For years, St. Louis has had a long-running saga called the
city versus the New Life Evangelistic Center. The political administration of
the city hated the NLEC, which housed 300 (or more) homeless people a night.
After years of litigation, the city finally won, and the NLEC’s operating
license was revoked. What I didn’t know was how the city’s Central Library was
involved. Ryan Krull at The Millions
has the story.
The New York Times
has issued social media guidelines so that its reporters and editors will avoid
the appearance of partisanship when they use social media. The fact that the
newspaper had to issue this unusual document speaks for itself. Journalists’
reactions also speak for themselves – many believe these guidelines will force
them “not to tell the truth as they see it.” These days, everyone has a truth,
including journalists.
Harvey Weinstein. So much to say. So little to say. Jim
Geraghty at the National Review
explains why Hollywood has lost its right to lecture anyone. Screenwriter Scott
Rosenberg goes further, and indicts the entire film industry. Including
himself. I keep thinking of all those YouTube videos of celebrities telling us
whom we should vote for.
Few today have heard of it, but in 1840, Henry Ainsworth
published a novel called “The Tower of London” which was quite popular in its
time. It included a series of illustrations by George Cruikshank, the same
artist who illustrated several of the serialized novels of Charles Dickens.
Spitalfields Life takes a look at the illustrations, highlighting the “bloody
romance of the tower.”
It was one of my favorite TV shows as a kid, and it became a
code of code phrase (with “Ozzie and Harriett”) for American life in the 1950s
and early 1960s. But perhaps there was more to it than we think. Michael De
Sapio at The Imaginative Conservative
takes a look at “Leave It to Beaver,” and finds a medieval morality play.
And more good stuff.
Faith
Making
a Biblical Inquiry – Charity Singleton Craig.
An
embarrassment – David Warren at Essays in Idleness.
Art and Photography
Nature
Impressions – Tim Good.
James
Mackinnon’s Solo Exhibition – Spitalfields Life.
Chaos
and Thread – J.L. Jacobs at Abstract Magazine.
Life and Culture
Hollywood
Loses the Right to Lecture Anyone – Jim Geraghty at National Review.
Screenwriter
Scott Rosenberg on Harvey Weinstein: Everybody Knew – Deadline Hollywood.
The
Girl in the No. 8 Jersey – John Branch at The New York Times (Hat Tip: J of India).
The
Moral Imagination of ‘Leave It to Beaver’ – Michael De Sapio at The Imaginative Conservative.
What’s
a Library to Do? On Homelessness and Public Spaces – Ryan Krull at The
Millions.
The New York Times Issues Social Media
Guidelines for the Newsroom – The New
York Times. And Neiman Lab’s roundup
of reactions.
What I Want
from the News – Tim Challies.
British Stuff
The
Bloody Romance of the Tower – Spitalfields Life.
Poetry
Autumn
winds stirs the leaves – and memories – Malcolm Guite at Church Times.
The
Anxiety Offices – Lisa Russ Spaar at Image Journal.
Equanimity –
Jerry Barrett at Gerald the Writer.
Fallen
Rising Glory – Tim Good.
Autumn Trees
– Loren Paulsson at World Narratives.
Writing
How
to Finally Get Free of Fear and Just Write – Mick Silva.
This
is How to Write Real Copy for Real People – Ann Kroeker.
Gentri Cover: Let
It Be
Painting: Woman reading in a landscape, oil on canvas by Camille Corot (1869).
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