Plus: One-on-One With Al Sharpton
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A daily digest of things to discuss over drinks
June 07, 2020
While the left has flowed to Twitter, Snapchat, and Instagram, Mark Zuckerberg has laid out the welcome mat to the Trump legions.
There's more to watch than ever, but series have fewer episodes—and fewer seasons—to prove themselves. Friends and Lost might not happen today.
Witness to jovial, jokey messaging at New York protests, the author shares his profound discomfort with white people's approach to this critical moment.
As protests over the killing of George Floyd stretch on, two civil rights activists talk police reform and Mark Zuckerberg's blind spots on this week's Inside the Hive podcast.
Love watching Elle Fanning scheme against her husband on The Great? Dig into these other true stories of royal matches made in hell.
Premiering tonight, the new HBO series from the creator and star of Chewing Gum explores consent in the uneasy age of dating apps.
The Reverend Al Sharpton has been many things to many people: a firebrand, an opportunist, an inspiration, a joke. In 2016, with race once again roiling America's conscience, he was arguably the country's most influential civil rights leader. As Sharpton reflected on his five-decade battle, the presidential election, his role as a political power broker, and the controversies he can't shake, Suzanna Andrews learned about the anger that created and nearly consumed him.
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