— Catherine Thompson, senior editor, the Cut
| Notre Dame sociology professor Tamara Kay is both Catholic and an abortion-rights supporter. This stance wasn’t an issue until the Supreme Court overturned Roe last year; a trickle of vicious messages in response to Kay’s writing about abortion became a flood when a conservative student publication took a sign hung on her office door that offered “help and information on ALL Healthcare issues and access — confidentially with care and compassion” out of context, drawing the attention of Fox News and Breitbart. Kay spoke with the Cut’s Andrea González-Ramírez about the threats and harassment she’s endured, both within the Notre Dame community and outside it, and about her struggle to get the school to take adequate safety measures to curb the abuse. “I’m not a victim,” she told Andrea. “I’m an expert who has the ability to write about an issue that is incredibly important. All I’m trying to do is do my job.” |
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| With her exhibition Timelapse, artist Sarah Sze has given the Guggenheim’s swooping white curves something like a consciousness, with vertiginous paintings and teeming sculptures that look like termite mounds climbing the walls, writes Jerry Saltz. |
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| On Intelligencer, Errol Louis advises against underestimating Alvin Bragg — a meticulous litigator who has proved he can build complex white-collar cases — against Trump, who’s only good at theatrics and distortion. |
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| “I love their companionship, as bizarre and strange as it is.” Jason P. Frank talks to Succession’s Justine Lupe about her character, Willa, the escort turned fiancée caught up in the eldest Roy child’s delusions. |
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