Showing results for: proud boys (page 47)
Ask the pilot
Patrick Smith
Singing the temp worker, furloughed pilot, punk-rock blues. Snapshots from a life aimed aloft.
“You’re supposed to marry the person you love, Mom”
Ayelet Waldman
My 7-year-old son's best friend is a lesbian and he says he wants to be gay. I hope he is.
Child soldier turned rap star
Vanessa Thorpe
Saved from waging war at age 13 by an aid worker, Emmanuel Jal is now busy with other projects -- promoting peace in Africa and helping with a film, starring Nicole Kidman, about his rescuer.
I Like to Watch
Heather Havrilesky
Pill-popping sociopaths, bad actors in bad wigs, and
Faye Dunaway snuffing out the hopes of young hopefuls. Have I died and gone to heaven?
Aiming to become a household verb
Gary Younge
James Dyson describes his bestselling vacuum cleaner as Britain's most successful export since the Beatles. And it's hard to argue with that.
The one who got away
Salon Staff
Curtis Sittenfeld, Rebecca Traister, Geraldine Sealey, Andrew Leonard and others reflect on their lost loves.
Drinking: A young story
Rebecca Traister
Twenty-four-year-old memoirist Koren Zailckas goes beyond blackouts and hangovers to examine the emotional costs of binge drinking for young women.
An “Ordinary People” for the “Rushmore” set
Heather Havrilesky
Noah Baumbach, the writer-director of the Sundance-winning "The Squid and the Whale," talks about the perils of joint custody and the odd microcosm of the intellectual family.
Ready for something different
Stuart Jeffries
Andrew Lloyd Webber's "Phantom" is about to hit the big screen, but he's already thinking about what's next, like maybe a musical about his talking trousers.
Anda’s game
Cory Doctorow
Killing newbies who were trying to cheat the system seemed like a good way to make a buck. But in this simulated reality, who is scamming whom?
Tom Wolfe’s animal house
Priya Jain
America's patrician journo-novelist goes back to college and finds --
surprise! -- the halls of academe strewn with beer cans, pizza boxes and
used condoms.
Letting down the Guard
Jeff Horwitz
With 200 dead in Iraq, morale in the tank and reenlistments threatened, the Army National Guard and Reserve are facing a crisis.
Letters
Salon Staff
"Hey, if you are stupid or lazy ... I don't want your vote mucking up my election": Salon readers step up in support of Matt Stone and Trey Parker's controversial views on voting.
The race to the bottom
Mark Follman
According to the Times' ombudsman, hateful rhetoric from the left this political season is more "vile" than from the right. Maybe that's true of his in box -- but it isn't of America at large.
Letters
Salon Staff
Readers weigh in on America's undecided voters, the myth of the "security mom," and Fox News' apology for its fake campaign story.
“Tropical Malady”
Charles Taylor
This love story about a soldier and a country boy from Thai director Apichatpong Weerasethakul makes you feel as if life itself is unfolding on the screen.
“The Plot Against America” by Philip Roth
Laura Miller
In his most believable novel in years, Philip Roth imagines a 1940s America where Charles Lindbergh unseats FDR and the nation descends into vicious anti-Semitism.
Liza’s horrible so-called life
Cintra Wilson
Mean boys. Badass girls. Your worst first-day-of-high-school nightmare, to the millionth power ... and in Marin County, Calif.
The gospel according to Jimmy Breslin
Andrew O'Hehir
New York's greatest living newspaper columnist says the Catholic Church, corrupted by sexual scandal and creeping right-wing ideology, is dying out in America. And he sheds no tears.
What al-Qaida did to us
Salon Staff
Nine people who have experienced terrorist attacks around the world, from Bali to Yemen, share their thoughts on the third anniversary of Sept. 11.
WWBS? (What would Bush say?)
Salon Staff
The results of our nomination speechwriting contest are in -- and there's no recount necessary.
Sex, lies and the “down low”
Whitney Joiner
Bestselling author J.L. King is the new public face of a not-so-new phenomenon -- "straight" black men who secretly sleep with men. Is he a savior to black women worried about HIV -- or a self-promoter fanning fears of a bisexual black bogeyman?
Innocence lost in translation
Cara Nissman
From the doctor's office to the courtroom, immigrants often rely on their bilingual children to interpret for them. Are these kids learning valuable life skills -- or shouldering too much family responsibility?
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