The boorishness of Ellen DeGeneres
She didn’t flee oppression; she fled embarrassment
Kara Kennedy is a staff writer at The Spectator World.
She didn’t flee oppression; she fled embarrassment
To call the shots in Trumpland, it helps to operate behind the scenes
The ciders are delicious – and with names like ‘Passionate Patriot IPA,’ a big hit with Trump fans
His mystique appears entirely deliberate
The future of American telecommunications has arrived – and it’s painted gold
Let’s dismantle the lunacy surrounding the ‘fake’ baby bump, shall we?
His path from Charlottesville vintner to crypto kingpin reveals something profound about power in this country
Her absence turned into a pretty lucrative enterprise
The President’s first born is executive branching out
The President’s daughter understands the food revolution
The center has seen half a century of American presidents come and go, each leaving their fingerprints on its marble halls
From our UK edition
In the gilded corridors of Trump Tower and the manicured greens of exclusive golf courses, a new Trump is quietly ascending. At just 17, Kai Trump – the eldest of the President’s grandchildren – is executing what appears to be a carefully orchestrated entry into public life, blending the traditional pathways of political families with the modern
Both women have discovered the same lucrative truth: in the modern marketplace of ideas, victimhood sells
They have morphed more broadly from modest celebrations into full-throttle wealth and status flexes
In contrast to her predecessors, the Press Secretary refuses to carry a binder of notes
What happens when the king tires of someone else having the spotlight?
Don’t be surprised if, come 2032, she tries to become the first woman to break the glass ceiling. And then sings about it
Let’s not let Megs delude herself that her throwing an apron on and frying chicken for her husband is helping anyone
From our UK edition
Washington, D.C. ‘What made you open a restaurant?’ I ask Bart Hutchins, the owner of Butterworth’s, a French-style bistro turned Republican hangout, frequented by the youthful wings of the Grand Old Party. It’s home to figures from the intellectual right such as Curtis Yarvin and darlings of New Right media including Natalie Winters, the increasingly
The second coming of a First Lady