Recommended reading / viewing / listening

This week: Cranberries as a Thanksgiving classic / Watch the history of presidents / 2025 hurricane season enters history books / Texas men planned to invade Haitian island and enslave women / MAGA singles look for love / Potential 2028 presidential candidates aren’t shy about ambitions

Most of these items come from my social media networks. Follow me on BlueSky, Instagram, Tumblr, LinkedIn, and Facebook for more fascinating videos, photos, articles, essays, and criticism. Learn more about my academic background here and about me here.

1. 2025 Atlantic hurricane season marked by striking contrasts
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration | November 2025
“The 2025 Atlantic hurricane season, which officially ends on November 30, was notable for its striking contrast — wavering between periods of relative calm and bursts of intense activity, generating very powerful storms. Overall, the season fell within the predicted ranges for named storms, hurricanes, and major hurricanes issued in NOAA’s seasonal outlooks.”

2. How are Americans using AI? Evidence from a nationwide survey
By Malihe Alikhani, Ben Harris, and Sanjay Patnaik | Brookings | November 2025
“The rapid emergence of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology has heightened the need to better understand its adoption across various aspects of social and economic applications. In this essay, we present new evidence on the extent of AI adoption across a host of dimensions, including use in households, by employees in the workplace, and by owners and workers in small businesses.”

3. The botany behind why cranberries became a Thanksgiving staple
By Serina DeSalvio | The Conversation :: PBS Newshour | November 2023
“Cranberry cultivation began in 1816 in Massachusetts, where Revolutionary War veteran Henry Hall found that covering cranberry bogs with sand fertilized the vines and retained water around their roots. From there, the fruit spread throughout the U.S. Northeast and Upper Midwest.”
Also see, from the Associated Press: Remember to give thanks to yourself during the holidays and beyond

4. How food assistance programs can feed families and nourish their dignity
By Joslyn Brenton, Alyssa Tindall, and Senbagam Virudachalam | The Conversation | November 2025
“Food is not just a matter of survival. What and how you eat is also a symbol of your social status. Being unable to reliably feed your family healthy and nutritious foods in a way that aligns with your values can feel undignified. It can make people feel unseen and less important than others.”

5. Texas adds new ID restrictions on vehicle registrations and renewals
By Ayden Runnels and Alex Nguyen | The Texas Tribune | November 2025
“The restrictions, which went into effect on Nov. 18, could upend the ability of many undocumented residents to legally own vehicles.”

6. ‘The blight seeped into your soul’: How ‘Seven’ reflected fears in the US in the 1980s
By Tom Joudrey | BBC News | November 2025
“David Fincher’s gritty thriller commented on the urban blight and religious conservatism of the Reagan era. But it also predicted our obsession with true crime today.”

7. The Vanquishing of Military.com
By Liam Scott | Columbia Journalism Review | November 2025
“Former staffers say a new owner dealt the respected publication a death blow when service members and veterans needed it most.”

8. How Gabbard’s ‘hunters’ pounced on secret CIA warehouse for Kennedy files
By Phil Stewart and Jonathan Landay | Reuters | November 2025
“The case casts new light on the tension between two forces in Washington, the CIA and Gabbard’s ODNI, as Trump appointees sought to act on the president’s orders to swiftly release the full accounting of Kennedy’s murder in 1963, as well as the high-profile 1968 assassinations of Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr.”

9. Texas men indicted in plot to take over Haitian island and enslave women and children
By Kristin Wright | NPR | November 2025
“Gavin Weisenburg, 21 years old of Allen, and Tanner Thomas, 20 years old of Argyle, along with other co-conspirators planned to murder all men on the Haitian territory before taking over the island, and enslaving the women and children as ‘sex slaves.’ “

10. McCarthyism Is Back. You Can Thank This Woman.
By Joshua Kendall | Politico Magazine | November 2025
“History has overlooked the real architect of Joe McCarthy’s purges: his wife.”

11. US leaders are erasing Black history. That threatens our future
By Stacey Abrams and Esosa Osa | The Guardian | October 2025
“DEI is being used as a smokescreen to roll back progress and consolidate power. The goal is to rewrite our nation’s story”

12. Potential presidential candidates are less coy about 2028 plans: ‘Of course I’m thinking about it’
By Jill Colvin | Associated Press | November 2025
“With no clear party leader and Democratic voters raring for a fight, some could-be candidates are being far more transparent about their intentions, doing away with pretensions as they try to gain maximum visibility at a time when authenticity is in high demand.”

