Free 1 min read
The full Browser features a video and a podcast daily, as well as five outstanding articles. Today, enjoy some of our recent audio and video selections.

Podcast: Nick Cave | The Louis Theroux Podcast. Rock memoir in interview form, conducted by one of the most skilful conversationalists there is (82m 41s)


Podcast: Sudden Russian Death Syndrome | Whale Hunting. Succinct exploration of the unusually high number of deaths among Russia's oligarchs and business leaders in the past two years. Putin may not be to blame for all of them (18m 45s)


Video: 12,000km | Vimeo | Erik Nylander | 28m 03s

A group of Swedish snowboarders want to try out the slopes in Japan, but have decided that they are no longer travelling by air because of the climate crisis. Instead, they take a series of boats and trains across eastern Europe and Russia to get there, documenting their journey through thousands of miles of wintry landscape.


Video: Hold It | YouTube | UCLA Film & Television Archive | 7m 52s

Cats serenade their neighbourhood at night — animated film from Fleischer Studios, Disney’s chief competitor in the 1930s. Note the surrealist touches — the bass disintegrates into the air, the cats chorusing on the branch conjoin to form one singing maw.


Want more? The full Browser sends five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast daily, for less than $1 a week.
Free 1 min read

Italy’s Bridge To Nowhere

Tobias Jones | Unherd | 9th July 2024

Italian leaders, from Ferdinand II to Silvio Berlusconi, have long loved the idea of a bridge across the Strait of Messina. The EU is keen on a road link between Sicily and the mainland too. But it would cost an estimated €13.5 billion, be vulnerable to earthquakes, and obstruct taller ships. Is it just infrastructure for Cosa Nostra? "The bridge won’t link just two mafias, but 20 different gangs" (1,500 words)


How To Feed The Olympics

Jaya Saxena | Eater | 3rd July 2024

Feeding all 15,000 people in the athletes' village at the 2024 Olympics will be hard. Competitors must eat sport-specific diets, and they hail from vastly different food cultures. In two weeks, the team will serve 1.2 million meals and three million bananas will be consumed. The Americans were the most "picky and sensitive" about the menu. The Australians are bringing their own barista (2,000 words)


Feeding all 86 billion neurons in your brain is also a challenge. The full Browser is here to help: get five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast daily, for less than $1 a week - plus discounts available.
Free 1 min read

Logical Fallacies

Amanda Ruggeri | BBC Future | 10th July 2024

Field guide to bad arguments. Being able to spot them is the first step to defeating them. There are seven types: the appeal to ignorance, ad hominem attacks, the slippery slope analogy, the straw man, the appeal to authority, the false dichotomy, and whataboutism. Their use does not necessarily mean the point is wrong; merely that its maker is resorting to underhand tactics to try and win (1,400 words)


A Man Apart

Alan Prendergast | Westword | 16th January 2024

Profile of James Sabatino, America's loneliest prisoner. He is held in the highest security wing of the US's most secure prison. He exists utterly alone but is always watched via cameras in the cell. He is only allowed phone calls with his stepmother and his lawyer. Why? He is not violent, but rather an expert con man with a record of running multi-million-dollar scams from behind bars (3,600 words)


Do you prefer your reading fallacy-free? The full Browser sends five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast daily, for less than $1 a week.
Free 1 min read

The Case For Political Neutrality

Dust To Dust | 4th July 2024

Is silence violence? Intervening in a controversy one knows little about can increase suffering. For example: it seems intuitive to support a ban on the rhino horn trade in South Africa. Yet, such a ban caused horn prices to soar, resulting in increased poaching of rhinos. Political neutrality does not mean withdrawing from politics; it involves cultivating informed opinions before taking action (1,700 words)


A Bug’s Life

Natalie Lawrence | Public Domain Review | 9th July 2024

On Book of Monsters, a 1914 collection of macrophotographs of insects. Its authors, David and Marian Fairchild, created cameras with extension tubes up to twenty feet long to magnify the images, transforming “jumping spiders, weevils, dragonfly nymphs, and other arthropods” into fantastical beasts. The text imagined insects’ perspectives — “a spider from the fly’s point of view is a terrible monster” (1,400 words)

Many things deserve a closer look. Zoom in on something new every day: the full Browser sends five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast daily, for less than $1 a week.
Free 1 min read

Why Haven’t Biologists Cured Cancer?

