Vulture had a fascinating examination this week of how messed-up things are over at Rotten Tomatoes, and of how depressing it is that people still look to those percentages for anything meaningful at all. NPR's Eric Deggans took a look at a new Little Richard documentary. Sophie Vershbow, who was working in social media for Penguin Random House when I published my first book there, wrote an incisive, deeply researched piece for Esquire about the troubled matter of book blurbs. Oof. (Sophie is one of regrettably few people who's getting big pieces about the book business published right now; I couldn't be more pleased for her. She also has a great dog.) Writer Jen A. Miller, who you might know best for her work about running, recently suffered the loss of her adventurous dog, Annie Oakley Tater Tot. And while this was an incredibly sad moment, Jen resurfaced a piece she wrote in 2017 about losing a pet, which remains as essential and helpful as an examination of grief as it was then. We seem never to run out of stories about bad workplaces in television and film; this week's Rolling Stone piece about life at Jimmy Fallon's Tonight Show is pretty painful. |
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