13. Texas’s Water Wars
By Rachel Monroe | The New Yorker | November 2025
“As industrial operations move to the state, residents find that their drinking water has been promised to companies.”

14. A ‘win-win’ partnership brings a surge of reporting firepower to hyperlocal news outlets around Boston
By Sarah Scire | Nieman Lab | November 2025
“The Boston University Newsroom has published nearly 400 news articles in hyperlocal outlets in and around the city.”

15. The Encyclopedic Genius of Melville’s Masterpiece
By Suzanne Conklin Akbari | LitHub | August 2019
“Time is not the principle of order in this book; it is a manifestation of chaos. Instead, the principle of order in Moby Dick is that of the encyclopedia, foreshadowed in the book’s first pages and then bursting forth exuberantly in the classification and the anatomy of the whale.”

16. MAGA singles are looking for love in Washington. It’s a challenge.
By Jesús Rodríguez | The Washington Post | October 2025
“The politics of trying to find a partner in an overwhelmingly liberal city can be tricky: ‘My partner can’t think I’m a fascist. That’s crazy.’ “

17. Mariners Wanted: Six-Figure Salaries and Months at Sea
By Peter Eavis | The New York Times | November 2025
“There are few American mariners today because only a small proportion of international commercial shipping is done with vessels flying under the American flag, meaning they are registered in the United States, follow the Coast Guard’s regulations and employ American citizens. The jobs pay well but often require people to be away from home for months at a time.”

18. The Presidents
American Experience :: PBS | 1990-2025
John and Abigail Adams | Abraham and Mary Lincoln: A House Divided
Ulysses S. Grant | Murder of a President (James Garfield) | TR
Woodrow Wilson | FDR | Truman | Eisenhower | The Kennedys and JFK
LBJ | Nixon | Jimmy Carter | Reagan | George H.W. Bush | Clinton
George W. Bush
Also see: The American Vice President | Eleanor Roosevelt | Kissinger
(Many of these films are also available on YouTube.)

19. Midnight Cowboy: On the Fringe
By Mark Harris | The Criterion Collection | May 2018
“As a New York movie, as a barrier breaker in terms of adult content, as a representation of a new, more daring Hollywood, as a buddy film, and most complexly as, if not a gay movie, a movie that at least helped to make the notion of a gay movie possible, the film represents a true dividing line, albeit not one that everybody immediately recognized.”

20. An Intoxicating 500-Year-Old Mystery
By Ariel Sabar | The Atlantic | August 2024
“The Voynich Manuscript has long baffled scholars—and attracted cranks and conspiracy theorists. Now a prominent medievalist is taking a new approach to unlocking its secrets.”


Interested in more like this? Since June 2011, Stillness of Heart‘s “Recommended” series has accumulated a magnificent collection of articles, essays, music, podcasts, historical analyses, cultural reflections, and documentaries. Scroll through the offerings here.

Recommended reading / viewing / listening

Exploring how animals keep us healthy / Meet the people who love killer plants / Dogs and dating apps / Studying a tsunami in real time / Mocha Dick, the whale that inspired ‘Moby Dick’ / Most emails between Greg Abbott and Elon Musk are redacted

This week: Exploring how animals keep us healthy / Meet the people who love killer plants / Dogs and dating apps / Studying a tsunami in real time / Mocha Dick, the whale that inspired ‘Moby Dick’ / Most emails between Greg Abbott and Elon Musk are redacted

Most of these items come from my social media networks. Follow me on BlueSky, Instagram, Tumblr, LinkedIn, and Facebook for more fascinating videos, photos, articles, essays, and criticism. Learn more about my academic background here and about me here.

1. People are tired of dating apps. Can dogs help?
By Maggie Penman | The Washington Post | November 2025
“A new dating app matches people through their shared love of dogs. There’s even an option to make a profile for your pup.”

2. ‘The American Revolution’
By Ken Burns, Sarah Botstein and David Schmidt | Florentine Films :: PBS | November 2025
“Thirteen American colonies unite in rebellion, win an eight-year war to secure their independence, and establish a new form of government that would inspire democratic movements at home and around the globe. What begins as a political clash between colonists and the British government grows into a bloody struggle that will engage more than two dozen nations and forever change the world.”
Also see, from The Hollywood Reporter: Who Plays Who in Ken Burns’ The American Revolution

3. Gov. Greg Abbott was ordered to release emails with Elon Musk. Most of the 1,400 pages are blacked out.
By Lauren McGaughy | The Texas Newsroom | November 2025
“The heavily redacted emails reveal little of the two men’s relationship.”

