Pub review: The Bay Horse, Meanwood, Leeds // The Novel in Real Time // A New Model for Music: Big Bands, Big Brands // Hey, Subway Hog // The Story of Joe // Library of America’s Bernard Malamud Collections // Apple Designer Jonathan Ive on What's Next // Missing: Ketamine. Have you seen this drug? // Paris Review – Bull City Redux, Nicole Rudick // In Praise of an Understudy // The Pointlessness of Unplugging // Blotto Pilot // Freshman Disorientation // Two Cultures, One City // The Campaign to “Cancel” Colbert // A walk, but not really in the park // Cielo, Garforth – The North’s Coffee Community pt VI // Vox Takes Melding of Journalism and Technology to a New Level // Weekend Reading: Underpaid Cheerleaders, A Shattered Iranian Rock Band, Malaria’s Cradle // April’s Visual Art Digest // Stenographer, Fired Over Drinking Problem, Left Headaches for Appellate Courts // Lofty Newspaper Project Is Closed After Two Years // Miley Twerks Through Brooklyn // Made To Break by D. Foy // The Lost World of Stefan Zweig // Life Is Short, Proust Is Long // My Town | Dean Wareham, Longtime New Yorker, on Why L.A. Is the Land of Milk and Honey // The arts and culture sector must think about data … but differently // Digging Beneath the Cliché of Ruin Porn in Detroit // ‘King Lear,’ With Michael Pennington, Opens in Brooklyn // Racist Satire of Obamas Hits a Nerve in Belgium // A 4 A.M. Encounter With New York’s Finest // Candid Camera // Local News, Off College Presses // A Gossipy Newsletter Aims Higher // Pub review: Woodies Craft Alehouse, Otley Road, Far Headingley // Boy Meets Nostalgia // The Real Colbert Will Triumph on Late Night // Interview between Emma Donoghue and her editors in America and Canada. // Baby Turtles on Fire // Review: Interim, blip blip blip, Leeds // We Talk Letterpress And Design With Oddly Correct Coffee Roasters In Kansas City // Applauding the Hangmen: Leeds United and the theft of football // Why Music Sounds Better When You Know the Artist Is Eccentric // Jon Stewart’s Role in Developing Stars // In Praise of Slow “Mad Men” // The Hungering Shame, by R. V. Cassill // How I found Leeds 6 by leaving it behind, by John Lake // Lydia Davis Can and Will // Paris Review – Keep Smiling, Tara Isabella Burton // Stars on 45 // Preview: Movement, Magic and Mirrors – Five short films by Maya Deren, Cornerhouse, Manchester // Paris Review – The Search for Solitude, Sadie Stein // Paris Review – How Far Should a Writer Go to Police His Public Image?, Evan Kindley // All You Need to Know About Publishing in Online Lit Mags // Paris Review – Hulk, the Brazilian Outsider, David Gendelman // John Oliver, Charming Scold // Craft Brewers, Finding a Better Seat at the Bar // ‘The Problem With Music’ has been solved by the internet // Paris Review – Three Short Stories About Deviled Eggs, Sadie Stein // Combing Through the Public Library’s Tom Wolfe Archive // The Music Scene in Britain is Amazing; You’re Just Looking in the Wrong Place // Ashley Highfield: Time to look afresh at the role of the BBC // No Time // Frank Lloyd Wright Tried to Solve the City // What’s in a Pen Name? // Literature Is Not the Same Thing as Publishing // Smart Alec // Rosemary Tonks, the lost poet // Opera’s “Fat-Shaming” Controversy // The Past Will Never Be Past: On A Detroit Anthology // Zlatan Ibrahimovic // Meeting Kurt Cobain: One Writer's Story, 20 Years Later // Bird? 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No, but the Same View for Tennis Matches // ‘My Salinger Year,’ by Joanna Rakoff // M: Roger Angell, A Hall-of-Famer at 93 // Paris Review – Croatia, a Work in Progress, David Gendelman // The Yolo Pages // Soccer is a Lie: Eduardo Sacheri’s “Papers in the Wind” // Santiago Dreaming // Laughter in the Dark // Bohemians: A Graphic History edited by Paul Buhle and David Berger // NYRblog : Roving thoughts and provocations // Nutshell dioramas of death : Frances Glessner Lee, forensic science, and training crime scene investigators. // Book review: King // The Jesus Lizard Book // Harold Williams: The Leeds United legend from another era // Diamonds in the Rough // Republic of Trauma // Pub review: New Burley Club, Leeds // Bill Murray, Internet Jester // Val McDermid’s ‘Northanger Abbey’ // Seeking Solace in SCUM// Nostalgia’s Blurring Glow // The 'public spaces' of Bradford and Leeds // Eleven Writers and Intellectuals on the World Cup's Most Compelling Characters // Hillary Clinton, Michiko Kakutani, and How Not to Write a Book Review // ‘Selfies With Purpose’: The Latest Big E-Commerce Idea // The Writer Who Designed Brazil’s Soccer Uniform // Debating the Seattle Orchestra’s Foray With Sir Mix-A-Lot // If Walt Whitman Vlogged // Public Books — Love, Factionally // One Three One by Julian Cope review – a 'hooligan road novel' // Why goalkeepers don’t catch the ball // With ‘SmartBinge,’ WNYC Wants Listeners to Load Up on Its Podcasts // New Emojis, But