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15 Oct 04:18

The Writer Who's Using Longform to Take Instagram to the Next Level: The Q: GQ

by hodad
77302ab1d83ab19dcc5841ff37e3cf2e
hodad

THE NEXT LEVEL

jeff-sharlet-writer-author-instagram.jpg

Photo: Courtesy Jeff Sharlet

Two months ago, when GQ contributing writer Jeff Sharlet (@jeffsharlet) downloaded the world's most popular photo app, he posted on Twitter: "New to Instagram. I like the family & friends function, sure. But who are the real photographers to follow?" He was navigating an unfamiliar territory of selfies, food pics, and humble brags. While those images fascinated him in their own way, he wondered: how could he contribute? (Duck-lipped pouts in the bathroom mirror: out of the question.)

Sharlet went shoe leather. He began interviewing strangers, taking their snapshots, and composing beautifully wrought essays to accompany the images. (The app's character limit on descriptions, it turns out is 2200 characters, or around 1000 words.) On September 25th, he posted on Twitter: "It's so simple. Hang out someplace. Ask people if you can take their picture. Phone, point, shoot. Talk to them. Voila! A true story." And then, yesterday: "These Instagram essays aren't distractions from my work. They're becoming my work."

He also digs up phone pics from stories reported months ago, reviewing notes and writing new essays to expand on and deepen the stories that were originally published. His last four posts—embedded below—are from the trip he took to St. Petersburg and Moscow to report for us on the gay resistance in Russia. Read these, revisit that piece, and start following Jeff.

Original Source

15 Oct 04:03

Darnell Dockett chastises Joseph Randle for underwear/cologne shoplifting

by Rodger Sherman

Joseph Randle's shoplifting incident was embarrassing. We could only hope Darnell Dockett would weigh in on the subject.

So who was the player stealing drawers /underwear from the cowboys

— DARNELL DOCKETT (@ddockett) October 15, 2014
yes, Darnell, we like where this is going

What's his twitter ?

— DARNELL DOCKETT (@ddockett) October 15, 2014
YESSSSSSSSS COME ON DO IT

@JRAN_1 damn bro..Next time go to ROSS or Burlington they have no security or cameras in there. Polo drawers and cologne. Just looking out!

— DARNELL DOCKETT (@ddockett) October 15, 2014

YESSSSSSSS

Previously on the topic: Warren Sapp.
15 Oct 03:58

Hend on Twitter: "5 of the last 12 Nobel Peace Prize winners were Muslim. So according to Bill Maher, we're all Peace Prize winners! http://t.co/SDY3w51A3D"

by gguillotte
5 of the last 12 Nobel Peace Prize winners were Muslim. So according to Bill Maher, we're all Peace Prize winners!
15 Oct 03:57

Face Mask And Hazmat Stocks Are Crashing - Yahoo Finance

by gguillotte
In the last couple weeks, traders have piled in to Lakeland and Alpha Pro Tech as ways to trade the Ebola outbreak.
15 Oct 01:45

We’ve just had the warmest six-months ever recorded

15 Oct 01:23

GIFS showing why ‘Boiler Room’ club kids are the worst people on earth

by djempirical

deadstate boiler room

We just discovered the Boiler Room TV live streams, with regular broadcasts from New York, Los Angeles, Berlin, London and other electronic club music capitals around the world.

Even better, there’s a Tumblr that picks some of the most hideous elements of these zombied children and posts them as entertaining gifs.

The creators of Boiler Room Knows What You Did Last Night have painstakingly compiled a ‘best of’ series for your viewing pleasure, and we’ve cherry-picked a few of the best ones.

1. This guy acknowledging the dopeness before mowing someone over. boiler 1
2. This Casanova with horrific timing. boiler 2
3. This guy’s girlfriend whose split personality suddenly decided to show up. boiler 3
4. This fellow and his “a thousand pardons, madam” retreat. boiler 4
5. This loud shirt dude looking for cues on spastic hand gestures. boiler 5
6. This guy REALLY feeling the music over here.boiler 7
…and over here.boiler 24
…this’ll do.boiler 25
7. This guy whose LSD just kicked in. boiler 8
8. This guy who likes pointing at things. boiler 9
9. This guy who clearly sees something unusual on the back of this girl’s neck. boiler 10
10. This chick test-sniffing her armpits. boiler 11
11. This guy and his f-cking invisible knobs. boiler 12
12. This kid who just discovered the art of self-expression. boiler 14
13. This indescribable moment in time. boiler
14. This guy who needs to step the f-ck back. boiler 15
15. This room that’s vibrating with energy. boiler 17
16. This dude counting his ones. boiler 18
17. This sad soul in his salmon-pink Polo shirt. boiler 19
18. This creature fellating a speaker. boiler 20
19. This guy who needs some Theraflu. boiler 21
20. This spazz that needs to chill the f-ck out. boiler 22
21. This OG who just made direct eye contact with you.boiler 23
22. These gelflings who REALLY like what they see. boiler 26

Original Source

15 Oct 00:48

Photo



15 Oct 00:41

Uber rider claims she was kidnapped, company says allegation is 'inaccurate'

by Jacob Kastrenakes
firehose

'it appears that a direct trip would have taken about 20 minutes, rather than the nearly 2 hours that this rider was apparently in the car for'

'In refunding the ride, Uber left a note with the passenger calling the trip an "inefficient route." '

A woman who was taken on a bizarre, two-hour-long Uber ride through Los Angeles last week claims that she was briefly kidnapped by her driver before being taken home, but Uber says that her account is inaccurate. The woman's story was widely publicized earlier today in Valleywag, which says that the driver took the woman far out of her way, brought her into an empty parking lot, and then locked the car doors when she attempted to leave. The driver is reported to have only taken her home when she began to scream.


The ride should have taken closer to 20 minutes

Uber does not yet know the full story, but it claims that current reports are quite inaccurate based on the information that it's received. In fact, Uber is under the impression that the driver was actually trying to help the passenger. It's told that the passenger was intoxicated and that the driver called 911 for assistance. For now, the LAPD is unable to confirm receipt of this call, though it's looking into it. It also hasn't received a complaint from the passenger.

"Early reports on this ride are inaccurate," Uber spokesperson Eva Behrend says. "Based on the information we have at this time, this driver called 911 to ask for assistance with an intoxicated rider who requested an extended trip. However, we have refunded the rider's trip and reached out to the rider for additional information." In refunding the ride, Uber left a note with the passenger calling the trip an "inefficient route."

