Latest

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3mins
Reporters tend to be more interested in process, Trillin says.
1mins
Why is somebody’s healthcare tied to his job on an assembly line?
5mins
Why do journalists keep telling us who’s going to win or lose? Is that really the point?
1mins
Health care reform and financial security are America’s biggest challenges, Novelli says.
2mins
We still haven’t figured out what to do with ourselves in the wake of the Cold War.
2mins
Religion has been polarizing us for time immemorial.
2mins
Reporters who think that they’re actually affecting things are following the path to madness or pomposity.
3mins
The New Yorker’s Joseph Mitchell has always been an inspiration of craft; Peter De Vries has been an inspiration for humor.
4mins
At some point most writers realize they sound the way they’re supposed to sound, Trillin says.
1mins
Trying to figure out what goes first and what goes second.
3mins
Although a writer never gets it quite perfect, the joy of laughter and discovery is enough to make a living.
9mins
Nobody ever thought there’d be a rich reporter, Trillin says.
1mins
The worst thing that could happen to a Midwesterner, Trillin says, is to have someone tell your mother at the supermarket that you’d gotten too big for your britches.
1mins
Canadians believe that recycling will make them pure, Trillin says. Maybe Americans can learn a thing or two from that.
1mins
Trillin is optimistic about his own life, but says the world will have to worry about itself.
7mins
The American government still spends too much money on defense, Trillin says.
2mins
Fifty years ago, Trillin would have never thought that religion would become so prominent in American public life.
2mins
Trillin believes in not having a personal philosophy.
6mins
Trillin doesn’t get up in the morning thinking, “Today, I’m going to write the great American story about parking.”