4. Want to build a sustainable local newsroom? These 21 steps will help you get there, a new report finds
By Sophie Culpepper | Nieman Lab | November 2025
“Having dedicated staff to generate revenue was transformational to an organization’s chances of sustainability.”

5. Welcome to the killer plant club
By Ashley Stimpson | The Washington Post | October 2025
“Inside the passionate fellowship of carnivorous plant enthusiasts.”

6. ‘It sounded kind of crazy:’ How ripples in the high atmosphere warned scientists of a tsunami in real time
By Chris Baraniuk | BBC News | November 2025
“Tsunamis are notoriously difficult to spot on the open ocean as they race towards shore. But in the summer of 2025, scientists watched one unfold as it happened.”

7. What is the role of native bees in the United States?
U.S. Geological Survey | June 2025
“Some of the native bees are specialists on the very plants that we use for food, including squashes, pumpkins, gourds, and the annual sunflower.”
Also see, from The Washington Post: Species That Save Us

8. On ‘Mocha Dick,’ the White Whale of the Pacific that Influenced Herman Melville
By Tim Queeney | LitHub | August 2025
“Initially sighted off the coast of the Chilean island of Mocha in the Pacific, the powerful whale was dubbed Mocha Dick. (Dick was a generic name used at the time like Joe is today — Herman Melville follows this convention by naming his literary whale Moby Dick.)”

9. Why people trust influencers more than brands – and what that means for the future of marketing
By Kelley Cours Anderson | The Conversation | November 2025
“Rooted in celebrity culture but driven by digital platforms, the influencer economy represents a powerful force in both commerce and culture. I’m an expert on digital consumer research, and I see the rise of influencers as an important evolution in the relationship between companies, consumers and creators.”

10. ‘Showgirls’ Nearly Killed Her Career. Now She’s Touring the World With It
By David Canfield | The Hollywood Reporter | November 2025
“Elizabeth Berkley’s biggest year onscreen in more than a decade — with a role in Ryan Murphy’s soapy legal drama ‘All’s Fair’ — happens to coincide with the 30th anniversary of her most infamous performance. She’s seizing the moment.”

11. How the Web Was Lost
By James Gleick | The New York Review of Books | December 2025
“The Internet was not meant to suck.”

12. Up and Then Down
By Nick Paumgarten | The New Yorker | November 2025
“The longest smoke break of Nicholas White’s life began at around eleven o’clock on a Friday night in October 1999.”

13. Why I Run
By Nicholas Thompson | The Atlantic | October 2025
“I took up the sport to be like my father. I kept going because he stopped.”

14. Leaf-Peeping in Texas Is a High-Risk, High(ish)-Reward Activity
By Amanda Albee | Texas Monthly | October 2025
“We set off on a quest for fall foliage at three state parks in East Texas.”

15. Scrutiny grows over Trump competence – but can an unfit president be removed?
By Adam Gabbatt | The Guardian | October 2025
“Impeachment and 25th Amendment offer routes for removal – but experts say the system is set up to protect the president.”

16. An Army of Robot Telescopes in Texas Makes the Stars Feel Closer Than Ever
By Kenneth Chang | The New York Times | October 2025
“Starfront Observatories allows amateur astronomers to rent a spot for their telescopes and photograph the cosmos over a high-speed data connection.”

17. It’s Pedro Pascal’s World Now
By Dave Holmes | Esquire | April 2023
“After years of grinding away, the suddenly-everywhere actor is enjoying fame and near-universal adulation thanks to his dual streaming blockbusters The Last of Us and The Mandalorian.”

18. The Boys of ’36
American Experience :: PBS | August 2017
“In the summer of 1936, nine working class young men from the University of Washington took the rowing world and the nation by a storm when they captured the gold medal at the Olympic Games in Berlin … giving hope to a nation struggling to emerge from the depths of the Great Depression.”

19. Scientists say North Atlantic right whale population slowly increasing
Associated Press | October 2025
“Once hunted to the brink of extinction, the most venerable of the leviathans now numbers 384, up eight from past year.”