No Hot Dog // How to Enjoy Soccer // Sucked Into the ClickHole // Paris Review – World Cup Recap for July 20, 2014, Jonathan Wilson // Reinventing Emily Gould // Paris Review – Laid Bare, Rowan Ricardo Phillips // Paris Review – Painkillers, God, and America, Jonathan Wilson // Is This the Best Way to Prevent Gentrification? // Stars of Vine and Instagram Get Advertising Deals // Paris Review – The Joys of Dancing, Sadie Stein // A Platform and Blogging Tool, Medium Charms Writers // The Endless T-Shirt Is a Trend // Trigger Warnings and the Novelist’s Mind // Karl Ove Knausgaard’s ‘My Struggle’ Is a Movement // John O’Hara’s ‘New York Stories’ and Truman Capote’s ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s’ // How We Met: Tim Booth & Gordon Strachan - 'You're not turning up in one of those dresses you wear on the cover of the album are you?' // What Is the Struggle in “My Struggle”? // If No One Sees It, Is it Still Art? On Finding Vivian Maier // Red Monkey // As Barbara Walters Retires, the Big TV Interview Signs Off, Too // Rebooting Elle // The crazy parties Microsoft doesn’t want you to know it’s having // Deventer by Matthew Stadler // We Went There: Watching the USMNT on Copacabana Beach in Rio // A 'Rich Kid of Instagram' Had Four Luxury Cars Destroyed in Arson Attacks // Ghosts at the Feast // Yahoo Wants You to Linger (on the Ads, Too) // The Red and the Scarlet // George Saunders’s Humor // Bookforum talks with Phyllis Rose // A “Baseball” Interview with Josh Ostergaard // A “Yo” Is Lovely to Receive // Paris Review – Win, Lose, or Draw, Rowan Ricardo Phillips & Jonathan Wilson // How’s a U.S. Soccer Fan Supposed to Feel? // Blog Post: Sitting in a supermarket car park telling people about theatre // Time Inc. to Start 120 Sports, a Digital Network, With Pro Leagues // The Fun We’ve Had // [Weekly Review] : June 24, 2014, by Jeremy Keehn : Harper's Magazine // London's Garden bridge: 'It feels like we're trying to pull off a crime' // Julia Fierro: Success in publishing means being able to publish a next book // Why Did Borges Hate Soccer? // Spain crash out as irresistible Chile prove too much of a handful // Nine weeks to launch Vox — it’s easier to go downhill than up // How to Write 225 Words Per Minute With a Pen // Who cares if it's true? : Columbia Journalism Review // The 'C86' Compilation Oral History // A portrait of Europe’s white working class // We Got A Look Inside The 45-Day Planning Process That Goes Into Creating A Single Corporate Tweet // THE FLAP OVER TOM WOLFE: HOW REAL IS THE RETREAT FROM REALISM? // A New Birthday Suit for Bernard // Bicyclism // Betting on Quality: On One Story Collected // Marc Spitz’s Twee Review – Flavorwire // Lydia Davis’s Very Short Stories // Punctuated Equilibrium // Review: Thunderdome – The Institute of Jamais Vu, blip blip blip, Leeds // Why Audiences Hate Hard News—and Love Pretending Otherwise // ‘The Star-Spangled Banner’ Has Changed a Lot in 200 Years // Medium Hires Tech Writer Steven Levy as It Moves From Platform to Publisher // Paris Review – Reality Bites, Jonathan Wilson // The Bite // Paris Review – Shades of Oranje, Rowan Ricardo Phillips // Six Seconds of Loopy Creativity, and Millions of Fans // With Online Video Offerings, the Establishment Plays the Upstart // Heil Hipster: The Young Neo-Nazis Trying to Put a Stylish Face on Hate // Brick by brick // What the New Kids on the Block Taught Me About Social Networks // For Email Newsletters, a Death Greatly Exaggerated // An Art Review in the Subway // [Weekly Review] : July 1, 2014, by Jesse Barron : Harper's Magazine // Ambient Genius // Defending the indefensible? Lawyers on representing clients accused of nightmarish crimes // The Art of Screenwriting No. 4, Matthew Weiner // 794 Ways in Which BuzzFeed Reminds Us of Impending Death // Paris Review – Hooray for Losers, Jonathan Wilson // Ira Glass’s ‘This American Life’ Leaves PRI // Paris Review – Be Afraid, Be Very Afraid, Jonathan Wilson // France v. Germany // Stop Making Sense // Vamping Teenagers Are Up All Night Texting // How Tourette’s-afflicted Tim Howard went from international ridicule to World Cup history // The Pernicious Realities of 'Artwashing' // Narrative of Fragments // The Rise and Fall of AIM, the Breakthrough AOL Never Wanted // Reality Hunger // Can Listicles Fund the Baghdad Bureau? // The New Yorker Alters Its Online Strategy // As the Cupcake Declines, Crumbs Shuts Its Doors // The Potato Salad Guy Should Keep Every Penny // Paris Review – Third Place, Rowan Ricardo Phillips // This Internet Millionaire Has a New Deal For You // Her Again // The Reckoning // // Paris Review – Let’s Get Metaphysical, Rowan Ricardo Phillips // USA Today Goes Viral // Social Media Stars Use Instagram, Twitter and Tumblr to Build Their Career // Text Games in a New Era of Stories // It’s Tartt—But Is It Art? // Paris Review – Schadenfreude, Jonathan Wilson //