Baffler Newsletter
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From the Magazine
Current issue, no. 37
America’s long history of predatory lending
East Chicago’s legacy of lead pollution
Spotify’s bid to remodel an industry
Latest
When I look at TPUSA, I don’t see an organization looking for dialogue—I see an occupying force.
Facial recognition technology has marched unimpeded into the commercial sphere—the consequences are staggering.
Fiction
Fabrications. Rag sheet revisionist history. All of it. We did our best by Our Girl.
My father called to tell me that my sister was going off the rails at college.
Vegetable fuchsia but faded, gilt
gone bad from its season in Hell. Plucked up
with dirt on its cheek, petrified
as a rose shut. . .
when his fork clinks against the breakfast plate,
my day is lit by a covetous rage, a fist swollen with
Word Factory
Some of the first people to be called “engineers" operated siege engines.
Spielberg's The Post never goes beneath the surface of the media’s fraught relationship with power.
Latest
When I look at TPUSA, I don’t see an organization looking for dialogue—I see an occupying force.
Facial recognition technology has marched unimpeded into the commercial sphere—the consequences are staggering.
Fiction
Fabrications. Rag sheet revisionist history. All of it. We did our best by Our Girl.
My father called to tell me that my sister was going off the rails at college.
Vegetable fuchsia but faded, gilt
gone bad from its season in Hell. Plucked up
with dirt on its cheek, petrified
as a rose shut. . .
when his fork clinks against the breakfast plate,
my day is lit by a covetous rage, a fist swollen with
Word Factory
Some of the first people to be called “engineers" operated siege engines.
Spielberg's The Post never goes beneath the surface of the media’s fraught relationship with power.
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