20. The Tree of Life: Let the Wind Speak
By Kent Jones | The Criterion Collection | September 2018
“I think that for Malick the imitation of nature is intensified and purified to such a degree that it becomes a devotional act.”


Interested in more like this? Since June 2011, Stillness of Heart‘s “Recommended” series has accumulated a magnificent collection of articles, essays, music, podcasts, historical analyses, cultural reflections, and documentaries. Scroll through the offerings here.

Recommended reading / viewing / listening

The inevitable end to the shutdown / MTV in the 1980s / Is it time for Cat. 6 hurricanes? / The $2,000 tariff dividend idea / The golden age of Costco / Cormac McCarthy shares his inner self

This week: The inevitable end to the shutdown / MTV in the 1980s / Is it time for Cat. 6 hurricanes? / The $2,000 tariff dividend idea / The golden age of Costco / Cormac McCarthy shares his inner self

Most of these items come from my social media networks. Follow me on BlueSky, Instagram, Tumblr, LinkedIn, and Facebook for more fascinating videos, photos, articles, essays, and criticism. Learn more about my academic background here and about me here.

1. Hurricanes: Do we need a new ‘Category 6’?
Sky News | October 2025
“There are five levels on what is called the Saffir-Simpson scale. But with storms getting stronger, should another category be added to it?”
Also see, from The New Yorker: The Hidden Devastation of Hurricanes

2. Beyond the Apocalypse
By Amitav Ghosh | Equator | October 2025
“How visions of catastrophe shape the ‘climate solutions’ imposed by aid agencies.”

3. What to know about Trump’s plan to give Americans a $2,000 tariff dividend
By Paul Wiseman | Associated Press | November 2025
“Budget experts scoffed at the idea, which conjured memories of the Trump administration’s short-lived plan for DOGE dividend checks financed by billionaire Elon Musk’s federal budget cuts.”

4. Inside the CIA’s secret mission to sabotage Afghanistan’s opium
By Warren P. Strobel | The Washington Post | November 2025
“In a decade-long covert operation, the U.S. spy agency dropped modified poppy seeds in an attempt to degrade the potency of Afghanistan’s billion-dollar opium crop.”

5. Why the Democrats Finally Folded
By Russell Berman and Jonathan Lemire | The Atlantic | November 2025
“This is how the government shutdown was always going to end.”

6. Sneaky viruses can hide in your body and bounce back even if you’re cured
By Gabrielle Emanuel | NPR | October 2025
“Often the human hosts have no idea. They’d fallen ill, then appeared to beat the virus. Their blood tested negative. They show no symptoms.”

7. What the Fascist Tech Bros Get Wrong About Prometheus
By James Folta | LitHub | October 2025
“Why a statue of this Greek myth? Prometheus is often seen as the patron saint of innovative risk, but there are some parts of the myth that the tech bros are overlooking.”

8. The Wayback Machine’s snapshots of news homepages plummet after a ‘breakdown’ in archiving projects
By Andrew Deck and Hanaa’ Tameez | Nieman Lab | October 2025
“Between May and October 2025, homepage snapshots fell by 87% across 100 news publications.”

9. Couldn’t Care Less
The Santa Fe Institute | December 2017
“Cormac McCarthy in conversation with David Krakauer … reflects on isolation, mathematics, character, and the nature of the unconscious.”

10. A Baleful Legacy
By David A. Bell | The New York Review of Books | November 2025
“Enlightenment writers who proposed ways of improving and even perfecting the human species laid the theoretical foundations of modern racism.”

11. What killed Napoleon’s army? Scientists find clues in DNA from fallen soldiers’ teeth
By Ari Daniel | NPR | October 2025
“In October, Napoleon called his soldiers back after barely engaging the Russian army. It wasn’t a defeat, but it was no win either. And during the march home, winter arrived early.”

12. ‘MTV Was a Lot Like Kabul’
By Tom Freston | New York Magazine | October 2025
“Tequila girls. Coke-dealing staffers. Office fires. In its ‘80s heyday, the network was a wild place with few rules.”

13. Could the internet go offline? Inside the fragile system holding the modern world together
By Aisha Down | The Guardian | October 2025
“Behind every meme and message is creaking, decades-old infrastructure. Internet experts can think of scenarios that could bring it all crashing down …”

14. Still ‘Crazy’ for Patsy Cline
By Holley Snaith | American Heritage | Fall 2025
“Since her untimely death in 1963, the legendary country music star — and the first female to be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame — continues to inspire new audiences and artists.”

