La Bible du pot veut en devenir le Playboy
Depuis 42 ans, High Times est la Bible, à peine légale, des amateurs de pot. Le New York Times explique que le magazine veut devenir le Playboy du pot.
Depuis 42 ans, High Times est la Bible, à peine légale, des amateurs de pot. Le New York Times explique que le magazine veut devenir le Playboy du pot.
By Bruce Feiler, New York Times “the most dangerous two years of your life are between 16 and 17, and the reason for that is driving.” (…) Among this age group, death in motor vehicle accidents outstrips suicide, cancer and other types of accidents, Dr. Morris said. “Cars have gotten safer, roads have gotten safer,…
Article en français du New York Times
L’an dernier, le Kiosque signalait un article du Columbia Journalism Review au sujet d’un journal unique au monde, The Orange Street News (200 exemplaires), seul mensuel local du patelin de Selinsgrove, Pennsylvanie. Sa seule journaliste, Hilde Lysiak, choisit les sujets, dirige les entrevues et rédige les articles. Elle a 8 ans. La petite, qui a…
“The ‘I don’t have enough willpower’ conversation misses the fact that there are 1,000 people on the other side of the screen whose job is to break down the self-regulation that you have,” said Mr. Harris, who emphasized that he was speaking only for himself and not for Google. Un article de Natasha Singer du…
Explications sur Visual Loop Et diffusion sur Statista et un article du New York Times How a Medical Mystery in Brazil Led Doctors to Zika «Who had brought the virus to Brazil? There are two theories. The first, offered by Brazilian scientists who analyzed airline flight patterns, was that it arrived in the crowds of soccer…
NORMALLY, I would have finished this column weeks ago. But I kept putting it off because my New Year’s resolution is to procrastinate more. I guess I owe you an explanation. Sooner or later. Un article d’Adam Grant dans le New York Times
Même aux meilleures heures d’écoute elle dépassait rarement 30 000 téléspectateurs. Al Jazeera America to Shut Down by April, par John Koblin du New York Times
In Sweden, a Cash-Free Future Nears, par Liz Alderman du New York Times STOCKHOLM — Parishioners text tithes to their churches. Homeless street vendors carry mobile credit-card readers. Even the Abba Museum, despite being a shrine to the 1970s pop group that wrote “Money, Money, Money,” considers cash so last-century that it does not accept…