RECENT ARTICLES
LITERATURE
Writing workshops
Herodotus and the oracle
"Things Fall Apart"
Book critics we like
Memoirs of a nobody
Thomas Bernhard
Herodotus and bad fate
Norman Rush's "Mortals"
Herodotus and retrospection
Grace Paley's "Fidelity"
Herodotus and women
Norman Mailer
Reading Herodotus
The indexing trade
The memoir boom
Barnes & Noble Media
MUSIC
Orchestral pleasures in Abu Dhabi
Sparks perform everything
Rock critics we like
Letting Bach breathe (audio)
Bryce Morrison on Hattogate
Music as installation art
The Joyce Hatto affair
The autumn IL playlist
FINE & PERFORMING ARTS
Niall Hobhouse's collection
Louise Bourgeois chills
Larry Gagosian
Two Gauguins
New York's Armory Show
Two-headed bust at Bonham's
"Design and the Elastic Mind"
American art in Dulwich
Natalia Goncharova
Tony Harrison's "Fram"
Design: Alexander von Vegesack
Circular tables at Christie's
Dani Karavan
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Richard Dadd at Bonhams
Hillary Carlip's "A la Cart"
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Martin Sheen for president
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East Germany on screen
I love the Oscars
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British Council film festival
"The Man from Earth"
David Lynch
"Yiddish Theatre, a Love Story"
"La Chinoise"
"Helvetica"
FOOD & DRINK
The mission: soufflé
Australia's wine country
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It's offal good
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Where the cabbies eat
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Taillevent
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Perfect cup of tea
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ISSUES & IDEAS
Decision making
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The Diana Inquest
Sarkozy visits England
TEOTWAWKI
Beggars can be orators
Aldermaston march
Friend of a farmer
Commander-in-chief
"The New Cold War"
Epicurus exonerated
Lazy language, lazy thought
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Britain's silly tax laws
PHILANTHROPY
Robin Hood and the ARK
Your money or your life?
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Children and wealth
New Philanthropy Capital
PLACES
Jaffa's vanished glory
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My house in Marrakech
What do people do in Antarctica?
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Chicago sells well
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Breaking into Burma
Dresden's rebirth
Birth bribes in Budapest
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SPORT
Olympic memorabilia
Watch cricket
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Against the London Olympics
American exceptionalism
Rugby World Cup 2007 (ii)
Rugby World Cup 2007 (i)
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Robots get cuddly
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David Weinberger
Ned Kahn
Swarming robots
MISCELLANY
TV, theatre, pop culture critics
Are you being followed?
The spring issue is here
Sex diaries of Keynes
New York cabs
Benjamin Franklin
Hitler's digestion
Life as a handbag
Stroke me, I'm a primate
The death of alpha-blogging
Swearing and Steven Pinker
Castration and sex



What sport isn't is a transcendental religion, as the Olympiarchs and other groupies imagine. I'm prepared to read that the Almighty has "granted" a blessing, or the Pope an audience, to some believer. But when the IOC announces it has "granted" its next jamboree to some city, much as 16th-century monarchs granted some noble the ruinous privilege of playing host to them, then I gag. When one sports journo gushes about the "profound beauty", nay and "truth", that he sees in the Olympics--"the greatest celebration of humanity", forsooth--my kindest thought is, yes, we've all read Keats.
Read the complete text of the Spring 2008 edition

Vote with your wallets and eyeballs
The last few games since about Los Angeles and Seoul my interest has gradually declined as the true nature of its innate jingoism and blatantly hypocritical commercialism began to show through. The aggressive corporate sponsorship of the games, the opening to professionals, the aforementioned protection of the word "Olympics" etc., have helped me come to a somewhat different, and perhaps even worse, conclusion than Mr. Hugh-Jones. I have come to think of the Olympic Games not as especially terrible, but simply as nothing special, except perhaps in scale. It is, it turns out, just another "money business" like any other professional "sport". The governing body or bodies license and make money off of Olympic merchandise. Tickets are expensive, often prohibitively so. And corporations simultaneously clamber and are courted for their sponsorship, for which they receive conspicuous (although perhaps more tasteful) advertising presence. Not that I object to profit, but at least the MLB, NFL, NBA, and the NHL have no pretensions about it. I can't speak for International football/soccer since I don't watch it, but I assume there is more honesty about money there as well. I have to ask how pure a sporting event can be if its organizers can not be more forthright about its purpose.
So I'll watch the water polo (what little they will broadcast) and swimming as well as the weightlifting, judo and all the other lesser seen sports (I hope they show more team handball, and what about some modern pentathlon!). I'm sure we'll see sporting heroics and enjoy controversy. But I can't say that I will be looking forward to it any more than the World Series or the Super Bowl or even the World Cup for that matter.
As for the cost to the public coffer, I am glad New York didn't win it, but don't even get me started on the New Yankee Stadium.