15. A Trip to Mars? They’re Ready to Go.
By Alex Vadukul | The New York Times | October 2025
“Fans of the red planet joined scientists at an annual conference sponsored by the Mars Society. One attendee said he would take a ‘one-way ticket’ “

16. Can the Golden Age of Costco Last?
By Molly Fischer | The New Yorker | October 2025
“With its standout deals and generous employment practices, the warehouse chain became a feel-good American institution. In a fraught time, it can be hard to remain beloved.”

17. Walking is good for you. Walking backward can add to the benefits
By Stephen Wade | Associated Press | October 2025
“Backward walking, also known as retro walking or reverse walking, could add variety and value to an exercise routine, when done safely. Turning around not only provides a change of view, but also puts different demands on your body.”

18. The Perfect Crime
American Experience :: PBS | April 2018
“When Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb, two well-educated college students from a wealthy suburb of Chicago, confessed to the brutal murder of 14-year-old Bobby Franks, the story made headlines across the country. The unlikely killers not only admitted their guilt, but also bragged that they had committed the crime simply for the thrill of it.”

19. The Breakfast Club: Smells Like Teen Realness
By David Kamp | The Criterion Collection | January 2018
“This was John Hughes s great gift in his early films as a screenwriter and director: he understood the whirling, emotionally inconsistent state of being an American teenager better than anyone else working his beat in the 1980s.”

20. Lorca
By Melvyn Bragg | In Our Time :: BBC 4 | 2011-2019
Also see: The Minoan Civilisation | Cogito Ergo Sum | The Bhagavad Gita | The Age of the Universe


Interested in more like this? Since June 2011, Stillness of Heart‘s “Recommended” series has accumulated a magnificent collection of articles, essays, music, podcasts, historical analyses, cultural reflections, and documentaries. Scroll through the offerings here.

Recommended reading / viewing / listening

Lady Gaga, the gothic groundbreaker / Time to rethink obituaries / Coffee has a long term effect on health / The ‘new’ Middle East may not exist / Some in MAGA want Trump to go harder / Napping smarter

This week: Lady Gaga, the gothic groundbreaker / Time to rethink obituaries / Coffee has a long term effect on health / The ‘new’ Middle East may not exist / Some in MAGA want Trump to go harder / Napping smarter

Most of these items come from my social media networks. Follow me on BlueSky, Instagram, Tumblr, LinkedIn, and Facebook for more fascinating videos, photos, articles, essays, and criticism. Learn more about my academic background here and about me here.

1. What you put in your coffee can have an outsize impact on your health
By Trisha Pasricha | The Washington Post | October 2025
“Add no more than 1 teaspoon of sugar and 2 tablespoons of whole milk to each cup. But go ahead and grab another mug; 3½ cups of filtered coffee per day can be good for your health.”

2. A ‘New Middle East’ Is Easier to Declare Than to Achieve
By David Remnick | The New Yorker | October 2025
“As a long-overdue ceasefire takes hold amid the ruins of Gaza, the President’s visit to Jerusalem is more about transactional politics than transformative peace.”

3. A seed bank in England marks 25 years of preserving the world’s plant diversity
By Mustakim Hasnath | Associated Press | October 2025
“The Millennium Seed Bank at the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew holds more than 2.5 billion wild plant seeds from around 40,000 species. The seeds are stored in sealed glass jars and foil packets, and are preserved in temperatures of minus 20 degrees Celsius ( minus 4 Fahrenheit) to guard against extinction.”

4. In D.C., the Arc de Trump Goes Up as the Local Workforce Shuts Down
By Michael Schaffer | Politico | October 2025
“Trump really wants a shining capital. Can you do that while battering the city economy?”

5. Obituaries are important, worth rethinking and reviving
By Kristen Hare | Poynter | November 2021
“Here’s what we discovered from 2.5 years of work, a fellowship and a newsletter.”

6. Putins All the Way Down
By Joshua Yaffa | Foreign Affairs | October 2025
“The Kremlin no longer holds to any democratic pretensions. Putin appears destined to rule indefinitely, and even far down the ballot, independent candidates are kept from running.”

