Then, in March, the incident made national headlines when authorities announced autopsy results showing the sisters had not died by accident — they’d been strangled to death before someone threw their bodies in the pond.
This week, the district attorney of Cass County, Courtney Shelton, told Rolling Stone that her office actually had the autopsy results since last August, days after the girls’ bodies...
This week, the district attorney of Cass County, Courtney Shelton, told Rolling Stone that her office actually had the autopsy results since last August, days after the girls’ bodies...
- 5/20/2023
- by Andrea Marks
- Rollingstone.com
New York Observer restaurant critic Joshua David Stein walked away from his job this week, becoming the paper’s second reporter to resign amid a conflict of interest involving Donald Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner’s ownership of the paper. Stein penned an op-ed in Guardian to announce that he’s leaving. Ross Barkan, the paper’s national political reporter, was the first staffer to leave because of the Trump endorsement. “Last week, after the paper endorsed Donald Trump for president of the United States in a bizarro editorial, I resigned,” Stein wrote. “It’s not quite falling on my sword,...
- 4/21/2016
- by Brian Flood
- The Wrap
How perfect is this?
So this sounds like it shouldn't work, but it does: Esquire's Joshua David Stein took it upon himself to create a Venn diagram of every single show in prime-time TV. While usually I post infographics and suggest ways they fall short, I find it hard to think of any possible way to improve this one. The more you look at it, the more accurate it becomes. And the picture of our collective zeitgeist is nothing short of amazing:
The one glaring omission would be Lost, which we suppose would be something like People-Being-Crummy (Ben Linus, et al.) meets Fat-People (ie, Hurley) meets People-Saving-People-Meanly (the Others, et al.) meets People-Would-Can't-Save-Themselves-Saving-People (the Oceanic passengers, and Jack in particular) meets Vampires--and-other-Supernaturals. Then again, Lost probably isn't here because cares about Lost anymore.
If you're having trouble making out the details, check out the full-size version.
So this sounds like it shouldn't work, but it does: Esquire's Joshua David Stein took it upon himself to create a Venn diagram of every single show in prime-time TV. While usually I post infographics and suggest ways they fall short, I find it hard to think of any possible way to improve this one. The more you look at it, the more accurate it becomes. And the picture of our collective zeitgeist is nothing short of amazing:
The one glaring omission would be Lost, which we suppose would be something like People-Being-Crummy (Ben Linus, et al.) meets Fat-People (ie, Hurley) meets People-Saving-People-Meanly (the Others, et al.) meets People-Would-Can't-Save-Themselves-Saving-People (the Oceanic passengers, and Jack in particular) meets Vampires--and-other-Supernaturals. Then again, Lost probably isn't here because cares about Lost anymore.
If you're having trouble making out the details, check out the full-size version.
- 4/22/2010
- by Cliff Kuang
- Fast Company
The High Line, built upon an abandoned stretch of elevated railway, opens tomorrow. Here's what it looks like.
Great news for New Yorkers and design fans alike: After years of wrangling, delays, and uncertainties, the High Line, an astonishing urban park built upon the remnants of an abandoned stretch of elevated railway, is opening tomorrow. Fast Company was at the preview, and here, we bring you the first images of the completed park.
It was a long shot from the outset: In 1999, two locals--Joshua David, a writer, and Robert Hammond, a painter--quailed at the prospect of the massive old railway structure being torn down by hungry developers. They lobbied the city to instead turn its surface into a park along the western fringe of the Chelsea neighborhood, some two stories above the street. Ultimately, they succeeded: The park itself is remarkably designed, a work led by landscape architecture firm James Corner Field Operations,...
Great news for New Yorkers and design fans alike: After years of wrangling, delays, and uncertainties, the High Line, an astonishing urban park built upon the remnants of an abandoned stretch of elevated railway, is opening tomorrow. Fast Company was at the preview, and here, we bring you the first images of the completed park.
It was a long shot from the outset: In 1999, two locals--Joshua David, a writer, and Robert Hammond, a painter--quailed at the prospect of the massive old railway structure being torn down by hungry developers. They lobbied the city to instead turn its surface into a park along the western fringe of the Chelsea neighborhood, some two stories above the street. Ultimately, they succeeded: The park itself is remarkably designed, a work led by landscape architecture firm James Corner Field Operations,...
- 6/8/2009
- by Cliff Kuang
- Fast Company
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