Recent Articles:
- PJ O'Rourke returns to form with a piece on Afghanistan
- Uncensored and off-the-record
- Why taxes are low in the Middle East
- TIME announces new magazine aimed at grown-ups
- The slow whiny death of British Christianity
- An interactive post on the Guerilla War waged by hippies 1965-1970
- The Last Days of Disco
- The best magazine article ever is about Amway
- Vancouver FC aka The Whitecaps
- Copyright termination
Usual Suspects:
- The Bigge Idea
- Chuck Dollarsign
- Heather Faulkner
- Martha Gall
- Alan Hindle
- Michael Klassen
- David Look
- Amil Niazi
- Christy Nyiri
- Cameron Reed
- Ginger Sedlarova
- Adam O. Thomas
Home Papers:
26 February 2010
The last days of Moscow's angriest alternative newspaper, The Exile
Vanity Fair has a good article of the final days of Matt Taibi and Mark Ames’ Exile newspaper in Moscow.
In its time The Exile was arguably the most abusive, defamatory, un-evenhanded, and crassest publication in Russia, and Ames and his staff had paid for that fact, or at least for the fact that they were arrogant reprobates, many times before. Columnist Edward Limonov, the 66-year-old political provocateur in whom the Federal Service officials were particularly interested, filed his copy from prison for two years after being convicted of possessing arms, which he admits he intended to smuggle into Kazakhstan in an effort to incite a coup there. Writer Kevin McElwee, an American expatriate, had both legs broken when he was torn from the side of a building he was scaling to escape an angry mob of Muscovites, an incident that had nothing to do with anything he’d written.