Showing results for: map (page 64)
How populism explains May’s stunning U.K. election upset
Terrence Guay, Charles Hankla
Corbyn may not have won enough seats to take over Parliament, but he dealt May a serious blow nonetheless
Brad Pitt plays weatherman to poke fun at Trump: “There is no future”
Katie Serena
The actor stopped by the Jim Jeffries Show to talk Trump withdrawing from the Paris Agreement
West Coast waters on acid trip; fishing industry in peril
Andrea Thompson
Ocean acidification is often an overlooked result of carbon dioxide emissions
Vladimir Putin to Megyn Kelly: Russian hacking allegations is “disinformation”
Matthew Rozsa
Megyn Kelly presses the Vladimir Putin hacking allegations, causing Putin to squirm under the spotlight
Crack in Antarctic ice shelf could create an iceberg the size of Delaware
Charlie May
The crack has grown 11 miles in a week as scientists keep researching how climate change is affecting Antarctica
“I’m Dying Up Here”: Showtime’s uneven drama flatlines
Melanie McFarland
Showtime's new series forgets that every once in a while a show about comedians should be, you know, funny
Forget the “blue wave” — the sequel: Can the Trump resistance survive the Democratic Party?
Andrew O'Hehir
There's no pathway to power outside party politics — but hoping for a big win in 2018 could be a death trap
7 in 10 smartphone apps share your data with third-party services
Narseo Vallina-Rodriguez
Does privacy mean anything to Silicon Valley?
Monopoly vs. the Nazis: How British intelligence used board games to thwart the Germans
Tristan Donovan
In WW2, MI9 smuggled escape maps and supplies in care packages to troops in POW camps. Here's how
Four years later, “Breaking Bad” remains the boldest indictment of modern American capitalism in TV history
Anis Shivani
The show’s visual style is the greatest-ever rebuke to the gory hold neoliberalism has over our minds and bodies
That neat and tidy map of tastes on the tongue you learned in school is all wrong
Steven D Munger
The tongue map was debunked by scientists a long time ago
An excerpt from William Hogeland’s “Autumn of the Black Snake”
William Hogeland
William Hogeland has written an exciting history of the founding of the U.S. Army
Who killed Sister Cathy? That is — and isn’t — the story of Netflix’s latest true crime show
Erin Keane
"The Keepers" is as riveting as a crime series gets. It also exposes pitfalls of the prestige true crime formula
Texas GOP wants to redistrict before the 2018 elections
Matthew Rozsa
They are concerned that unfavorable redistricting may be imposed on them in an upcoming July trial
GOP strategist admits he colluded with Russian hackers to hurt Hillary Clinton, Democrats
Sophia Tesfaye
It’s bigger than Trump
SCOTUS ruling on North Carolina’s illegal political maps exposes GOP’s extreme partisan gerrymandering based on race
Steven Rosenfeld
A rare pro-democracy ruling from the court before Neil Gorsuch was seated.
The climate crisis may be taking a toll on your mental health
Lorraine Chow
People around the world are suffering from ecoanxiety, a feeling of impending environmental doom.
“Cultural anxiety” is unpatriotic: America’s mission is for liberty and justice for all
David Masciotra
To say that diversity comes at the expense of white people is to say you don't believe in America
“Autumn of the Black Snake” tells the story of America’s first war
Matthew Rozsa
William Hogeland has written a popular history about the birth of America's war machine that has resonance today
Red-state blue-state divide is showing up in tourism: Stereotypes are keeping liberals from Alabama beaches
April M. Short
Those who do visit the state’s beaches may like what they find
Eat it up: The second helping of “Master of None” is artistically satisfying and visually sumptuous
Melanie McFarland
An aesthetically adventurous, romantic second season proves Aziz Ansari's Netflix comedy is comfortable in its skin
Gerrymandering did this: How the GOP’s redistricting master plan brought us Trumpcare — even though most people hate it
David Daley
Most Republican House members fear their right-wing base more than they fear the Democrats. It's a toxic combo
Democrats appear united on abortion rights — but behind that reality lies a difficult political problem
Matthew Sheffield
Democratic leaders and voters are overwhelmingly pro-choice — but the party still hopes to compete in rural areas
The chilling tech that brings “Minority Report” inches from reality
Tom Roston
New documentary "Pre-Crime" shows how police use big data to stalk potential offenders who've yet to break the law
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