Slaves of the Colbert-industrial complex

So why is it appalling when the kid sees an ad for sugar-infused cereal on TV and asks us to buy some, but it’s totally okay to buy the sugar-infused ice cream that Stephen Colbert has been flogging on TV and feed it to said kid?

Because it’s all meant ironically, of course! (I can’t wait for the Colbert-logo Hummer.)

How will the Wolf survive?

This Paul Wolfowitz World Bank scandal, while it’s lots of fun to rant about and has just reminded me of a great Los Lobos album that I used to own in vinyl, is starting to nag at me a little.

Thing is, Wolfowitz faced a really difficult choice when President Bush foisted him upon the World Bank. The love of his life, or at least the …

Welfare reform, Dutch style

Meet permanently unemployed Dutch guy Gertjan van Beijnum (from today’s Volkskrant, translation mine):

The ex art school student stands in the middle of his room in a former squatters’ dwelling, an old hospital in the center of Den Bosch. Since he broke off his studies in 1979, he’s been unemployed. For 28 years now he’s been receiving a

It’s tough being Ben Bernanke

One of my chief goals in life was realized this morning when I was quoted as an expert alumnus in The Daily Princetonian:

The convergence of a slowing economy and rising inflation may present Bernanke with his greatest challenge yet. “Greenspan had this tailwind that he didn’t have any situations like [that convergence]. There’s no clear

Midtown Manhattan’s intense need for burritos

In Birmingham, Ala., where I used to live, lunch places start to fill up around 11:30 a.m. New York isn’t like that–the lunch rush hits here around 1. So when I headed out to look for food today at about 10 minutes before noon (I had gotten to work very early this morning, and needed sustenance), I had the brilliant idea of heading …

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