Based on screenshots of the driver's route published in Valleywag, it appears that a direct trip would have taken about 20 minutes, rather than the nearly 2 hours that this rider was apparently in the car for.

The ride was taken through UberX, Uber's lower-cost taxi service that allows almost anyone with a vehicle to sign up to be a driver. While that's a nice way to build a small taxi industry and let people earn some extra money, it also opens up a number of potential problems. In particular, UberX drivers aren't particularly well vetted: Uber's website notes that while potential drivers do receive a background check, they are not subject to "a formal interview process" — just some online training. Despite that, Uber actually adds a $1 surcharge to every UberX ride as part of a "safe rides fee" that's meant to "ensure the safest possible platform."

This is not the first time that an Uber driver has been alleged to have kidnapped a passenger. Just this year there have been reports of one driver taking a passenger on a "high-speed chase" in DC and another driver bringing an intoxicated woman to a motel and then asking her to stay there with him.

Image via Valleywag

15 Oct 00:39

Google Finds Vulnerability In SSL 3.0 Web Encryption

by Soulskill
AlbanX sends word that security researchers from Google have published details on a vulnerability in SSL 3.0 that can allow an attacker to calculate the plaintext of encrypted communications. Google's Bodo Moller writes, SSL 3.0 is nearly 15 years old, but support for it remains widespread. Most importantly, nearly all browsers support it and, in order to work around bugs in HTTPS servers, browsers will retry failed connections with older protocol versions, including SSL 3.0. Because a network attacker can cause connection failures, they can trigger the use of SSL 3.0 and then exploit this issue. Disabling SSL 3.0 support, or CBC-mode ciphers with SSL 3.0, is sufficient to mitigate this issue, but presents significant compatibility problems, even today. Therefore our recommended response (PDF) is to support TLS_FALLBACK_SCSV. This is a mechanism that solves the problems caused by retrying failed connections and thus prevents attackers from inducing browsers to use SSL 3.0. It also prevents downgrades from TLS 1.2 to 1.1 or 1.0 and so may help prevent future attacks.

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Read more of this story at Slashdot.








15 Oct 00:39

centerforinvestigativereporting: More than 100 for-profit...



centerforinvestigativereporting:

More than 100 for-profit colleges are so dependent on taxpayer money that they’d be violating the law if not for a loophole, according to a never-released analysis by the Department of Education we obtained.

Taxpayers spent $9.5 billion on these schools in 2012 alone. Get the full story.

15 Oct 00:38

Gordon Hayward claims he's the best player in the league, would crush LeBron James (in League of Legends)

by Rodger Sherman

Bold words from Gordon Hayward (until you actually see what he's talking about)

Gordon Hayward tweeted this:

If I played @KingJames 1-on-1, I'd crush him. My new blog on why I'm the best in the game: http://t.co/JstMVmubBl pic.twitter.com/svA2tay0Cj

— Gordon Hayward (@gordonhayward) October 14, 2014

WHAT, GORDON? I mean, you're good and all and averaged 16.2 points per game last year but BETTER THAN LEBRON? ARE YOU CRAZY? I MUST CLICK THIS LINK TO FIND OUT WHAT YOU'RE TALKING ABOUT AND.... oh.

I repeat: I’m the best in the game. And probably in all the other major sports, too.

No athlete on earth is as good at League of Legends as I am.

For a while, this tweet crashed Hawyard's site:

crash

Hayward goes on to tell the story of how he got into gaming, for which his passion is well-known: he talks about it a whole bunch, and was even briefly a pro gamer in the IGN Pro League.

15 Oct 00:37

do you have any morel inks about what's happening in mexico? im part of a club at my school where we focus on international affairs and problems and id like to present something about it but i feel like i dont know enough yet

yes absolutely

What is happening in Mexico? 

  • How it began

On September 26, students our age (~19-22) were attacked by the local police and gangs in Iguala, Guerrero in Mexico. They were studying to become teachers at Escuela Normal Rural de Ayotzinapa. I have read many articles about how the students were in the town to ask for money to help pay tuition, to protest discrimination of rural school teachers, to travel to commemorate another student massacre of 1986, etc., so I am unsure of what is what here. But the students were on the buses and police blocked their way to get the students out. When they did, they opened fire on the students at once. Some students threw rocks back in self-defense, but the students were unarmed. Six people died and 17 were injured. Three students died, a taxi driver, a woman in a taxi, and a football player that was just 15 years old (x). The injured were taken away by an ambulance, local journalists came, etc but it was not over as more men came in plain clothes and rifles (x). These men are apart of Guerreros Unidos and work for the Beltran Leyva cartel. The students were forced into police vans and have since disappeared. 43 students are missing.

Some of the students escaped by hiding in nearby houses. One terrified student tried running away, but he was found later yet with his eyes gouged out and his face completely sliced away to the bone. A YOUNG MAN only 19 years old suffered through this. (As a warning, be aware that there are photos online and that while searching deep through articles and tags, they are present.) A survivor of the attack says this is “symbol of the cartel assassins” (x).

22 local policemen have been detained for suspicion of working with Guerreros Unidos. This is how authorities were then tipped on what has happened to some students. (x) (x)

  • The Mass Graves

~ More than a week later, on Saturday, authorities found mass graves nearby that has 28 burned remains with the tips (x). We fear that this may be some of the students. We won’t have DNA analysis to confirm anything for another two weeks, if not longer.

image

MORE mass graves were found yesterday, but it is still unknown about how many remains these graves have (x). 

Keep in mind that the CITY MAYOR AND HIS WIFE are on the RUN. No one knows where they are. 

We still don’t understand the reason behind this violence. Why kidnap and kill these young men? There are several explanations online, but how do you explain something like this? One story is that the mayer’s wife was giving a speech that day and did not want to be disrupted by the students. Keep in mind that the wife is the head of the city’s family welfare department and also has family connections to cartels (x). There are other alternatives online, but I don’t know. I just don’t. 

  • You cannot be silent about what is happening in Mexico

You can’t. You just can’t. Social media has a big impact and this story has to spread. In the last 24 hours I have seen an incredible boost in coverage about Ayotzinapa.

On Wednesday, thousands protested the disappearance of the students in Mexico.

image

image

Amounting pressure is being put on the Mexican government to find the missing students. There is also added outrage and demand ‘to punish politicians linked to organized crime’. It is no shock when considering the police corruption and brutality in Mexico. As Mexico bleeds, we all bleed. 

