free hit
counters

Occasional literary links, amusements, culture, politics, and rants

Enter The Daily Beast

October 6, 2008 | Comments Off

Former New Yorker editor Tina Brown’s The Daily Beast — which takes its name from Evelyn Waugh’s Scoop — has launched.

As a longtime admirer of Brown (in a city where contempt for powerful women who are actually smart sometimes seems de rigueur), I was excited when my friend Bryan Keefer invited me to be part of the site’s Buzz Board. Today’s recommendations include Bill Clinton on “three bailout-related books: Michael Heller’s Gridlock Economy (about hoarding resources), David M. Smick’s The World Is Curved (why things could get much worse), and Larry M. Bartel’s Unequal Democracy (on how partisanship has hurt the poor).”

Also on the board: Christiane Amanpour, Qubad Talabani, and many others, including, from the looks of it (top right), Rachel Maddow(!).
 

Rather than starting a new post, while we’re on the subject of the bailout, I’ll just tack this here: Be sure to read about the 2004 SEC meeting in which investment bank leaders — including Paulson — convinced the agency to “unshackle billions of dollars held in reserve as a cushion against losses on their investments.”

The fox, Max observes (in email), is guarding the henhouse. Yep, says GMB, and “he’s hungry for his chicken dinner.”

Comments

Comments are closed.

On Twitter

  • 'Charlie and the Chocolate Factory' reissue includes missing chapter. http://bit.ly/9EPd8H http://bit.ly/a5jxHZ (via @galleycat) 17 mins ago
  • .@GrantaMag's sex issue is available in the iPhone store, for £1.19: http://bit.ly/aLJXHr 1 hr ago
  • McSweeney's seeks to award $2,500 to a female writer, age 32 or younger, of 'outrageous lyricism and heart': http://bit.ly/c2g4oS 1 hr ago
  • .@BookCourt Have thought about writing to the shooter's grandkids, but it's a little awkward to know how to begin. 2 hrs ago
  • Er, I meant to say that a lot of amateur genealogists want to find out that THEY'RE (not their) related to Queen Elizabeth, or something. 2 hrs ago
  • .@BookCourt Also, one of my granddad's (supposedly thirteen, I've found six) wives shot him in the stomach. http://bit.ly/cr09l3 2 hrs ago
  • Recently I joined 23andme, which does genetics-based genealogy, and it's hilarious to see people trying to wriggle out of cold, hard science 2 hrs ago
  • Turns out a lot of people don't really want their trees tied to yours on ancestry.com when you put this kind of stuff on there. 2 hrs ago
  • And after getting out of jail, he came after my great-granddad in retaliation for his testimony at the trial. 2 hrs ago
  • Last month I found deeper background in old Texas criminal cases. Guy he killed had been convicted of attempting to rape his stepdaughter. 2 hrs ago
  • A couple years ago I verified the story about my great-granddad killing a man (in self-defense) with a hay hook. http://bit.ly/dpf5Yh 2 hrs ago
  • The genealogical information available online these days, if you're willing to hunt in multiple archives, is amazing. 2 hrs ago
  • 1,700 recorded oral histories from immigrants who came through Ellis Island available free online starting today: http://bit.ly/cTaBpX 2 hrs ago
  • More updates...

Subscribe

FTC Disclaimer

Search

Archives