Articles 2026
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Oprah, American Girls and Other Binge Dreamers
Bloomberg View, May 25, 2011
In her 25 years hosting her eponymous show, Oprah Winfrey changed lives, most notably her own, but she did not change American culture. Rather, she revived and extended an old American phenomenon: the tradition of middlebrow self-improvement that many observers assumed had died in the anti-authority turmoil of the 1960s. While anything but radical, this achievement was nonetheless remarkable.
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The Fantasy of Survivalism
Without trade, every day would be like the aftermath of disaster
The Wall Street Journal, "Commerce & Culture", April 09, 2011
After a distant disaster like the earthquake and tsunami in Japan, people have two reactions, both rooted in identification with the victims. The first is, How can I help? The second is, How can I keep this from happening to me?
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"Mommy Track" Without Shame
A notorious article urging flexibility is proven right
The Wall Street Journal, "Commerce & Culture", March 26, 2011
Motherhood, it seems, is the Middle East of social controversy. Alliances may shift, new dogmas and leaders may arise, tactics may change, but the fundamental conflict resists resolution. Despite the efforts of would-be peacemakers, impassioned partisans continue battling to claim all the territory as their own. My way, they declare, is the one right way to be a good mother, a real woman, a fulfilled human being.
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Why We Prize That Magical Mystery Pad
Apple is bragging that owners haven't the foggiest notion how the iPad works.
The Wall Street Journal, "Commerce & Culture", March 12, 2011
When Apple introduced the iPad last year, it added a new buzzword to technology marketing. The device, it declared, was not just "revolutionary," a tech-hype cliché, but "magical." Skeptics rolled their eyes, and one Apple fan even started an online petition against such superstitious language.
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The Statues Dreams Are Made Of
Oscar night is a snooze. So why do millions of us love it?
The Wall Street Journal, "Commerce & Culture", February 26, 2011
The Academy Awards show is ridiculous. Guests arrive in broad daylight wearing the most formal of evening gowns. Presenters, including some of the world's most accomplished performers, read their lines with the studied cadence of high-school commencement speakers.
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Would Bogie Wear Gore-Tex?
The next big thing often consists of lots of little things.
The Wall Street Journal, "Commerce & Culture", February 12, 2011
The hardest economic question is, What comes next? What, in other words, are the new sources of economic value? How can businesses grow and our standard of living rise?
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Small Crafts vs. Big Government
Can artisanal goods survive federal legislation?
The Wall Street Journal, "Commerce & Culture", January 29, 2011
This is a story about artisanal cheese and hand-polished wooden toys, organic spinach and exquisitely smocked baby dresses—the burgeoning small-scale economy so beloved by members of the "creative class." But it's also about another, much-discussed growth industry: the production of political cynicism among formerly idealistic Americans.
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Kidney Donation Goes Prime Time
Popular culture may finally be getting over its mockery of living kidney donors.
The Wall Street Journal, "Commerce & Culture", January 15, 2011
On Dec. 23, Ronald Herrick gave a kidney to his twin brother. On Dec. 27, he died—56 years later.
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Still Gripped by the Ideal of the Princess
The endless fascination with the tiara, real and toy
The Wall Street Journal, "Commerce & Culture", December 18, 2010
I admit it. When I was growing up, my father called me "Princess." Routinely. Even when I was in high school. This was strange, I now realize, and not just because I was more nerd than girly-girl. The United States has been a republic for more than two centuries. We aren't supposed to have princesses. Yet the archetype remains both persistent and profitable.
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Recovering China's Past on Kenya's Coast
China's archeological search for a "usable past"
The Wall Street Journal, "Commerce & Culture", December 04, 2010
A team of Chinese archeologists arrived in Kenya last week, headed for waters surrounding the Lamu archipelago on the country's northern coast. They hadn't made the trip to study local history. They came to recover a lost Chinese past.