Americans cannot ignore the violence of drug cartels and place it as just a problem in Mexico. There is too much innocent bloodshed. And because BILLIONS AND BILLIONS of dollars are collected in the United States by Mexican drug cartels, it is a shared responsibility (x). CHILDREN ARE DYING. Do not skim over these articles, do not just read them and do nothing, you have to act and spread the information. Do not be silent. Please, please, please help and pay attention. 

ARTICLES

TUMBLR TEXT POSTS (these have better information than I can explain)

If there any corrections that need to be included, please just add them in.

14 Oct 23:49

goose no like drone

firehose

via Rosalind



goose no like drone

14 Oct 23:48

Terror threat against feminist Anita Sarkeesian at USU

by gguillotte
firehose

props to the Standard-Examiner for calling it a terror threat

Utah State University confirmed some staff received an anonymous email terror threat on Tuesday from someone claiming to be a student proposing “the deadliest school shooting in American history” if it didn't cancel a Wednesday event featuring a prominent Canadian-American author, blogger and feminist. The email author wrote that “feminists have ruined my life and I will have my revenge, for my sake and the sake of all the others they've wronged.“ The email was sent to Ann Austin, director of the Center for Women and Gender Studies, along with several others, according to a spokesman for the center. The group has reported campus security and police are involved and they still plan to hold the event on Wednesday, Oct. 15.
14 Oct 23:48

Justices stop parts of Texas abortion law - Yahoo News

by gguillotte
In an unsigned order, the justices sided with abortion rights advocates and health care providers in suspending an Oct. 2 ruling by a panel of the New Orleans-based U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals that Texas could immediately apply a rule making abortion clinics statewide spend millions of dollars on hospital-level upgrades. The court also put on hold a separate provision of the law only as it applies to clinics in McAllen and El Paso that requires doctors at the facilities to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals. The admitting privileges remains in effect elsewhere in Texas. Justices Samuel Alito, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas said they would have ruled against the clinics in all respects. The 5th Circuit is still considering the overall constitutionality of the sweeping measure overwhelmingly passed by the GOP-controlled Texas Legislature and signed into law by Gov. Rick Perry last year.
14 Oct 23:48

Maine hospital observing patient as possible Ebola case - Yahoo News

by gguillotte
A patient in Portland, Maine, is being held for observation for a potential case of Ebola at the request of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, health officials said. No information about the patient, his condition or travels has been released by the hospital, and there is no confirmation of Ebola, according to Dr. August Valenti, an infectious disease specialist at Maine Medical Center. He said in a statement that the decision was a precautionary step.
14 Oct 22:52

Why civil rights groups are asking Supreme Court to block Texas voter ID law - Christian Science Monitor

firehose

great


Christian Science Monitor

Why civil rights groups are asking Supreme Court to block Texas voter ID law
Christian Science Monitor
In an emergency application filed Wednesday, the groups' lawyers said the law would lead to 'massive confusion' among voters and would disenfranchise a disproportionate number of African-American and Latino voters.
Texas voter ID case to test Supreme Court's prioritiesMSNBC
Texas abortion clinics back to scheduling patientsKFOX El Paso

all 651 news articles »
14 Oct 22:50

Oscar Pistorius vulnerable to gang rape if sent to prison, court told - Irish Independent

firehose

sounds like a prison administration problem


Irish Independent

Oscar Pistorius vulnerable to gang rape if sent to prison, court told
Irish Independent
Oscar Pistorius would be vulnerable to gang rape if sent to prison and should serve house arrest instead, a court was told during sentencing procedures for the South African double-amputee sprinter. Share. Facebook · Twitter · Google · Email. Go To.

and more »
14 Oct 22:45

Infraction for SweeneyTodd: 8) One Month Ban

by Ettin
firehose

"If you advocate for #gamergate on this site, we're going to ban you under Rule 2, same as we would if you advocated for Stormfront or any other hate group or harassment campaign."

Post: #gamergate on RPGnet: READ THIS
User: SweeneyTodd
Infraction: 8) One Month Ban
Points: 30

Administrative Note:
Quote:

Gater.

Message to User:
Quote:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Holden View Post
If you advocate for #gamergate on this site, we're going to ban you under Rule 2, same as we would if you advocated for Stormfront or any other hate group or harassment campaign.



Original Post:
Quote:

#GamerGate is a consumer revolt and it doesn't matter how much you smear us, we're still not consuming biased journalism.
14 Oct 22:44

Why We Can’t Have a Great Oregon Trail Boardgame

by Oakleaf Games
firehose

"It’s a one-time journey into the unknown, which is directly at-odds with a board game."

Really? _Seriously?_

For a lot of people my age, the video game Oregon Trail is a piece of nostalgia. It brings back memories of sitting around a computer screen, bathed in its monochrome green light (or maybe a few more colors if you were lucky), watching your family members die off one by one as they attempt to cross the thousands of miles of American wilderness with a covered wagon and some oxen. It was a magical experience. Nowadays, there are a lot of video games and board games that draw on some of the same thematic elements of pioneering in the American west. There have been attempts made at recreating the experience of Oregon Trail, but few have been very successful. Clearly, the interest in the theme is there, but nobody seems to be able to capture the feeling just right. I think the reason is that the people had no idea how to play.

If you played Oregon Trail, think back and try to remember how it played. You could start out as a banker, carpenter, or farmer, which started with different amounts of money, which obviously changes the difficulty. You could set your pace, occasionally go hunting or stop at a fort, and attempt to ford rivers. But how much food did you need? Or clothing? Or bullets? How long would it take you to play? How do you decide how to cross a river? Though it’s not a large number of variables to track, the computer hid them all. From a thematic point of view, this is great. Players set out with very little knowledge of what was ahead, and have to face unknown challenges with unknown outcomes with very little guidance. And at any time random misfortune can strike. This is a similar position to what the pioneers had to deal with, and the game experience of struggling across the country leaves a powerful impression.

But these very same things also make it hard to convert to a boardgame. All of the possible events can be examined beforehand. There are no great surprises, because all the variables are visible. So you can’t capture the feeling of the Oregon Trail in a game that simply makes you balance food, health, and morale, when you know what all of the trade-offs are. Random events help the feeling of unknown, but you still know you will have to encounter forts and rivers on the way, and players will know exactly how far they need to travel. The old computer game had that element, too, but it hid the workings, so you never quite knew where you were or how far away the next fort is. On top of that, players expect to be able to plan for or react to events, but the computer game was absolute and unforgiving. A game that gives players no choice won’t be successful.

