THE NEW YORK TIMES—SEEMINGLY CATCHING ON PART 1
SENATOR CHRIS MURPHY RECOGNIZED IT back in April 2025 and SimanaitisSays agreed at the time. It is significant, albeit lamentable, that more than six months later The Editorial Board of … Continue reading
MISTER 880—THE MAN, THE MOVIE, THE RETROSPECTIVE
THE NEW YORKER HAS A REGULAR FEATURE “TAKES,” retrospectives of previous pieces on one thing and another. “David Grann on St. Clair McKelway’s ‘Old Eight Eighty’,” October 19, 2025, is … Continue reading
RENOIR DRAWINGS—ENJOYING THEM FROM AFAR
THE MORGAN LIBRARY & MUSEUM, 225 Madison Avenue at 36th Street, is a continent away from me, but through electronic wizardry and the Morgan’s kindness, I am able to share … Continue reading
CELEBRATING THE 100th ANNIVERSARY OF THE MOTEL
MEGAN MCCREA CELEBRATES “100 YEARS of the Motel: Neon Signs, Swimming Pools, and American Dreams,” The New York Times, October 22, 2025. What fun, even if experienced armchair-fashion! Here are … Continue reading
INDEPENDENCE FOR WHOM? PART 2
YESTERDAY, OUR CIVICS LESSON BEGAN with The Atlantic’s “Independence for Whom?” Part 1 and Jefferson’s stirring words “all men are created equal.” Lamentably enough, it concluded with Supreme Court Chief … Continue reading
INDEPENDENCE FOR WHOM? PART 1
A FEW DAYS AGO, I PROMISED to continue with more from The Atlantic’s “The Unfinished Revolution.” As I noted, think of this magazine’s excellent series as “a much appreciated (and … Continue reading
OUR QUEENS FELON GRIFTER-IN-CHIEF
IN A CONCISE 2 MINUTES 21 SECONDS, KATHLEEN KINGSBURY describes “The Corruption Behind Trump’s East Wing Demolition,” The New York Times, October 25, 2025. “As of Oct. 24,” the preface … Continue reading
BARONESS ORCZY AND EARLY TV PART 2
YESTERDAY IN PART 1, WE LEARNED how the first superhero novel transformed from rejection status to best seller by way of its stage play counterpart. Pimpernel cinema followed—indeed, in multiple … Continue reading
THE BARONESS ORCZY AND EARLY TV PART 1
“THEY SEEK HIM HERE, THEY SEEK HIM THERE/ Those Frenchies seek him everywhere.” So it was said of the Baroness Orczy’s Scarlet Pimpernel. I sought him recently—with double success—in recent … Continue reading