The road forward begins locally

To resist the cruelty of the Trump administration and bring a better future into focus, we must become more involved in our communities. | WBUR

 

The transformative power of a Second Act

These day, more and more Americans are making mid-career pivots and pursuing deep-seated passions. This is a Second Act. | Exeter Bulletin

 

A midsummer trip to the sugar shack

In Quebec, winters are getting warmer and maple sugaring shacks are finding ways to become year-round destinations. | The Boston Globe

 

Leaving the 9-to-5 workforce, by choice

Five freelancers talk about why they voluntarily left the world of full-time employment and how they’re getting by. | The Boston Globe

 

What do the rich actually want?

Land owners are making it impossible for people who provide essential services to live locally. Where does this lead us? | Welcome to Hell World

 
 

Building castles in the air

The cathartic joy of building with Lego again, for the first time in two decades, and what it taught me about “building” in general. | WBUR

Sometimes, just surviving is good enough

During times of stress and isolation, ensuring that we can be here for each other might be the most important work we can do. | The Boston Globe

 

Bernie Sanders is mobilizing the DIY scene

The 2020 presidential campaign is building a coalition of musicians and artists, which has imbued his campaign with irreverence and fun. | VICE

 

Being frugal is for the rich

American media just can’t get enough of the “savings hero” narrative. But frugality works best if you have a lot of money to start with. | The Outline

 

‘Occupied’ brings the climate crisis to TV. Finally.

Climate change is strangely absent from the narrative TV landscape. But a powerful and addictive Norwegian Netflix series is changing that. | MIC

 

The money that Congress owes us

Americans need direct relief to survive the pandemic. We must stop letting our politicians get away with being cheap. After all, it’s our money. | GEN

 

A Hidden Life and the cost of resisting fascism

Valerie Pachner talks about her role in Terrence Malick’s new film about the Jägerstätter family, who refused to swear loyalty to the Nazis. | VICE

 

Could Crawl revive the climate horror genre?

Creature features were a product of climate anxiety during the 1970s. Will the genre re-emerge today, as climate change gets worse? | VICE

 

Arctic is an exemplary wilderness survival thriller

Mads Mikkelsen’s intense and sometimes terrifying North Pole thriller is an opportunity to discover the best of the overlooked survival genre. | VICE

 

Philanthropy is nice, but free college is better

American students shouldn’t have to rely on the whims of billionaires to receive an education that doesn’t crush them with debt. | WBUR

 

Vice exposes the viciousness of U.S. politics

Adam McKay talks about his new Dick Cheney biopic: a devastating look at how America’s political system cultivates sociopathic leaders . | VICE

 

The troubling idea behind “dignity of work”

Politicians like Joe Biden often talk about the “dignity of work,” but the idea that hard work bestows dignity on people is dangerous. | NBC News

 

Christmas Vacation—a class warfare manifesto

The classic comedy unites the suburban middle class, the rural poor, and even the police against the wealthy. That’s virtually unheard of. | VICE

 

Why prequels suck (and how to make them cool)

Prequels to beloved franchises like Star Wars and Harry Potter should be as dangerous and weird as possible. Otherwise, what’s the point? | VICE

 

Voting is not enough

Liberals and progressives must win more elections. But building mass movements outside of electoral politics is just as important. | WBUR

 

The Meg and the ecstasy of the creature feature

Jason Statham vs. a 75-foot shark is a cinematic premise that most of us would contemplate under psilocybin mushrooms. And yet. . . | VICE

 

Rethinking America’s live-to-work culture

American life prioritizes work above all else, and Americans are suffering from chronic anxiety and exhaustion. How can we change gears? | GEN

 

Millennial voters are coming for the gerontocracy

Democrats like Dianne Feinstein aren’t too old to run for re-election. But they are too out-of-touch from the party’s younger voters. | The Nation

 

Surviving austerity

The Republican Party’s tax reform will gut social programs. In the absence of a kind government, Americans must take care of each other. | WBUR

 

Neither here nor there: a smartphone journey

When I walked across Massachusetts in 2014, I underestimated how my smartphone would enhance and undermine the long walk. | Headspace