-
5 votes
-
Arne Aksel: ‘Denmark had become this decorative no-go land. We've been in a white or gray or beige box for what – 20, 25 years? I think people have had enough.’
5 votes -
Stop talking to each other and start buying things: Three decades of survival in the desert of social media
17 votes -
Why Japan's internet is weirdly designed
8 votes -
Teletubbies: The bizarre kids' TV show that swept the world
6 votes -
How bullying manifests at work — and how to stop it
4 votes -
Almost famous: The untold story of an artist’s rock-poster roots
4 votes -
How online mobs act like flocks of birds
4 votes -
Rooster Teeth responds to ex-employee’s allegations of harassment, grueling hours, low pay and unpaid work
6 votes -
Burlesque in crisis: Hanging on by a g-string
5 votes -
High anxiety in Hollywood: “Everyone is totally drained and burnt out”
8 votes -
Why do new cars look like this? (Gray and without any flake, as if formed out of dough)
14 votes -
Indigenous Sámi cinema meets a global audience – transformation of the Nordic Pavilion into the “Sámi Pavilion” at this year's Venice Biennale
5 votes -
Don't blame Dostoyevsky - Culture, too, is a casualty of war
6 votes -
One good way to understand religion is to break it apart
5 votes -
China says Hollywood needs to show respect as films blocked
10 votes -
Failure to cope "under capitalism"
14 votes -
Why is America obsessed with racial trauma?
6 votes -
On being an asshole, on being a woman: In praise of female pedants
6 votes -
Languages at war: Ukraine and Belgium
6 votes -
Fake accounts fueled the ‘Snyder Cut’ online army
12 votes -
Mascots, unmasked - An absurdly deep dive into the history, culture, and antics of sports mascots
3 votes -
Toronto wants to kill the smart city forever - The city wants to get right what Sidewalk Labs got so wrong
10 votes -
Three things I got wrong about patriarchy
5 votes -
The polyglots of Dardistan - At the crossroads of south and central Asia lies one of the world’s most multilingual places, with songs and poetry to match
3 votes -
Gender has a history and its more recent than you may realize—The story of how society, ignorant of medical research, made a stigma of something our bodies do naturally: not conform to a sexual binary
3 votes -
How ‘The Dress’ sparked a neuroscience breakthrough
8 votes -
The Deep South’s dames of dildos
7 votes -
Cryptos grim worldview
2 votes -
Mechanization and monoculture
6 votes -
Soft power Japan: How Japanese culture influenced British Grime music
3 votes -
I should be able to mute America
10 votes -
A stupendously wonderful interview with one of the founders of @ Cafe, an internet cafe that launched just as the internet was coming into the public eye
5 votes -
The strange appeal of garden lawns
10 votes -
Why audiences in China are loving Green Book
4 votes -
Your own sense of identity
I've been wrestling with my own sense of identity recently and would love to hear what part culture/identity/place plays in your lives. This all kicked off while I was watching Stanley Tucci's...
I've been wrestling with my own sense of identity recently and would love to hear what part culture/identity/place plays in your lives.
This all kicked off while I was watching Stanley Tucci's Searching for Italy. In it, Stanley spends an episode in a different Italian state experiencing the local culture and cuisine. It struck me how deep the history, lore, and identity were in every aspect of their lives. It seemed even the young adults who headed off to Rome to establish their careers were expected to eventually in the small postcardesque cities and villages they were born in. It seemed like the people had an incredibly strong sense of identity and place.
I have many friends who fall into this category. They come from towns, cities, or even countries drenched in culture and identity. And as we have started to reach the "nesting" period of our lives, many are returning to raise their children in a similar setting. As I think about my own future and those of imaginary children, I find myself jealous. My solidly suburban upbringing in a career focused, transient area means there isn't much that I can think of as a personal culture. Maybe as much as a strip mall, In-and-Out, or cul-de-sac can.
I'm wondering what my fellow tilderinos experience is like. Is there a particular place you feel at home, either from your heritage or of your own making? Are there pieces of your cuisine, culture, or lore that you would share? I know we have quite a diverse crowd here and it would be fantastic to hear about your community.
15 votes -
Women are splitting off from the doomsday prepper community
19 votes -
Let’s please not make “the slap” more than what it is
17 votes -
Anyone can defeat Goku now
5 votes -
How China conquered the keyboard
5 votes -
The Internet Is Not What You Think It Is: A history, a philosophy, a warning
9 votes -
The case for nudity
8 votes -
Our fundamental right to shame and shun The New York Times
16 votes -
The airport: A story of the fall of Kabul
8 votes -
/r/antiwork: A tragedy of sanewashing and social gentrification
19 votes -
How wine bricks saved the US wine industry during Prohibition
8 votes -
In 1965, Teté-Michel Kpomassie left his Togo homeland for a new life in Greenland; the first African man to set foot there
5 votes -
The Mexican state does not live up its inheritance
9 votes -
How our ancestors used to sleep can help the sleep-deprived today
7 votes -
Why you're christian
7 votes