How Trump went from disgraced insurrectionist to Iowa caucus winner
This piece from Vox's newest senior correspondent, Eric Levitz, is the definitive read on how we got here: to a point where former president Donald Trump's third candidacy for president — even as he faces multiple felony charges — feels somewhere between likely and inevitable. It's a story not just about Republican voters' and elites' choices, but about the structural factors that make modern American politics the way it is.
📹 How Michigan explains American politics
Speaking of why American politics is the way that it is, this deep dive from Vox's video team into the politics of one state and its shifts in recent years — and what it says about America as a whole — is riveting. Worth watching whether or not you think you know the story of what has happened over the last eight years.
Ultraviolet light can kill almost all the viruses in a room. Why isn't it everywhere?
Like many people over the last two winters, I have spent the past several months plagued by a seemingly endless series of head colds. So I was fascinated by senior correspondent Dylan Matthews' look at a technology that could make indoor virus transmission much less likely — and the unknowns and barriers that explain why you might never have heard about it. (I hadn't!)
What the FAA gets right about airplane regulation
I learned so much from this piece (originally part of the Future Perfect newsletter) from Vox senior writer Kelsey Piper — not just about why kids under 2 are allowed to fly on their parents' lap even as car seat regulations get stricter, but about how to think about risk in the broader sense and why it's important to consider trade-offs in regulation.
🎧 Hollywood's secret musicals
When I found out that three recent movies — Wonka, The Color Purple, and the new Mean Girls — were all musicals, I assumed I was surprised because I don't follow movie news closely enough. But it turns out that the marketing for these movies deliberately obscured that they were musicals — a mystery that this episode of Today, Explained dissects thoroughly, with some truly delightful sound design.
Something weird is happening to these Alpine goats. Scientists say it's an ominous sign.
Okay, come on. How can you not click on this headline from senior environmental reporter Benji Jones?! (And in its spirit, I'm not going to tell you what the "something weird" is.)
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