The game could be approached from a role-playing angle. This has more potential, especially if given a Game Master who hides the controls like the computer does. Role-playing can capture the aspect of story-telling that made it fun to write the tombstone epitaph after a family member’s death. Yet this is also in opposition to the strict nature of the computer game. You are limited by the stories you can tell because you are on a fixed path of hardship. And a role-playing aspect also takes the game farther away from a pure boardgame.

Oregon Trail was so successful because you couldn’t figure it out. It was still rare to have the opportunity to play a computer game, and it took a lot of plays and some luck to learn how the game really worked.  It’s hard to capture that in a board game, and especially so in today’s environment, when games are expected to have tons of replayability, avoid player elimination, and include a lot of control for the player. The Oregon Trail just isn’t made for that. It’s a one-time journey into the unknown, which is directly at-odds with a board game. But it’s still an interesting idea, and maybe it will be possible some day for someone to cross that river without losing all their oxen.

 


14 Oct 22:42

New Yahoo Series “Other Space” Brings Together MST3K Cast Members & Paul Feig - This is Big McLargeHuge news!

by Sam Maggs
firehose

"The show will feature Beaulieu again voicing a robot character, as well as a long list of other cast members from shows like Silicon Valley, Broad City, and Betas"

mst3k

Paul Feig is kind of having a great time at the moment. Not only is he heading up that all-female reboot of Ghostbusters, but now he’s also reuniting the Mystery Science Theater 3000 cast for a new Yahoo series!

MST3K stars Joel Hodgson and Trace Beaulieu join Feig for the new show, called Other Space, which will be a half-hour comedy premiering this spring. The show is “a journey in unknown space set in the early 22nd century, when the human race has mapped most of the known universe, failed to find alien life, and frankly gotten a little tired of the whole thing.” Said Hodgson,

“I’m thrilled to be cast with my old buddy Trace Beaulieu in the new comedy sci-fi series Other Space. I also think fans of MST3K will be very interested in this new work that mastermind Paul Feig and his cast and crew, have cooked up for Yahoo.”

The show will feature Beaulieu again voicing a robot character, as well as a long list of other cast members from shows like Silicon Valley, Broad City, and Betas. Yahoo is also the one reviving Community, so Other Space seems like it will fit right in.

(via Variety [warning for autoplay vid at the link])

Previously in MST3K

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14 Oct 22:40

Photo



14 Oct 22:40

Rogue Albanian drone flies over Serbian soccer stadium, cancelling match

by Cyrus Farivar

An already tense soccer match in Belgrade between the national teams of Albania and Serbia has been suspended after a drone flew over the field waving a Greater Albania flag. Based on online footage, the drone appears to be a DJI Phantom or a Phantom 2, which retails for roughly $500 to $800 depending on the model.

The Tuesday game, which was to be a Euro 2016 qualifier match between the two sides, was the first time they had met in the Serbian capital since 1967. According to The Guardian, away fans were not allowed in the stadiums in either Belgrade or in the upcoming rematch in Tirana, the capital of the Republic of Albania.

The two sides’ enthusiasm for soccer has been overshadowed by a larger political issue: Kosovo, a republic that broke away from Serbia in 2008. Kosovo, which has a majority ethnic Albanian population, is not formally recognized by Serbia but is recognized by the United States, Canada, Australia, France, the United Kingdom, and many other states.

Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

14 Oct 22:39

The Next Chapters For Kate And Clint in Jeff Lemire And Ramón Peréz's 'Hawkeye' [Interview]

by Patrick A. Reed
firehose

"As for colors, I’ll be teaming up with Ian Herring again — with whom I worked with on Tale Of Sand" <3

"Kate is an equal to Clint in terms of who the “star” of the book is. It’s equal billing. It will be as much Kate’s story as it is Clint’s." <3

This weekend at New York Comic-Con, Marvel unleashed a host of announcements, revealing new series and projects galore. One of the most fascinating bits of news came out of Sunday’s ‘Axel-In-Charge’ panel, where the Marvel editor-in-chief announced a new ongoing Hawkeye series launching in March 2015, from the creative team of Jeff Lemire and Ramón Peréz.

The book follows hard on the heels of the current critically acclaimed run on the title by Matt FractionDavid Aja and Annie Wu, and while the new series will continue to focus on the characters of Clint Barton and Kate Bishop, Lemire and Perez are determined to tell their own story in their own way. We spoke to the creative team to find out more.

ComicsAlliance: You’ll be launching this title soon after the current Hawkeye series wraps up, and while the Fraction/Aja/Wu run has been both a critical and commercial success, you’ll clearly want to put your own spin on things. So what can you tell us about your plans for the book: the mood, the cast, the style you’re going for?

Jeff Lemire: What Matt Fraction, David Aja and Annie Wu did on Hawkeye was a miracle. It was truly a special book. I couldn’t hope to repeat their success, all I can do is work with Ramon to tell the best Hawkeye story I can.

We also need to bring our own voices and ideas to the book. Fraction and Aja set the bar in terms of bringing a personal point of view and a singular aesthetic to a modern super hero comic. So, for me, I knew I needed to do the same. And by that I don’t mean that Ramon and I are trying to copy what they did, or emulate the style they developed on Hawkeye. That was their unique point of view; Ramon and I want to create our own world the way they did. And bring our own voices to the characters.

The tone of the book is probably closer to my indie work, like Essex County or Underwater Welder, than my past superhero work. It will remain very grounded and very “street level.” The book will be split evenly between Clint and Kate in NYC in the present, and Clint’s childhood.

CA: Are there any particular elements of Clint’s history you’re planning on delving into with this series?

JL: I won’t really be delving too much into his past as a superhero, but rather his childhood, his time before Hawkeye. Having said that, I do love Mockingbird, so I would like to bring her in again at some point.

CA: Ramon, will you be sticking with the Fraction/Aja costume designs for Clint and Kate, or giving them any tweaks for this new series?

Ramón Peréz: Costume-wise, we’re sticking fairly close to David’s designs. It’s in essence the same pair, and we’re not looking to change their costumes – the story is the focus here. There may be small cosmetic tweaks to adjust elements to my own personal aesthetics and style, similar to how I adjusted Logan’s costume slightly during my arc on Wolverine And The X-Men, but no more and no less.

