Articles 2024
-
Umbrellas: The iPhones of the Victorian Age
New technologies help create a sense of personal privacy in public.
Reason, March 2017
Before the smartphone or the hoodie, the iPod or the Walkman—even before the automobile—that technology was the umbrella. It gave its bearer space and a semblance of privacy. Like the smartphone and the music player, it also provided ample material for humorists, social critics, and arbiters of manners. -
One Nation, Divisible by What Scares Us Most
Bloomberg View, February 15, 2017
It’s a dangerous world. The threats are insidious, lurking undetected until it’s too late. Left on your own, you won’t survive. The government’s job is to protect you. Many Americans hold some version of this view. But they strongly differ on which threats they fear. -
The Best Picture for What America Needs Right Now
Bloomberg View, February 03, 2017
"Hidden Figures," a drama about three black women, is a movie for anxious times, offering patriotic balm for the fractured body politic and even throwing in a tale of career resilience in the face of automation. -
Now's the Time for Big-Box Stores to Embrace the 19th Century
Bloomberg View, January 18, 2017
Today’s turn toward experiences doesn’t just pose a challenge to brick-and-mortar stores. It offers them an opportunity -
Why Americans Long to Live in an HGTV Home
Bloomberg View, January 05, 2017
On HGTV, optimism and love abound. Those qualities reflect the fundamental appeal of the network’s formula: It reverses entropy and celebrates home. -
A New Year's Eve App to Fight Drowsy Driving
Bloomberg View, December 30, 2016
Driving drowsy can be as dangerous as driving sleepy. But thanks to demand from the trucking business, wearable technologies are already monitoring driver alertness. It won’t be long before conscientious consumers can buy them as well. -
Merry Christmas. Don't Be Stupid.
Bloomberg View, December 23, 2016
The annual “Merry Christmas” dispute is one of the weirdest things about contemporary America. -
Love Your Homemade Quilt? Thank Capitalism.
Reason, January 2017
Patchwork quilts wouldn't exist without trade, industrialization, and material abundance. They are the physical embodiment of what economist Deirdre McCloskey calls the Great Enrichment: a bourgeois art par excellence. -
Pokemon Go Just Can't Catch a Break
Bloomberg View, December 18, 2016
Novelty and a sense of accomplishment are what make Pokemon Go, or any other game, interesting. To hold players' attention, Niantic Inc.'s mobile game needs to work on both. -
How Trump Can Build the Best Airports and Roads
Bloomberg View, December 16, 2016
How can Donald Trump live up to his infrastructure promises without just wasting a lot of money?