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Новости за 26.12.2024

Tinder Takes on the Skeptics, Claiming Dating App Fatigue Is ‘Overstated’

Adweek.com 

Dating apps have gotten a bad rap lately, so Tinder is taking on the skeptics with playful ads that flip the script on negative narratives about modern dating. Tinder has unveiled the latest chapter of its "It Starts With a Swipe" campaign by once again inviting daters to reconsider what they thought they knew about...

Get out and do something this weekend in central Ohio, Dec. 27-29

NBC4i.com 

COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) - From festive holiday events to the Columbus Blue Jackets and Ohio State Men's Basketball, here are things to see and do this weekend in central Ohio. Blue Jackets vs. Bruins Nationwide Arena, Dec. 27 at 7 p.m. Harlem Globetrotters 2025 World Tour Schottenstein Center, Dec. 27 at 2 p.m. and 7 [...]

Tottenham will be impressed by Luka Vuskovic’s insane stats this season

TheSpursWeb 

One Tottenham teenager, Luka Vuskovic, is posting some incredible numbers out on loan this season, which Spurs fans will surely be excited about. 17-year-old Luka... The post Tottenham will be impressed by Luka Vuskovic’s insane stats this season appeared first on Spurs Web.

Unsinkable Paris

The New York Review of Books 

One evening during the Summer Olympics last August, I wandered through central Paris at dusk with a friend. We watched on a café TV as the American sprinter Noah Lyles narrowly won the hundred-meter dash and became the fastest man in the world, then we continued down the stately rue de Rivoli and through the […]

Dispirited Away

The New York Review of Books 

Eliza Griswold, a Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter, begins her latest book, Circle of Hope: A Reckoning with Love, Power, and Justice in an American Church, by announcing her method as “immersion journalism.” The technique, she suggests, is “unruly,” akin to climbing into a stranger’s car and going along for the ride, wherever it takes her. The […]

‘Never Too Much’

The New York Review of Books 

Something has gone terribly wrong. In his 2004 book Why Globalization Works, the economics journalist Martin Wolf wrote that “liberal democracy is the only political and economic system capable of generating sustained prosperity and political stability.” He was articulating the elite consensus of the time, a belief that liberal democratic capitalism was not only a […]

Passion’s Countervoices

The New York Review of Books 

Balzac’s The Lily in the Valley gives full-throated voice to romantic passion and at the same time contains it, inflating its rhetoric while ironizing it.

The Kitchen

The New York Review of Books 

sky and congestion    up ahead—why wait in line    with this chewed boot, this cold breakfast river below    and everywhere the straight face    of a season passing— long mile    separates ice from ice             here—maybe            a whole work— knife cut, bleached peppers,    vinegar and light round clock    is a loose knot in time    a plain devotion

Chaos and Treasure

The New York Review of Books 

No artist has tried harder to get photographs and text to bring each other urgently to life than Jim Goldberg.

Player Piano

The New York Review of Books 

My face is a case studyin gravity. A face study. A grave.Effaced, I introduce myselfby name, a quippydelegate, ceci Susan,this lifelong stand-in.Named after my motheror rather, the pseudonym that hidher foreign origin. Shoushik.She’d take her breakfaston the balcony. Tehran1943. Feeding the antsand plants her onion-tisanemilk. My little mother.From her ovariescame I. An alloy.Reproduction reproducesinexactly, doesn’t […]

A Deadly Apathy

The New York Review of Books 

A blank indifference to cruelty and atrocity as a normative mode of waging war has infected Israel's collective conscience.

Far from the Seventies

The New York Review of Books 

Two memoirs by women remembering their youthful relationships with older men complicate the definition and implications of “consent.”

Limitless Space, Endless Motion

The New York Review of Books 

When the choreographer Alexei Ratmansky first saw a tape of Balanchine’s Apollo, he watched in disbelief. Here was elegance without exaggeration, tension and beauty without stagy excess.

Evolution in the Dock

The New York Review of Books 

We’ve seen many skirmishes in America’s culture wars over the decades; one recent round, over abortion, was on the ballot in ten states during the 2024 elections. But the most dramatic battle of them all, between two of the twentieth century’s greatest orators, took place in 1925 in Dayton, Tennessee, after the high school teacher […]

Joy and Apprehension in Syria

The New York Review of Books 

There is widespread relief after Assad's fall, though no one is more aware than Syrians themselves of the dangers and challenges that await them.

Rebels Without a Cause

The New York Review of Books 

In Sam Gold's Romeo + Juliet, the lovers' headlong rush into marriage is in tension throughout with the surprising regression to childhood that characterizes so much of the production.