CA: Ramon, you tend to push your style a bit in different directions for each project – how would you describe your approach to this book?

RP: I love the idea of adjusting my style to fit the story, as I believe every story should have its own voice…  And as for inks, I always ink myself, time given. With that in mind, Jeff has created a really beautiful script that will allow me to play stylistically. The better part of the first arc in the series is set both in present day and Clint’s childhood. With the past, to evoke that kind of blurred memory you envision when thinking back, I plan to go a bit looser and and sketchy, more raw pencil sketches with washes of ink or watercolor. With the present day, I’ll lean more towards a graphic black and white, really pushing the blacks far more then I ever have.

As for colors, I’ll be teaming up with Ian Herring again — with whom I worked with on Tale Of Sand, and Spider-Man: Learning To Crawl. Ian and I share a studio, and there is a nice opportunity for going over pages together. Ian’s palette choices are fantastic, and with the idea of a more graphic approach to the modern setting, we plan on using a simplified palette and rendering style. As well, similar to our collaboration on Tale Of Sand, I will most likely be taking over coloring on any painted sequences.

CA: Kate Bishop is a co-star in this series – will she and Clint be back to operating side-by-side, or will they continue to function as solo acts? How has their working relationship changed since they last met?

JL: To me, Kate is an equal to Clint in terms of who the “star” of the book is. It’s equal billing. It will be as much Kate’s story as it is Clint’s. One of the many wonderful things about Matt Fraction’s run was the relationship between Kate and Clint, and to me, that must remain central to the book.

So, in terms of the Kate/Clint relationship, I don’t just want to repeat or maintain what Matt was doing. I want their relationship to continue to evolve. I want to see what comes next. And I’m not going to say any more, or I’ll spoil my story.

Clint and Kate share adventures and time in NYC. They won’t be splitting up again in the near future. This will be very much be the final stages of Kate’s development as Clint’s equal — or even his better — rather than his student.

CA: The previous Hawkeye series tended to steer clear of the mainstream Marvel Universe – are you maintaining the same distance, or will we see closer ties to other titles?

JL: Much like what Matt and David did, this book will kind of exist in it’s own little “Hawkeye bubble.”

CA: Can we look forward to seeing any other regular supporting cast members, either familiar or newly invented?

JL: Both. As I said, Clint’s childhood will be explored extensively, which means Barney will also play a big role. And there will be new cast members as well!

14 Oct 22:36

http://gguillotte.tumblr.com/post/100021644015

firehose

love youtube autocaptions



14 Oct 22:33

Hark, A Vagrant: Femme Fatale

firehose

new Kate Beaton!




buy this print!

Watch out! Dames like this are dangerous. But you know, they have other things going on in their lives than walking through a detective's door through a dangerous cloud of fog. Probably.

I've watched some noir films while drawing this comic, and where has that dialogue been all my life? Also, if you read essays on how femme fatales threw out conventions of the day you realize they are all basically the best characters ever. Too bad for any lousy rat they cross paths with though.

The store is going to update as soon as the new merchandise comes in. STAY TUNED
14 Oct 22:32

Netherlands says OK for biker gangs to fight Islamic State - Yahoo News

by gguillotte
"Joining a foreign armed force was previously punishable, now it's no longer forbidden," public prosecutor spokesman Wim de Bruin told AFP. "You just can't join a fight against the Netherlands," he told AFP after reports emerged that Dutch bikers from the No Surrender gang were fighting IS insurgents alongside Kurds in northern Iraq.
14 Oct 22:32

W.H.O. Forecast for Ebola Worsens as Mortality Rate Rises - NYTimes.com

by gguillotte
firehose

great

Dr. Aylward, an infectious diseases specialist who just completed a visit to West Africa, said the survival rate was now “30 percent at most in these countries.” That suggests that patients have become more likely to die from the disease as the outbreak has spread — even as the international campaign to fight it has escalated.
14 Oct 22:31

Portland's 10 best bars for games: Bar Tab | OregonLive.com

by gguillotte
firehose

'THE CRITICAL SIP
Geeky glory

345 S.E. Taylor St.
503-238-4000
ggportland.com

Past the Warhammer figures, beyond the dragon mural and through the Magic: The Gathering section of Guardian Games, adventurers will reach the Critical Sip, the gaming store's back room bar. The 10,000-square-foot Guardian is the largest such store in town, which means the Critical Sip offers plenty of room at its plastic tables for low-key playing and boozing. A wall of board games from Settlers of Catan to Bananagrams is available to borrow from, with the bar stocked with four taps ($4 for a 12-ounce pour) and a solid bottle selection of beer, cider and wine. That guy in the back, frozen in carbonite? Don't mind him, it's just Han Solo.

Who's sitting next to you? Folks with ponytails, sandals and black t-shirts.

Signature drink: Nothing in particular, but look for geek-themed snacks and sweets.

-- David Greenwald'

guardian is just, ugh

like so much potential, and it really is any other game store but massive and with four taps

14 Oct 21:39

How I Rebuilt Tinder And Discovered The Shameful Secret Of Attraction

by OnlyMrGodKnowsWhy
firehose

Let’s examine Dave, one of the lowest-scoring male profiles. It’s an ambiguous profile — there are four men, and no sign as to which one is “Dave” — but that’s also the case with many Tinder profiles. But the rage directed at Dave wasn’t primarily due to the inclusion of his friends in the shot. Rather, it was his apparent privilege — communicated via the golf course, the uniform whiteness of himself and his friends, and the apparent gall to use a golfing photo as one’s profile picture — that led respondents to say the following.

“NO NEVER IN A MILLION GODDAMN YEARS. This privileged fuck, first of all, which one is he? Does it even matter? No, because all polo shirts are interchangeable.” —bi/white
For the record, not interested in any of those white frat boys in that picture.” —straight/Asian
“I can’t tell which of these four dudes he is, but I don’t want to date The Man.” —bi/white
“they all look like finance bros which might be the worst subcategory of bro.” —straight/white
“Not sure which one of these guys is Dave, but that doesn’t matter, because they all seem like Republican d-bags. Also: Pleated khakis? No.” —gay/white
“SO WHITE” —queer/Asian
“golf. overabundance of white dudes. who is Dave? Dave is legion. a legion of golf-playing white dude demons.” —pansexual/white

8d2cc425146099670fad12b892654e24
OnlyMrGodKnowsWhy

This is good. Also, today is the day you saw the word “reifies” on Buzzfeed.