Ruxandra Teslo | 6th July 2024

A common explanation is that the field of biology suffers from a dearth of talent. Biologists are blamed for being bad at maths, yet the integration of mathematics and computing into genomics, for instance, has not resulted in comparable advancements in biology or medicine. This could be due to “long feedback loops” — lab experiments and clinical trials take a long time to yield results (5,400 words)


Browser classified:

EasyOptOuts.com is a fully-automated tool for removing yourself from the websites that hackers and scammers use to find their victims. Sign-up is quick, easy, and affordable at $20/year, and we'll start removing you right away.

A Book To Read Out Loud

Henry Oliver | The Common Reader | 7th July 2024

On the joys of reading The Hobbit out loud. “Tolkien breaks many rules of writing. He says “suddenly” all the time. He uses “he” multiple times in a sentence, referring to two different people. He constantly breaks the fourth wall to say “of course such and such”. He repeats words, relatively close together. But Tolkien does all of this deliberately. He is not a mere spinner of tales, but a worker of lost languages” (900 words)


Read the finest writing - out loud, if you like. The full Browser sends five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast daily, for less than $1 a week.
Free 1 min read

Gilded Age Privacy

Sohini Desai | Smithsonian | 5th July 2024

The debut of the first Kodak camera in 1888 transformed the way that Americans thought about their own image. Suddenly, anyone could be snapped or "Kodaked" anywhere. By 1905, a third of people in the US were amateur photographers. There were no stock photos nor any laws dealing with this, so companies regularly stole the images of private citizens for their advertisements (1,500 words)


The DMZ At 70

Matthew Longo | LARB | 2nd July 2024

The Demilitarised Zone between North and South Korea was meant to be temporary. Nobody imagined that the ceasefire line would still be there 70 years on, nor that it would have become a tourist attraction: militarised, yet Instagrammable. It is more than a border. It has a culture and a spirit. "It doesn’t just enforce division but also creates, performs, and maintains it" (2,500 words)


Want more? The full Browser sends five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast daily, for less than $1 a week.
Free 1 min read
Five Books features in-depth author interviews recommending five books on a theme. You can read more interviews on the site, or sign up for the newsletter.

Books to Help You Understand British Politics in 2024

Bookseller and former Economist journalist Tom Rowley offers book recommendations on British politics that share expert insight into the backdrop to the UK general election: from a technical discussion of the statistics used by politicians and policy makers to an in-depth exploration of Rawlsian philosophy.


The Best Political Science Fiction

Science fiction has a rich tradition of examining not only space-age technology but political ideology. Arkady Martine, author of the Hugo-award winning A Memory Called Empire, introduces us to political science fiction books that explore systems of government, power hierarchies, and the geopolitics of other planets.


Want more to read? The full Browser sends five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast daily, to keep you fascinated for longer.
Free 1 min read
The full Browser features five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast. Today, enjoy our video and podcast picks.

Video: Fran Lebowitz On Great Writing | YouTube | The Morgan Library | 5m 12s

Fran Lebowitz in her element here — “the closest thing to a human being is a book. I know people think it’s a dog, but they’re wrong”.


Podcast: How Grinders Work Deep Inside | The Science Of Coffee. Debunking myths about grinding coffee, via a detailed look at what happens to the beans inside the device. The conclusion is that after a certain point, spending more money on grinding won't produce a better-tasting cup of coffee (47m 24s)


Want more? The full Browser sends five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast daily, for less than $1 a week.
Free 1 min read

Revolution In The Air

Mark Miodownik | Guardian | 4th July 2024

History of nitrous oxide, also known as laughing gas. Interesting throughout. Samuel Colt funded the development of his revolver by travelling the US giving laughing gas demonstrations. Edgar Allen Poe's cousin George worked out a way to manufacture it as a liquid and distribute it to dentists in canisters. If you give birth in a hospital today, you will still be offered the gas for pain relief (3,700 words)


