Katherine Needleman Oboist's Substack
A personal essay navigating the tension between criticizing an institution and still believing it deserves to exist. The National Symphony Orchestra's management history, a deleted post, a GoFundMe against the writer, and a snubbed obituary tribute all surface here — messy, specific, and worth a read if you follow classical labor disputes.
A Different Lens
A Different Lens uses a hospital vigil and a robotic coffee installation to argue that automation can replicate the visual grammar of human services without any of their soul. The machine had the footprint of a small business and the flexibility of a vending machine — no double espresso, no honey, no accommodation.
The Believer Magazine
Marjane Satrapi, in this 2006 interview shared by The Believer in her memory, argues that empathy — not politics — is the real subject of her comics. The exchange is sharp on why small personal anecdotes carry more explanatory power than headlines, and why cultural exchange (Iranians discovering punk before midwesterners did) undoes the assumptions people don't realize they're holding.
David by Design
David by Design uses Robert Putnam's *Bowling Alone* — the 1995 finding that Americans kept bowling but quit the leagues — as a lens on how solo work has quietly replaced collective professional life. The article traces how the institutional scaffolding around work eroded the same way civic membership did: not through rejection, but through gradual opt-out.