Suppose you’re a straight woman thumbing through Tinder while waiting for the train, avoiding your homework, or bored at work. A picture of a deeply bronzed man pops up in your stream. How do you swipe? More interestingly, if someone asked you to explain why, how would you answer?

Say that it’s this guy:

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

His location is exotic. He’s doing something that requires a wetsuit. Chances are, he needed a good amount of money to do what he’s doing in the place he’s doing it. But the dark tan, large tattoo, long hair, and name like “Kip” indicate a lifestyle that is probably not that of an investment banker. You can’t really see his face, but surprisingly that doesn’t really matter because the overwhelming reason that hundreds of men and women who swiped “no” in a full-fledged Tinder simulation I unleashed on the internet had nothing to do with attractiveness. Instead, it had everything to do with the type of person Kip seemed to be:

“He probably calls himself a ‘humanist’ instead of a feminist and tries to impress people with how much he ‘made friends with the natives’ when he travels. Barf.” —straight/white

“I love the tattoo, but he seems too skeezy in a way I can’t put my finger on. Scuba is pretentious? Longer greasy hair?” —bi/Hapa/Japanese

“close call, but i hate his sunglasses and also i am imputing all sorts of things about him. like he probably says namaste to the barista at the coffee shop and has a profile picture of him with a bunch of african children” —bi/white

“Lol he’s too old and it looks like the sea is his mistress already I can’t compete with that.” —straight/white

It’s possible these respondents are “overthinking” their response to what, on the surface, is a very straightforward question: Am I attracted to this person or not? Indeed, some would argue that there’s no reason to even explain: You can’t argue with your genitals.

But maybe what we call the argument of one’s genitals is, in truth, incredibly — and both consciously and subconsciously — influenced by the cultures in which we grow up as well as our distinct (and equally culturally influenced) ideas of what a “good couple” or “good relationship” would look like. Put differently, we swipe because someone’s “hot,” but we find someone “hot” based on unconscious codes of class, race, education level, religion, and corresponding interests embedded within the photos of their profile.

Essentially, we’re constantly inventing narratives about the people who surround us — where he works, what he loves, whether our family would like him. And more than other dating services, which offer up comprehensive match dossiers, Tinder appears to encourage these narratives and crystallize the extrapolation process and package it into a five-second, low-stakes decision. We swipe, in other words, because of semiotics.

“Semiotics” is, quite simply, the study of signs. The field of semiotics tries to figure out how we come up with symbols — even as simple as the word in front of you — that stand in for a larger concept. Why does the word “lake” mean that massive blue watery thing? Or how does the stop sign, even without the word “stop,” make everyone understand not to go forward?

But signs aren’t always static in their meaning — it’s all about context. Wearing a camouflage jacket can mean that you’re in the military, a hunter, a punk, a redneck, a misogynist; having a shaved head, as a girl, can connote that you’re a radical, a cancer survivor, or a lesbian.

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

 

I first noticed this “crystallizing” tendency in Tinder when a friend, let’s call her Katie, starting playing it for fun, three beers in, at a bar. She was thumbing through prospective matches’ profiles (usually comprising six Facebook pictures, authenticated Facebook age, and a brief bio line) for the table, yelling out her immediate reaction: too old, too manscaped, too short, too bald, too Jersey, HOT, too douchey, too finance-bro, too “ew,” too hipster, too boring, too CrossFit, TOTALLY HOT.

Katie’s performance is indicative of a larger truth: that most of the fun of checking people out isn’t actually talking to them, but thinking about whether or not you’d talk to them and how. Katie was using Tinder at a bar, but instead of squinting across the room, she got to look at well-lit pictures of each potential match attempting to present his best self, seeing what phrase he uses to describe himself and a collection of ironic bon mots or general pronouncements (“no offense, but no crazies”).

Tindering thus mimics the relationship of checking someone out on the street, in the classroom, or on the subway, but with the added tactile pleasure of physically swiping the rejects out of your field of vision (and your life). That’s the real difference between Tinder and sites like OkCupid, Match, eHarmony, and J-Date: The end game on those sites is an actual date (and a lot of times marriage!); the end game on Tinder is the web version of a low-stakes bar conversation, which may or may not lead to a date or relationship.

Katie’s verdicts were often based on obvious, glaring “facts” of the profile: A 5-foot-7 male was “too short.” A 39-year-old guy was decidedly “too old” for Katie’s 33 years. Another is bald; she decides him “too” much so. But other swipes relied upon more a more vague, albeit immediate, calculus. To be “too douchey” is to have a bad goatee, a shiny shirt, an unfortunate facial expression, or a certain type of sunglasses. “Too ew” could be any blend of traits that, to white, straight, middle-class Katie, read as repugnant.

But some judgments are too secret — and shameful — to say out loud, or even admit to ourselves. Katie never said “too not-white,” “too poor,” or “too uneducated.” We cloak those judgments in language that generally circles the issue: “Nothing in common,” “he wouldn’t like me,” “I can’t see us together.” Those statements aren’t necessarily lies, but they’re also not always full truths either — and often rely on overarching assumptions about what differences in race, class, education, and religion dictate not only in a relationship, but any interaction, romantic or otherwise.

After watching Katie and tinkering around on the app myself in a game-like fashion, I wanted to see if, relying on anonymity, I could get at the heart of the subconscious snap judgments behind each wipe. Why do we swipe the way we swipe? And are those assumptions “just human,” or indicative of larger, enduring, and possibly destructive cultural divides?

Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed

Since there’s no way to standardize Tinder’s in-app selections for all respondents (and because using and publishing the real identities of strangers poses more than a few concerns), I decided to make my own, somewhat crude simulation. The first step: Scour stock images to find a broad array of profile “types.”

The process proved fraught, as stock images for casually dressed black males, women over a size 4, and anyone who didn’t fulfill stereotypical understandings of what male/female looks like require some unsettling search queries and yield clichéd and borderline racist results (try searching “curvy” or “fat,” for example, and you get a sea of women looking very sad while looking at food or standing on scales).

I winnowed the profiles down to around 30 men and 30 women, processed them through Instagram filters to make them seem more like something someone might actually have on their account, and put them in standard Tinder profile frames. I picked approximate ages and came up with a mix of names — some of which were intended to complicate or amplify the mix of signs in the profile.

