In French Thriller Anatomy of a Fall, the Law Is No One's Friend
A tricky, excellent legal drama shows just how hard it can be to pin down the truth.
A tricky, excellent legal drama shows just how hard it can be to pin down the truth.
Narrator Peter Dinklage takes viewers through a step-by-step process for becoming the next Jim Jones.
“It’s really no surprise, the amount of energy vampires in politics," says a fictional candidate for Staten Island comptroller.
Over the last several years, they have worked nonstop to ease the tax burden of their high-income constituents.
“We've taught young people that any of their missteps or any of their heterodox opinions are grounds to tear them down. That's no way to grow up.”
“We've taught young people that any of their missteps or any of their heterodox opinions are grounds to tear them down. That's no way to grow up.”
Rikki Schlott and Greg Lukianoff discuss their new book, The Canceling of the American Mind.
Popular podcasts and shows portray crime as salacious and sexy, failing ordinary victims in the process.
Aside from narrowly defined exceptions, false speech is protected by the First Amendment.
Author Kevin J. Mitchell makes a neuroscientific case against determinism.
The union wants you to throw your Barbie costume in the trash, scab.
The limits of "we just don't believe you" as a news-consuming habit
A masterful epic from one of Hollywood's most important, most ambitious filmmakers.
A podcast about a man everyone already has an opinion about.
If multimillionaire José Alvarado can't figure out how to get his family here, what hope do other Venezuelan migrants have?
Plus: Jim Jordan has no friends, an "antisemitic Burning Man festival" at Penn, Staten Island secession, and more...
Higher rates lead to more debt, and more debt begets higher rates, and on and on. Get the picture?
The psychedelic comedian talks cognitive liberty and the mind-blowing pace of legalization efforts.
Being able to take risks and having the freedom to try out wild ideas is the only process that leads to successful innovation.
In her new book From Rage to Reason, Emily Horowitz explains what's wrong with the sex offense registry.
The epidemiology of food and drink is a mess.
The pop singer's new concert film inadvertently makes the case for big businesses with sweeping market power.
"After Trump, everybody's tolerance for exploring different points of view kind of dried up," says the star Substack writer.
Being against cancel culture requires consistency.
Just 24 percent of self-identified Trump voters and 34 percent of self-identified Biden voters say they support a public handout for the Milwaukee Brewers' 22-year-old stadium.
Whether a person deserves to be "cancelled" for saying awful things depends on the nature of what they said and the nature of their job.
The epidemiology of food and drink is a mess.
The latest RPG from Bethesda Studios chronicles the unexpected ways that private, non-governmental power steps in to fill the gaps and voids left by state actors.
The political commentary in Netflix's sci-fi comedy isn't exactly subtle.
Did Laura Ingalls Wilder's libertarian daughter have an outsize role in crafting the beloved children's series?
We don't need better manners, we need a commitment to mutual respect and tolerance, and space to live our lives as we see fit.
Houston officials say they'll keep fining activists for feeding homeless people, calling it "a health and safety issue."
Let's celebrate her return without exaggerating the relevant dangers; stranger abductions are rare.
The English economist's unapologetic liberalism often drew the ire of other members of Parliament.
The former OnlyFans star and outspoken libertarian defender of sex workers considers the acceleration of government crackdowns on online porn, the sexual revolution, and sex work.
Stop enabling thieves by owning stuff.
With subplots about bite mark evidence and asset forfeiture, it's a parade of shady cop practices.
Amity Shlaes anthologizes Franklin D. Roosevelt’s critical contemporaries.
Those sounding the loudest alarms about possible shutdowns are largely silent when Congress ignores its own budgetary rules. All that seems to matter is that government is metaphorically funded.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook at 1 p.m. Eastern this Thursday for a discussion with Aella about the escalating government crackdown on online porn, the sexual revolution, and sex work.
Despite their popularity, food trucks at the National Mall are paying a hefty price to operate.
"California is promoting an approach to math instruction that's likely to reduce opportunities for disadvantaged students," writes math professor Brian Conrad.