Slideshow

السبت، 24 مارس 2018

What Hope Hicks Knows

Plus: How to eat "right," when Trump met Stormy, and the retired couple who beat the lottery.
NEWS SPOTLIGHT
Five stories to read this weekend, chosen by our editors.
Hope Leaves the White House

Hope Leaves the White House

"I'm sorry for everything you've been through," President Trump told his communications director Hope Hicks moments before she resigned. Through interviews with more than 30 administration officials and campaign staffers, New York Magazine explores the famously loyal adviser's tenure in the chaotic Trump White House — and what finally made her leave.

New York Magazine
My Cow Game Extracted Your Facebook Data

My Cow Game Extracted Your Facebook Data

Cambridge Analytica isn't the only company that invaded your privacy on the social network. The creator of Cow Clicker, a seemingly innocuous game from a decade ago, confesses that he too collected user data. And so did lots of other games, horoscopes, and personality quizzes. In fact, it was hard not to.

The Atlantic
The Final Word on Eating Right

The Final Word on Eating Right

Is organic really better? What constitutes a "good" fat? Cooked tomatoes or fresh? Are carbs evil? With "no goal other than to cut through all the noise and help everyone see how simple it is to eat well," food writer Mark Bittman seeks scientific consensus on pretty much every question about food you can think of.

Grub Street
When Trump Met Stormy

When Trump Met Stormy

Twelve years ago at a celebrity golf tournament in Lake Tahoe, Donald Trump crossed paths with Stormy Daniels. But what happened in Tahoe is not staying in Tahoe — and the details pose a threat to his presidency. Here, ahead of Daniels' "60 Minutes" interview airing Sunday, is what (allegedly) transpired.

GQ
How a Retired Couple Cracked the Lottery — and Grossed Nearly $27 Million

How a Retired Couple Cracked the Lottery — and Grossed Nearly $27 Million

Using middle school math, a 64-year-old corner store owner exploited an obvious loophole to game the lottery, grossing $27 million over nine years. "People have been conditioned to think it is luck," he said. "They don't look at the structure of games."

HuffPost
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