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

 

The result is an approximation, but not re-creation, of what Tinder is actually like. The goal was to correlate each participant’s race, class, education, religion, and sexual preference to their swiping habits. For each Tinder “profile,” regardless of whether they swiped yes or no, the user was prompted to answer “What race/religion/class and education level is this person?” And, if they swiped no, they were asked to write a brief explanation for “why,” with a specific instruction not to simply note, “not attracted.”

The survey circulated via Twitter, Facebook, email, and among friends, amassing 799 seemingly earnest respondents. It’s not divided by the gender of the respondent, but by sexual preferences: If you desire men, you took the male simulation; if you desire women, you took the female one. If a participant identified as bisexual, he or she could take either.

Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed

The most swipeable woman — no matter if the user identified as straight, gay, queer, or bi — was Yasmin, with an 89% swipe-yes rate, a full 10% higher than her closest “competitor.”

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

But why? She signified as middle-class (85% believed so); she seemed as if she had finished a four-year college degree or higher (83%). She looks Christian (42%), spiritual (20%), or agnostic/atheist (17%), and reads as either “mixed race” (48%) or black (40%).

Look closer at this image: Yasmin’s teeth are white and straight and her skin is clear. Her shirt is nondescript, but doesn’t read, at least from what we can see of it, as “cheap.” The contrast between the shirt color and house in the background makes her look crisp and clean. Her overarching look is bourgeois, like a model in an issue of Real Simple.

Her eyes are “smizing,” which makes it seem like she’s actually happy, not just posing for the camera, all of which combines to create a feeling of “genuineness.” Her hair seems only the slightest bit unruly — hey, she’s not uptight! — but is also well-conditioned and cared for. She probably has means; she is content; she is educated; you will have something to talk to her about, and she will be pleasant.

But perhaps the most attractive thing about Yasmin, at least according to the simulation, is that her race is ambiguous. In his new book Dataclysm: Who We Are (When We Think No One’s Looking), OkCupid co-founder and data scientist Christian Rudder asserts that “when you’re looking at how two American strangers behave in a romantic context, race is the ultimate confounding factor.” Working with star ratings and messaging data, Rudder found “two essential patterns” of male to female attraction: First, men tend to like women of the same race; second, men “don’t like” black women.

So why, then, do Rudder’s OkCupid findings not apply to Yasmin? It would appear she’s not black enough. Just contrast Yasmin’s profile with that of Lindsay, whom users read as unquestionably black (97%) and who received only a 43% swipe-yes rate.

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

Most respondents explained their rejection of Lindsay based on height and race, or, in one straight white male’s words, because of “unconscious racism?” He continues: “Not that I don’t find black women attractive — and not just the Beyoncés of the world, either — but this woman’s aesthetic, which has definite racial and class markers, doesn’t appeal to me at all.”

Here, “aesthetic” seems to mean manipulated hair, more visible makeup, cluttered clothing, and a less-inviting facial expression. And those “definite racial and class markers” make users more likely to see her race. For Yasmin it’s just the opposite: The absence of those racial and class markers make her race recede in importance (only two respondents, both straight white males, cited race as their reason for swiping no).

The same holds true for Xavier, who had the most swipeable male profile.

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

Xavier received a 79% overall yes rate — 10% higher than the closest “competitor.” Ninety-five percent of users read him as black — a similar percentage to Lindsay — but users also perceived him as well-educated (95% percent thought he’d finished a four-year college or higher) and middle- or upper-class (74%/24%). The business attire makes him look professional, but not overly boastful; he looks directly at the camera and his arms are folded, which makes him seem direct. You could read his lack of smile as menacing, but the shirt and tie soften the effect.

The 21% who swiped “no” were bluntly concerned with race: “Not into black guys” (gay/white), “I think I might be racist” (straight/white), “interracial dating is not for me” (straight/white). Some pointed to race-specific traits without explicitly mentioning race: “his lips are way bigger than mine. I have thin lips and the thought of always kissing gimungous [sic] lips is scary to me,” wrote one bi/white user.

Then there’s the cultural extrapolation: “Man, he’s pretty. And he seems really engaged and confident. But I can’t see him at the next big half Polish, half French, all judgmental family picnic” (white/straight).

But why was Xavier rejected for his race more than Yasmin? Both read as middle-class and educated; both appear clean-cut in their pictures. But Xavier reads as “more” black and he isn’t smiling; black men read, stereotypically, as more threatening than black women. Now, that’s all racist and speculative, but it also seems to mimic how our racist and speculative subconsciousness functions in the split second it takes to swipe a Tinder profile.

Here’s the religious breakdown of the simulation participants compared to national statistics from the 2012 Census:

Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed

The discrepancy is fairly easy to explain — the mostly twenty- and thirtysomethings who took the simulation are less religious than their parents and grandparents. Participants were willing, however, to assign religious beliefs to the profiles they rejected.

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

 

Take, for example, Junior, who garnered a paltry 7% swipe-yes rate. The stated reasons for rejecting Junior were variations on “he seems old school, like he’d be really patronizing to women” (bi/white) and “He’s overweight/doesn’t seem athletic” (straight/Asian). Eighty-one percent of users also read him as Christian — which could be correlated to the 70% who believed he was Hispanic, an ethnicity often associated with Catholicism. (Importantly, no respondent cited religion or ethnicity as their reason for swiping “no” on Junior.)

Same with Jimmy, who also pulled a 7% swipe-yes rate. Users didn’t like his truck and read him as “Southern” and working-class (84%). Seventy-five percent of users believed he was Christian, despite no physical indications of religiosity. A similar yoking happened with Chase, a man with a nice smile and a cowboy hat, whom 86% of users read as Christian.

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

By contrast, here’s Conor — who received a 56% swipe-yes rate. He’s holding a mandolin, he has a beard and long hair, and the reasons for rejection usually had something to do with said beard and the lifestyle it connoted. But only 10% of users thought he was Christian — while 60% thought he was atheist/agnostic, and 20% believed he was spiritual. Even though, like Jimmy and Chase, he’s photographed outdoors, certain hipster signifiers (not looking at the camera, long hair, mandolin) negate that reading.

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

When a profile includes obvious signifiers of religious belief, however, the reading process becomes more complicated. Thirty percent swiped “yes” on Kate, and despite signifiers that many interpreted as hipster, many signaled the cross around her neck as indicative of Christianity. A white, bisexual respondent wrote, “I don’t date people serious about their religion”; a gay Hispanic woman called the cross “a huge turn off”; and one who identified as mixed race and straight thought she seemed “a bit arts-y and sanctimonious (spiritual).”