7. The Rise of RFK Jr.
Frontline :: PBS | October 2025
“Tracing the dramatic and controversial rise of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., ‘Frontline’ examines how the scion of a storied dynasty endured tragedy and scandal, broke with the Democratic Party and his family, stoked conspiracy theories, and is reshaping government and public health.”

8. Latinx Shakespeares of the 20th century
By Carla Della Gatta | Shakespeare & Beyond :: Folger Shakespeare Library | October 2025
“Latinx peoples and cultures have been a rich part of American Shakespearean performance for more than 85 years.”

9. The Conservatives Who Think Trump Isn’t Going Far Enough
By David Austin Walsh | Boston Review | October 2025
“MAGA’s base is more fractured than it looks.”

10. Lady Gaga Was Always Gothic. Now the World Has Caught Up to Her.
By Wesley Morris | Cannonball :: The New York Times | October 2025
“At a moment when other pop stars are flirting with dark spectacle, Gaga’s ‘Mayhem’ tour shows that she has perfected it.”

11. ‘Shall We Have a King?’
By William E. Leuchtenburg | American Heritage | Fall 2025
“Some delegates at the Constitutional Convention wanted a strong executive, while others feared the American president might become a king.”

12. How a ‘dark fleet’ of tankers helped a Mexican cartel build a fuel-smuggling empire
By Stefanie Eschenbacher, Shariq Khan and Stephen Eisenhammer | Reuters | October 2025
“The Jalisco New Generation Cartel has mastered the use of tankers to smuggle fuel to Mexico. U.S. oil players are helping them. Reuters traces one ship’s brazen journey.”

13. Revenge is never simple — neither is the legacy of ‘Kill Bill’
By Caroline Siede | Paste | October 2025
“Like The Bride herself, Kill Bill remains a messy, contradictory, thoroughly kickass duology.”

14. The secret to waking up from a nap feeling refreshed (and not groggy)
By Andee Tagle | NPR | October 2025
“Ever woken up from a nap and felt more tired? Or so discombobulated you forgot which planet you were on?”

15. Francis Ford Coppola Forced to Sell His Custom $1 Million Watch After ‘Megalopolis’ Debacle
By Laurie Brookins | The Hollywood Reporter | October 2025
“The one-of-a-kind F.P. Journe watch will be on display in New York before its sale in December. The director spent $120 million of his own money on the film, which grossed just $14.4 million.”

16. Social Ties Help You Live Longer. What Does That Mean for Introverts?
By Dana G. Smith | The New York Times | October 2025
“You don’t have to be the life of every party to reap the health benefits.”

17. A new island erupted from the sea – can it show us how nature works without human interference?
By Patrick Greenfield | The Guardian | October 2025
“The volcanic island of Surtsey emerged in the 1960s, and scientists say studying its development offers hope for damaged ecosystems worldwide.”

18. Stonewall Uprising
American Experience :: PBS | June 2023
“When police raided the Stonewall Inn, a popular gay bar in the Greenwich Village section of New York City on June 28, 1969, the street erupted into violent protests that lasted for the next six days. The Stonewall riots, as they came to be known, marked a major turning point in the modern gay civil rights movement in the United States and around the world.”

19. Inside Llewyn Davis: The Sound of Music
By Kent Jones | The Criterion Collection | January 2016
“The world of the Coens is the world of everyday heroes and scoundrels, of you and me and the stranger sitting across from us, the ordinary citizens trying to make sense of life as we live it, who have neither the time nor the wherewithal to develop into the Transformative Figures of Our Age.”

20. The Inca
By Melvyn Bragg | In Our Time :: BBC 4 | 2011-2019
Also see: The Taiping Rebellion | Maimonides | Aristotle’s Poetics | The Mexican Revolution


Interested in more like this? Since June 2011, Stillness of Heart‘s “Recommended” series has accumulated a magnificent collection of articles, essays, music, podcasts, historical analyses, cultural reflections, and documentaries. Scroll through the offerings here.

Rebecca Aguilar

#CallingAllJournalists Initiative | Reporter | Media Watchdog | Mentor | Latinas in Journalism

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Observations on the Hudson River as it passes through New York City. The section of the Hudson which passes through New York is historically known as the North River, called this by the Dutch to distinguish it from the Delaware River, which they knew as the South River. This stretch of the Hudson is still often referred to as the North River by local mariners today. All photos copyright Daniel Katzive unless otherwise attributed. For more frequent updates, please follow northriverblog on Facebook or Instagram.

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