How a fight over data made South Dakota's bad syphilis outbreak worse
Keren Landman took a hard look at the alarming spread of syphilis through Native communities in South Dakota, and the bureaucratic roadblocks that made the whole mess that much messier. Talking to the chief public health officer of the Great Plains Tribal Leaders' Health Board and dozens of others, Keren paints a picture of just how frustrating the lack of information sharing at the state and federal level really was, and the dignity-stripping — and deeply familiar — effect it had on the Indigenous communities unable to get the help they needed.
🎧 How Barnes & Noble survived
Maybe you too remember when Barnes & Noble was the big bad guy of the bookstore business — not just in You've Got Mail, but in real life. Today, the onetime bookstore giant is dwarfed by Amazon but battling its way back through a rebrand and expansion. Today, Explained talked to The Verge's Nilay Patel and prosecutor Brendan Ballou about the store's second life. For book lovers, shopping enthusiasts, and people who need to use a decent bathroom at the mall, it's a story worth listening to. Barnes & Noble could have died a villain, but somehow it lived long enough to see itself become the hero.
The very best books of 2023
Speaking of books, Vox's book critic Constance Grady gave us her picks for the latter half of the year (for the first six months, check out her list from July). How can we have a Vox Recommends newsletter and not include the Vox Recommended list of books? There are some truly fantastic selections, and with Constance's lovely, witty write-ups you'll know exactly which ones are your taste (or, perhaps, the taste of a person you need a last-minute gift for). I'd like to give a big "plus one" to her first rec: Chain-Gang All-Stars, by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah. She describes the book as The Hunger Games but with "beautiful sentences and coherent racial politics." I would heartily agree, and also say, "It's rad, check it out."
📹 What all Christmas movies have in common
Oh, I'm sorry, did you think we were done with Christmas movies in this newsletter? Clearly no. Vox Video's Ed Vega dove deep into the genre and came back with the thing all these movies actually have in common: Christmasy-sounding music. (As much as I am loath to admit it, some holiday films — like the instant-classic Violent Night and the family favorite A Christmas Story — don't have romance plots.) How can everything from studio blockbusters to the barely budgeted off-brand streamer original have that jingle bell sound? Watch and find out.
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