That said, perceived religiousness is not an automatic “no.” Take Johanna, who had an overall yes rate of 64%:

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

Eighty-seven percent of users read her as Muslim. The reasons for swiping “no” were almost entirely contingent on her perceived religion and its cultural extrapolations: A white male said, “I wouldn’t want to deal with cultural differences in the bedroom”; a gay Hispanic user said, “I have no patience for religious people. She’s hot, but sadly religion is the biggest turn off for me.”

Overall, however, Johanna had an excellent Tinder swipe-yes rate (58% of straight men, 75% of bi men or women, and 78% of gay women).

Johanna signifies as religious, but unlike Jimmy, Junior, or Conor, she also signifies as middle- or upper-class (71%/26%) and college- or graduate school-educated (64%/26%). Like Chase and Jimmy, she’s photographed outside, but she wears a women’s suit jacket. Even those who swiped “no” on her profile for religious reasons conceded that “she is very cute” and “she’s hot.”

Religion — even religion that would likely preclude a successful relationship — seems to matter less when the subject seems to belong to a higher class and educational level (especially if that subject is gorgeous).

Via Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed

Let’s examine Dave, one of the lowest-scoring male profiles. It’s an ambiguous profile — there are four men, and no sign as to which one is “Dave” — but that’s also the case with many Tinder profiles. But the rage directed at Dave wasn’t primarily due to the inclusion of his friends in the shot. Rather, it was his apparent privilege — communicated via the golf course, the uniform whiteness of himself and his friends, and the apparent gall to use a golfing photo as one’s profile picture — that led respondents to say the following.

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

It was bad. Like, really bad:

“NO NEVER IN A MILLION GODDAMN YEARS. This privileged fuck, first of all, which one is he? Does it even matter? No, because all polo shirts are interchangeable.” —bi/white

For the record, not interested in any of those white frat boys in that picture.” —straight/Asian

“I can’t tell which of these four dudes he is, but I don’t want to date The Man.” —bi/white

“they all look like finance bros which might be the worst subcategory of bro.” —straight/white

“Not sure which one of these guys is Dave, but that doesn’t matter, because they all seem like Republican d-bags. Also: Pleated khakis? No.” —gay/white

“SO WHITE” —queer/Asian

“golf. overabundance of white dudes. who is Dave? Dave is legion. a legion of golf-playing white dude demons.” —pansexual/white

Dave scanned as well-educated (71% believed he’d finished college; 20% thought he’d finished grad school) and definitively upper-class (73% believed as much, the highest of any profile). But unlike other white men of higher class and education level, users also overwhelmingly read him as Christian: a whopping 79%. (Compare with Kieran, another white, well-educated male, whom 64% of users read as agnostic/atheist.) Respondents read Dave’s hobby and whiteness as indicative not only of wealthy, but Conservatism — which is often associated, explicitly and implicitly, with Christianity.

Dave demonstrates how Tinder’s lack of information forces assumptions from its swipers, which is is a perfect example of what makes Tinder so unique and perfect for this experiment. On OkCupid or Match, there would be clear markers of one’s political views. But on Tinder, you have only the presence of a pair of pleated khaki pants to tell you if the person is, say, conservative, “a douche,” and thus unattractive.

No one wants to believe their attractions are racist, or classist, or otherwise discriminatory. We use elaborate phrasing to cover it up or explain it away, but it’s still there, even if not always to the profile’s detriment. The fact that the two profiles with the highest swipe-yes rate were both people of color seems to suggest something about shifting understandings about attractiveness, which makes sense given our respondents (overwhelmingly middle-class, largely white, and mostly urban and suburban denizens of the internet).

But “what we find attractive” appears to be far less about someone’s face and far more about the signs that surround that face. Think, for example, if a woman like Marit, pictured below, had the cheap highlights and unfixed teeth and name of Crystal?

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

 

Though still anecdotal, Tinder rejection in this simulation appears to be more about class than race or religion. If a user self-identified as upper-middle-class and identified the male profile before him or her as “working-class,” that user swiped “yes” only 13% of the time; if they identified themselves as lower-middle-class, the swipe rate rose only slightly to 17%.

If those same users identified the profile before them as middle-class, that number rose to 36% and 39%, respectively. The same trend held true when judging female profiles: If the user identified as upper-middle-class and identified a profile as working-class, the yes rate was 26% — compared with 52% if they identified a profile as middle-class.

Whatever the signs that made someone think that a profile was working-class — McKenzie’s fishing pole, Renee’s dye job and pool pose, Ricky’s tattoos and piercings, John’s tank top, Toby’s camo, Jimmy’s truck — the swipe rates plummeted.

Which isn’t to suggest that poor people are ugly. The vast majority of explanations for the no swipes on all of the above profiles pointed to a perceived lack of common interests: “we’d have nothing to talk about,” “I don’t think our politics would mix,” “nothing in common.” Sometimes those assumptions stem from depicted activities — fishing, body modifications — but some are just the way the mind runs wild with class, weaving the narrative that a working-class person probably doesn’t read books for pleasure, or enjoy art cinema, or seek out microbrews, or go on hikes the way a bourgeois, middle-class person does.

Now, the results of a small sample-size Tinder simulation doesn’t mean that we’re all destined to marry within only our own classes. Data on the tendency to marry within one’s class is difficult to come by, but if relying on education level as an (imperfect) proxy for class, then the rate has decreased dramatically over the 50 years. Even as more and more people marry “across” lines of race and religion, fewer and fewer are willing to cross the education/class line.

Tinder is by no means the cause of this decline. It simply encourages and quietly normalizes the assumptions that undergird it. The Tinderspeak of “we’d have nothing in common,” taken to its natural extension, bolsters and reifies the idea of “two Americas” with distinct values and worldviews, two discrete factions with little impetus to support that which doesn’t necessarily personally affect us or our class.

It’s not as if race and religion aren’t still mitigating factors in our decisions about whom we find attractive, with whom we emphasize, or for whom we feel compassion. Race and religion do matter (and might always), but almost only when they intersect with a class identity that isn’t our own.

Ultimately, this admittedly un-randomized sample seems to suggest that the raw idea of attraction — that knee-jerk “thinking from the genitals” decision — has less to do with our unmentionable parts and much more to do with a combination of our deepest subconscious biases and with our most overt and uncharitable personal politics. And if that’s the case, it’s no doubt the reason why Tinder is so popular, addictive, and ultimately insidious.

Original Source