"Nigeria. Toluse Olorunnipa reminisces on a childhood spent waiting for cousins in Nigeria to mail him physical media from the industry. Now anyone can catch Nollywood fare on streamers, where movie budgets have grown and the storytelling is as fantastical as ever. Climate change. Peter Brannen argues that such a fiery fate might await the whole world if society resigns itself to the "climate realism" argument that says a 3-degree rise should be the new do-not-pass"
"says a 3-degree rise should be the new do-not-pass line-because, realistically, do-not-pass lines often get passed. Read more. Richard Nixon. Idrees Kahloon observes that conservatives are starting to talk about the faction's post-Donald Trump future, including at least one commentator who says that the current veep, J. D. Vance, should look to how Nixon united a fractious right (even though he lost). Read more."
Toluse Olorunnipa recalls waiting for cousins in Nigeria to mail physical Nollywood media. Streaming services now carry Nollywood films, budgets have increased, and storytelling has become more fantastical. Peter Brannen warns that a conference venue fire functions as a metaphor for climate risk and criticizes the "climate realism" argument that treats a 3-degree Celsius rise as an acceptable boundary, observing that do-not-pass lines often get passed. Idrees Kahloon reports conservatives debating the movement’s post-Donald Trump direction, with at least one commentator urging Vice President J. D. Vance to study how Richard Nixon once united a fractious right despite earlier electoral losses.
Read at The Atlantic
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