Announcements

Like It’s 1999

by The Morning News Like It’s 1999

You may have noticed that one of our co-founders, Rosecrans Baldwin, has a new book out about his stint living and working in France, inspired by the letters he wrote for TMN.

On Tuesday, Rosecrans and Paul Ford will read at New York City’s KGB Bar at 7 p.m.. Rosecrans and Paul have an unlikely friendship, but we’re pretty sure this will be an event that TMN fans will not want to miss. Plus, there’s a party afterward. Continue Reading

This Week

Everyone Is Wrong

by The Morning News

Every Friday we take a look back at the week’s headlines, centering on a theme we’ve singled out as particularly important. This week, the opinion column’s wrath bled well beyond its confines with the headlines full of people calling others out, correcting them, and setting them straight.

Corrections to stories from the Middle East—e.g., “farewell sex”—that were too good last week to fact-check:

Blame it on journalists unfamiliar with their subject matter, the demands of an ever-quicker news cycle, or simply salacious stories that were “too good to check.”

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Contest

Paris, I Love You But You’re Bringing Me Down: Cover Remix Contest

by The Morning News Paris, I Love You But You’re Bringing Me Down: Cover Remix Contest

To celebrate the release of Rosecrans Baldwin’s Paris, I Love You But You’re Bringing Me Down, we’re giving away copies of the book to the creators of our favorite remixes of the Paris cover. For those of you addicted to creating internet memes, this contest is your free therapy. (The rest of you don’t know what you’re missing.) Now brave reader, wield your weapon of choice—be it MS Paint or Photoshop—and rise to the challenge. Continue Reading

This Week

There Is No Simple Answer

by The Morning News

Every Friday we take a look back at the week’s headlines, centering on a theme we’ve singled out as particularly important. From the difficulties of dealing pot or having too much to read and learn, to being the biggest working comic without being famous, it’s never as easy as you think, and there’s rarely a simple answer to fix things. The headlines this week continued to remind us to shed conventional wisdom in favor of understanding the complexity of an issue.

Two takes on recent pan-African development:

There is no magic recipe for turning countries around, Mr. Severino writes, only good cooks. He believes that 20 years after democracy was prescribed to Africa by the West, there are the beginnings of local democratic activities all over the continent that are forcing governments to deliver.

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This Week

Science Tells Us What We Need to Know

by The Morning News

Every Friday we take a look back at the week’s headlines, centering on a theme we’ve singled out as particularly important. Scientific findings, methodical studies, and reports were at the heart of many of the most interesting headlines this week, reminded us of science’s attempts to dispel myths, fix things, and report on society’s ills.

Report says Breivik massacre has led Norwegians to believe more strongly in their open society:

A survey by the UNI Rokkan Center in Bergen and the Oslo-based Institute for Social Research in August found 52 percent of 2,252 respondents expressed greater, not less, trust in other people after the attacks, although one-third of 18-24-year olds said they were more skeptical of other people.

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