How 'Feud' explores a parade of great pain — Capote's and the Swans' Jon Robin Baitz approached Truman Capote's story with "a kind of deep sorrow for him" even as the famous writer "had become a very unsympathetic man in many respects." ... 06/14/2024 - 5:01 am | View Link
Book called "Ban This Book" is now banned in Florida. Its author has this to say about the irony. Author Alan Gratz says his book might get a sales uptick from the notoriety, but most banned books and their authors suffer negative outcomes. 06/13/2024 - 9:03 am | View Link
'Challenges our authority': School board in Florida bans book about book bans School officials in Florida have banned a book about book banning. The Indian River County School Board voted to remove " Ban This Book " by Alan Gratz from its shelves, overruling its own district ... 06/12/2024 - 5:44 am | View Link
Truman Capote continues to captivate even amid his downward spiral in ‘Feud: Capote vs. the Swans’ Forty years after his death, Truman Capote continues to draw audiences in for another lascivious story and another dramatic portrayal in 'Feud: Capote vs. the Swans.' ... 06/11/2024 - 11:45 pm | View Link
Diane Lane's ‘Feud' Role Inspired Her to Write a Book Fighting Against ‘Misinformation': ‘How One Comports Oneself Is Important' "Is it a gift or is it not a gift that you can only play the age you are?" It's a rhetorical question Diane Lane asks - but doesn't pretend to have the answer to - and also a thought she embraces. "I ... 06/11/2024 - 9:07 am | View Link
Every year, Apple and Google announce major software updates that bring new features to our smartphones, such as cosmetic overhauls to the home screen, stronger privacy protections and fun messaging tools. This year, the changes will feel more radical because the companies are focusing on reinventing our phones with artificial intelligence.
At its annual software developer conference Monday, Apple showed a host of enhancements coming this fall to iOS 18, its operating system powering iPhones.
When David De Clercq traveled to San Francisco last year, he had a few musts on his itinerary: Go to Alcatraz. Try new restaurants. And ride in a self-driving car.
Self-driving cars, also known as autonomous vehicles or, colloquially, robotaxis, have been driving the streets of San Francisco in some form since 2009 and have been operating commercially since August.
At what age should kids be on social media? Should they be on it at all? If they aren’t, will they be social pariahs? Should parents monitor their conversations? Do parental controls work?
Navigating social media as a parent — not to mention a child — is not easy. Using social media platforms is still the default for most American teenagers, with the Pew Research Center reporting that 58% of teens are daily users of TikTok, including 17% who describe their TikTok use as almost constant.
First, the Nuggets went two and ’que in the playoffs. Does that mean they are one-and-done when it comes to NBA titles?
When the postseason began, Denver harbored aspirations of a dynasty. It has been the posture of the front office to take a macro view, focused on winning multiple crowns over a swath of time.
There is no denying this wider-lens philosophy cost them in May.
A recent Denver Post article by Meg Wingerter (Colorado clinics, mental health providers are seeing more uninsured patients — and they’re worried that’s the new normal,) did a good job of capturing the real challenges faced by our state’s “safety net” for the most vulnerable Coloradans.
We opted to speak out together on this critical issue because we represent a large swath of what people euphemistically call the safety net — community mental health centers across the state.
To respond to these needs, we call on the state leadership to use unspent federal pandemic funds to make sure providers can keep their doors open and continue to provide all the care our patients require.
To recap the problem: in recent months, many community mental health centers — the safety net clinics that care for individuals with the most serious mental illnesses — are seeing higher numbers of uninsured patients than they have in five years.
Dear Readers: Before I leave at the end of the month, I’m going through my files and choosing some of my favorite “vintage” columns from over the years. The following Q&A are both from 2020.
Dear Amy: This is a “trivial” subject that has nonetheless bothered me for years.
My parents have the original Trivial Pursuit game, circa 1983.
At various get-togethers, my mom will drag out this relic, and enthusiastically try to rally us around a good old game of “General Knowledge.”
I feel like she should upgrade her game, at least to a game from this century.