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William Bastone, editor of the muckraking website, talks to Gelf about exposing author James Frey's fabrications and how the cover-up may have been as bad as the crime.
Two Sports Illustrated writers talk to Gelf about their book Foul Lines, an NBA satire with some juicy material that doesn't always fit in the magazine.
The author of Rammer Jammer Yellow Hammer talks to Gelf about working for the New York Times, Alabama football, and why sports fundamentalism is OK.
The internationally renowned novelist and journalist talks to Gelf about noir, comedy, and the state of the written word. And about how Joe Buck is an asshead.
What do Yo Mama and The Aristocrats have in common, besides bestiality?
Our weekly roundup of misleading review blurbsin ads for movies, books, theater, and moretakes on Heights, The Girl in the Café, Sahara, and more.
Our weekly roundup of misleading review blurbsin ads for movies, books, theater, and moretakes on Cinderella Man, Entourage, the latest from Nick Hornby and Umberto Eco, and more.
Our weekly roundup of misleading review blurbsin ads for movies, books, theaterand more, takes on Madagascar, Empire Falls, Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close, and more.
We have no choice, say John Hagel III and John Seely Brown. In their new book, The Only Sustainable Edge, the Silicon Valley business gurus talk about collaboration, globalization, and why friction is not necessarily a bad thing.
Great novels are mere grist for the Hollywood sucking machine.
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