Moral Luck

Arianne Shahvisi | LRB Blog | 3rd July 2024

On the false comfort of counterfactuals. We tend to assume we would easily pass the moral tests of history — refusing the lure of dictators, declining to join the Nazi Party — but perhaps we are just lucky not to have to decide. "Recognising the role of moral luck encourages empathy and humility, but it also threatens the notions of culpability that help us to make sense of evil" (1,000 words)


Here's a counterfactual to ponder: if you'd received the full version of this Browser edition, you would have enjoyed five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast...
Free 1 min read

The Bird Detectives

Andrew Zaleski | Washingtonian | 3rd July 2024

When a bird flies into a aeroplane's engine, whatever "gunk" is leftover is posted to a team of forensic ornithologists in Washington DC. These "bird detectives" inspect 11,000 dead birds a year. They identify bird corpses, sometimes just from a single feather. Their suggestions about pest control and habitat management aim to reduce the number of fatal bird strikes and improve air safety (2,500 words)


The Shareholder Supremacy

Edward Zitron | Where's Your Ed At? | 1st July 2024

It is not your imagination: today's companies don't care about customers. Instead, the shareholder reigns supreme. "Our economy is run by people that have never built anything, running companies that they contort to make a number go up for shareholders they rarely meet." This is all a short-termist shell game, in which the only winning moves are those that increase company value (11,000 words)

Want more? The full Browser sends five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast daily, for less than $1 a week.
Free 1 min read

Like Shining From Shook Foil

Shore Leave | 30th June 2024

Make travel intrepid again. “Pursue your personal canon to its obscure points of origin. Assign yourself highly personalised and esoteric errands. There are more people crossing the seas on vessels of their own creation than in any previous age — improvised rail carts and mine shafts. Embed yourself in odd institutions, real or invented. Take jobs that let you into the back rooms of cities” (2,200 words)


American Dream Is Cursed

Meghan Boilard | Off-Topic | 1st July 2024

Visual history of American Dream, a New Jersey colossus that had once promised a staggering catalogue of amenities. The developers originally called it Xanadu, possibly dooming the project with the ill-fated name. Beset by difficulties, the space is now a maze of “deserted corridors, stairways abruptly interrupted by ceiling, unsettling murals, and an eerily quiet Nickelodeon Universe indoor theme park” (5,000 words)

Want an even bigger shining dream? The full Browser sends five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast daily, for less than $1 a week.
Free 1 min read

The Augustinian Settlement

Nathan Goldwag | Goldwag’s Journal On Civilisation | 1st July 2024 | U

Historians mark 27 BCE as the year the Roman Republic transitioned into the Roman Empire, when Augustus became its first Emperor — without actually establishing an “Empire” or the office of “Emperor”. The Republican system was retained, while a dynasty that would last centuries was formed. How was this done? Extraordinarily detailed account of the forces that shaped Rome’s turning point (3,600 words)


Browser classified:

Slow down, get creative, feel better. Join this beautiful weekly letter filled with treasures from far flung corners, to play more in the real world (while it lasts).

Elite Misinformation Is An Underrated Problem

Matthew Yglesias | Slow Boring | 26th June 2024 | U

Case in point: fossil fuel subsidies. For years, the mainstream press have reported on governments subsidising fossil fuel companies to the tune of trillions. These stories are based on an International Monetary Fund report, in which the majority of subsidies mentioned are “implicit subsidies” — in other words, governments’ failure to impose a carbon tax being characterised as a subsidy (1,900 words)


Want more? The full Browser sends five outstanding articles, a video and a podcast daily, for less than $1 a week.

Join 150,000+ curious readers who grow with us every day

No spam. No nonsense. Unsubscribe anytime.

Great! Check your inbox and click the link to confirm your subscription
Please enter a valid email address!
You've successfully subscribed to The Browser
Welcome back! You've successfully signed in
Could not sign in! Login link expired. Click here to retry
Cookies must be enabled in your browser to sign in
search