ICE Is Using Facial-Recognition Technology to Quickly Arrest People - WSJ
“Deal-Breaker,” by Allegra Goodman | The New Yorker - Excellent. I love the cadence of the prose. It’s rhythmic.
Minnesota’s Tim Walz Drops Re-Election Bid in Wake of Fraud Scandal - WSJ
The Year the NFL Was Conquered by a New Wave of Quarterbacks - WSJ
Looking Ahead to 2026 | sn scratchpad - Uncle Satya’s new blog
It’s hard to justify Tahoe icons @ tonsky.me
Everything Student-Loan Borrowers Need to Know About Wage Garnishment - WSJ
John Harbaugh out as coach of Ravens after missing playoffs - ESPN - He would look good in Miami.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Will Shut Down in May - WSJ - one of America’s great newspapers.
I did the NYT mini today in 34 seconds. After a few years away from the mini, I’m slowly working up to my usual speed - about 18 to 20 seconds to finish the mini.
Todd Bowles returning as Buccaneers head coach; staff changes expected: Source - The Athletic
Wordle in 2!
The three shows that should be required watching for all Americans.
Knight Rider - Original Show Intro | NBC Classics - YouTube
This May Be the Choke of The Century - YouTube
A Letter Won’t Always Be Postmarked the Same Day You Drop It in the Mail - WSJ
‘The Pitt’ Season 2: Behind the Scenes with Noah Wyle - The New York Times
NFL coaching changes 2025: Latest firings, rumors - ESPN - McDaniel out. No factor.
Chase to become new issuer of Apple Card - Apple
What “The Pitt” Taught Me About Being a Doctor | The New Yorker
I’ll say it. Dhruv Khullar is pushing boundaries like Gawande never could. He’s bringing medicine mainstream like Gawande never could. Gawande mainly appealed to medical technocrats.
I binged “The Pitt” over the holidays, during an especially busy stretch in my hospital. Practicing medicine by day and watching medicine by night was surreal. I found myself grappling with the peculiar way that doctors toggle between the quotidian and the extreme. In one room, you joke with a patient about the Mets; in another, you tell someone that their cancer has spread. With time, you start to forget how strange this is. But “The Pitt” did what good art often does: it allowed me to see my reality more clearly.