As Americans prepare to head into the kitchen for the holiday season, we wanted to know: What are the recipes that define American home cooking? We asked dozens of well-known chefs, cookbook writers, culinary historians to weigh in—not only on the recipes that changed American cookery, but the ones that influenced their own lives. The result is a fascinating, encyclopedic history of American cooking in the modern era.
Slate Magazine
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Slate is a daily online magazine and podcast network that helped invent the voice of the web. Founded in 1996, Slate is a general-interest publication offering analysis and commentary about politics, news, business, technology, and culture. Slate’s strong editorial voice and witty take on current events have been recognized with numerous awards, including the National Magazine Award for General Excellence. Slate’s podcast network, established in 2005 with the launch of Political Gabfest, produces more than 20 podcasts, including Slow Burn, Culture Gabfest, What Next, Decoder Ring and more. Slate.com reaches more than 25M unique visitors and averages more than 40M pageviews every month. Slate's podcast network garnered more than 190 million downloads in 2022.
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- Book and Periodical Publishing
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Updates
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Slate Magazine reposted this
Find out what it means to me: In this very fraught month, my new Hit Parade episode is all about the natural woman, the legend, the Queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin. Sure, she had that regal title. But Franklin didn’t just want to be worshipped—she wanted hits. And she got them, on her terms. In the ’60s, when showtunes and standards didn’t work, Aretha switched to gritty R&B and gospel harmonies—and started topping the charts. In the ’70s, when she recorded a live album in a church, it became her all-time bestseller. In the ’80s, when the MTV era changed the game, she did New Wave synthpop her way and scaled the charts again. In the ’90s, she tried house, hip-hop and New Jack Swing, scoring hits deep into her fifties. How did Franklin become a Queen, one hit at a time? In these dark times, if you need some life-giving soul and maybe a little prayer, join me as I explain how Aretha became an icon with self-respect, amazing grace and a deeper love. 💒🎙️👸🏾 LINK: https://lnkd.in/eUZTK5rV
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Slate Magazine reposted this
If the election still has you asking “How could they,” Night Is Not Eternal has an answer, but also argues that’s the wrong question.
How Could Latinos Vote for Trump? A Great New HBO Documentary Suggests That’s the Wrong Question.
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You’d think workplace Halloween celebrations would be enjoyable: It’s a holiday centered around costumes and candy, after all. And many offices do manage to make Halloween a good time. Sometimes, though, things go awry.
Haunted Houses Have Nothing on the Real Scariest Halloween Location
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Slate Magazine reposted this
As we near the end of October, I’ve got another Hit Parade—“The Bridge” episode to share (link in the comments), following up our U2 episode. I’m delighted to welcome back friend, colleague and esteemed critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine to dive deeper on the Irish quartet. Tom reviewed literally all of U2’s studio albums for AllMusic and has thought a lot about the unusual chemistry that has kept them aloft for nearly five decades. Tom says the band couldn't exist with Bono, and he, in turn, needs them to carry off his rock-star visions. I even pinned Tom down on his U2 top five—you’ll be fascinated to learn where he places their maligned disc 𝘗𝘰𝘱. Plus, trivia—we have a former Jeopardy! contestant this month—and a next-episode preview that prepares us for an anxious November by saying a little prayer for you. 🎤✝️🙏🏼 LINK: https://lnkd.in/eX__4KvF
U2 Always Knew They Were Rock Stars.
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Slate Magazine reposted this
I talked to Rachel Bloom about, death, dogs, and trees that smell like [redacted]
The New Netflix Special From One of Our Most Brilliant Comedians Goes to a Very Dark Place
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Slate Magazine reposted this
On your knees, boy: My new Hit Parade episode is about those four Irish lads with the devout hearts, big mouths, messianic moves and long roster of hits. So…how *did* U2 do it? Pivoting from the earnest ’80s to the sardonic ’90s, then back again in the 21st century, Bono and the boys outlasted new wave, college rock, grunge and electronica to remain chart-toppers into the era of teenpop and hip-hop. All the while, they were both cool and cringe, getting away with stuff that would have felled other bands…well, until they tried to shove an album onto your iPhone. (I have a theory about that, too.) Am I buggin’ you? I don’t mean to bug ya, but join me as I consider why, for about four-plus decades, we can’t live with or without U2. 🎚️🏳️🌳🪰🎸 LINK: https://lnkd.in/etYzQTaS
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Even if you’d never set foot on one of its planes, Spirit Airlines has already done more for you than you know. https://lnkd.in/grxTcADT
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Before he ran Fox News, Roger Ailes launched a very different kind of channel. When that dream got snatched away from him, Ailes went on a revenge mission—and made a connection with Rupert Murdoch. Listen to Slow Burn: The Rise of Fox News now:
Slow Burn
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When the Fox News Channel launched in 1996, critics called it disorganized, incompetent, and laughably inept. But, during the 2000 election, it captivated the nation – and just maybe changed the fate of American democracy. Listen to Slow Burn: The Rise of Fox News now: https://lnkd.in/gqdG5nEz
The Moment When Fox News Surged to Power
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