A Different Lens
Floyd Webb's essay uses a Chicago dispute over the Black Panther Party's legacy as a lens on a pattern anyone inside institutions recognizes: trauma hardens into ego, ego into performance, and performance quietly displaces the work. Webb isn't interested in adjudicating the dispute — he's naming what the argument costs when it becomes the point.
The New York Review of Books
The New York Knickerbockers win the NBA championship after a fifty-three-year drought in a five-game series, led by Jalen Brunson. Jonathan Lethem's account describes the triumphant conclusion of the finals and the subsequent championship celebrations at Madison Square Garden.
THE ARTS STACK by Rosie Millard
Rosie Millard's tribute to David Hockney resists elegiac convention — it opens instead with the argument that Hockney never really peaked, he just kept expanding. Reposted from her Paris retrospective coverage, it grounds his seventy-year run in the recognizable: student-wall posters, iPad experiments, Yorkshire blossom. The Fondation Louis Vuitton show, 400-plus works, is the frame.
Katherine Needleman Oboist's Substack
Katherine Needleman's piece begins with a confession: she had no idea what 'La donna è mobile' was actually about until watching Rigoletto's dress rehearsal. The opera — a Duke who assaults women with impunity while his jester mocks the victims — forced her to reckon with tunes she'd played without really hearing. A quiet indictment of how easily craft becomes a way of not paying attention.
Kyle Chayka Industries
The New Yorker's latest column argues that digital content has collapsed into a single repeating format: the serial gimmick show. Using Kareem Rahma's Subway Takes and his new YouTube series Keep the Meter Running as anchors, it maps how creators across every platform are chasing the same parasocial franchise model — gather audience, sell attention, repeat.
i-D
A writer attends the first edition of the Antwerp Fashion Festival, a city-wide celebration of exhibitions, student work, runway shows, and independent designers. The piece explores how the city, historically defined by the Antwerp Six designers from four decades ago, is attempting to build something new while remaining haunted by its fashion legacy.
Isabel1000
Isabel Pabán Freed shares her recent YouTube discoveries, highlighting Chinese pool instructional videos and celebrating Miyu Matamiyu, a 12-year-old Indonesian dancer whom she describes as the most swagged-out person alive. The piece includes commentary on crowd reaction videos and the joy of fandom before transitioning to promotional material for her subscription and forthcoming essay.