Which Fyre Festival documentary is most worth watching?
Fyre Fraud and Fyre: The Greatest Party That Never Happened reviewed
Fyre Fraud and Fyre: The Greatest Party That Never Happened reviewed
Destroyer reviewed
As told to Dominic Green
The answer to the race conundrum was to split the difference between the minorities, and give most of the awards to white actors
The Mule reviewed
From our UK edition
This week, I’m casting the pod with author and foreign policy analyst Robert Kaplan. At the end of the Cold War, the United States was both the most powerful country in history and without a challenger. Since them, however, America’s reach in foreign policy has consistently exceeded the grasp of its bureaucrats and elected politicians.
20 predictions for 2019
Holmes & Watson reviewed
From our UK edition
In Western democracies, literature no longer matters to politics. Once, literature and politics could co-exist on the same typewriter or in the same person: George Orwell in Britain, André Malraux in France. But that was a long time ago. Still, the powers of politics remain linguistic, whether bureaucratic or rhetorical: the war criminal at his
Vice reviewed
Christmas came early for Turkey
Don’t be fooled by the Zionist narrative!
It depends on which year
From our UK edition
This week, I’m casting the pod with a congeries of crack art critics from The New Criterion: James Panero, Benjamin Riley and Andrew Shea. In the background, instead of sleigh bells and carol singers, you can dimly hear the smashing of plates and the roar of laughter as The New Criterion’s Christmas party gets under
Mary Queen of Scots reviewed
Kissinger is right about Trump, of course
From our UK edition
As the old year dies, our thoughts turn to what happens next. What better time, then, to cast a seasonally morbid, deeply philosophical, and curiously uplifting pod with David Saunders of the J. Paul Getty Museum in California? The Getty Villa’s new exhibition, Underworld: Imagining the Afterlife is all about ideas of what happened next
Divide and Conquer: The Story of Roger Ailes reviewed
From our UK edition
RIP Pete Shelley. I would suggest three minutes silence, but Buzzcocks would have said it all in 2 minutes and 59 seconds. When I spoke to Shelley a few days ago for my podcast ‘The Green Room’, he was in good spirits, looking forward to another busy year, and especially looking forward to performing the
It’s a mediocre vehicle that promotes Queen’s back catalog and some contemporary virtues