Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Three Strings: Past, Present, and Future

image of mountain dulcimer set against a wavy and abstract illustration of a musical staff

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Ayla Samli | Longreads | May 14, 2024 | 4,420 words (16 minutes)

Sometimes the past comes up in unexpected ways, like roots turning up the sidewalk, refusing to stay flat beneath the concrete. The roots insinuate themselves into the present, compelling you to walk carefully and mindfully; you must step through them to move forward.

A Latinate root had gotten under my feet. I studied Latin from middle school through college, and sometimes its familiar yet surprising tendrils show up on my path. A new acquaintance came into my life, the first person I had ever met with a cognate name, Dulce. A local Italian bakery of the same root, Dolci, opened near my neighborhood. Then an instrument filled my ears with memories and hope for belonging: the mountain dulcimer. The open vowel topped off with the “l” rolls around in the mouth like a light, creamy confection. Sweetness is at the center of these delectable words.

The mountain dulcimer began to call to me when my family and I were at a local folk festival. The air that day was flooded with new and comforting scents—and sounds. We walked from stage to stage, passing food trucks with acrid-sweet smells of North Carolina barbeque and starchy Indian samosas. And then a sound caught my attention: a rhythmic, friendly brightness that rang out from a stall, each note knitted to the previous one. The instrument was familiar but not stale or readily identifiable; it was not the painted piano installed at the Creative Arts Center down the street, or a folksy guitar. Its sound carried like a mountain dulcimer, like the ones I’ve heard at old-time concerts. But when I walked up to the stall, the instruments looked and played more like small ornate guitars, delicate and cherry-topped with laser-cut sound holes, in a variety of Celtic-looking designs. Although their train-like pulsing was familiar, they were not hourglass-shaped and played parallel to the ground as Appalachian, or mountain, dulcimers are. These were held across the body, played like guitars.

At the time, I did not know that the instruments for sale were pricey dulcimers on a stick. They looked simple, like cigar boxes glued to a fretboard. My 11-year-old daughter was immediately in love with them. Of course she was; they were adorable and pricey. Although I do not really believe in genetic gifts, music came naturally to her. Both sides of my family played music skillfully: instrumentalists of the banjo, piano, and organ existed on my mother’s side, while my father’s relatives had played the piano, violin, and other stringed instruments. Channeling everything my daughter had learned from a few years of laidback violin lessons, and perhaps some epigenetic flair as well, she easily located the notes she needed to play some tunes. 

People paused and listened as she transposed, plucked, and strummed songs from the lessons she had at her former elementary music teacher’s house. Her Suzuki violin songbook came to life in a folksy way; the song “Perpetual Motion” hung in the air in contrast to her violin version’s crisp notes. I was floored by how adeptly she found the right sounds on an unfamiliar instrument, impressed that she was able to transpose the songs, and, truthfully, a little smug about paying for all those violin lessons that had at the time felt like a total waste of money. My hope had been that she would be able to play something when she went to college, something to give her a little cred, like the shirtless boys at the beach who find themselves surrounded by barely clad admirers when they play Bob Marley’s “No Woman, No Cry” on their guitars. I had given up on the idea that she was benefiting from the lessons, but here, she proved me wrong. Sometimes musician-hobbyists stopped to play another stick dulcimer on display. A young scruffy man proceeded to tinkle out some classical and Flamenco-style songs as he smiled charmingly between two beautiful onlookers. More confident musicians listened to my daughter’s playing and improvised in deferential accompaniment. The dulcimer’s self-assured sound resonated with me for days.

The sound of the dulcimer has resonated with me for most of my life, the frets of its fretboard like notches in my own timeline. 

I called my father, who was in an assisted living facility at the time, to tell him about the stick dulcimer. Since he was hard of hearing and could not comprehend the pitch of my voice any longer, most of my words floated straight into the ether. He complained when I didn’t have a lot to say to him, but I stopped talking because I was exhausted by repeating the same inane things over and over. “Nevermind” became my refrain, not because I didn’t want to be heard but because being heard became almost impossible. 

But in this particular conversation, my father was lucid and listening. He loved music and enjoyed knowing that my daughter has an affinity for it. His own parents had forbidden him from taking music lessons in Turkey because they wanted him to focus on his academics, and I think he knew he would have been good. I remember him humming and singing throughout my childhood, and he loved to listen to music, even when his hearing started to fail him. In his late 80s, after writing marketing books and teaching college became too difficult, he refashioned himself as a lounge singer who would regularly break into song in the assisted living cafĂ©. Not everyone enjoyed his spontaneous singing, but he did have a few fans in his dining room. 

While speaking about string instruments, he told me that his grandmother had been a virtuoso on the kanun, a plucked string instrument in the zither family, an old-world auntie to the Appalachian dulcimer. Just as I wished my grandmothers had been able to see my daughter play the stick dulcimer, he said that he wished I had been around to hear his grandmother play because it was impressive. I imagined my Turkish great-grandmother—whose photograph I’ve never seen because she believed that photography would tarnish her soul—who memorized the entire Koran when she was a little girl but refused to recite it until she was given a little lamb. Consigned to an arranged marriage in Istanbul, she was subject to the hard domestic roles of wife and mother of six children. I imagine the pleasure and power she felt when she exerted her virtuosity into her music, bringing grace and control to her sounds. Playing music, like cooking, was a process in which she had agency—and through which she made beauty. Given my father’s stinginess with accolades, my great-grandmother must have been quite an adept musician.

There have been many piano players in my family—my paternal grandmother, with a fourth-grade education, could play any song on the piano by ear, like many of my father’s relatives. He said when she heard a song on the radio she would sit down and play it herself. But since I only met her twice and never heard her play, celebrating her cooking is the next best thing.  

Just as my daughter had begun to develop a knack for transposition, playing the J. Geils hit “Centerfold” on the violin after hearing the song in the car, making sense of my grandmother’s virtuosity requires a kind of transposition on my part. I met my grandmother once when I was a baby and again when I was nearly 5, so I did not have many chances to savor her meals, but the memory of her sweet, fragrant lemonade stirred in me powerful feelings and life-changing desires, so strong that I traveled to Turkey to learn about women’s wedding traditions. My paternal aunt, who married into my family when she was a teenager, learned to cook from my grandmother over the decades, standing side by side with her in their Istanbul kitchen. Her cooking stirs me like no other cuisine. Having grown up on fried bologna sandwiches, creamed spinach, and Steak-umms, I have never tasted anything as perfect and comforting—her lemony artichokes are a culinary homecoming. My father told me that his mother was the best cook of all, and when she visited him while he was in graduate school at Michigan State University, he suddenly had more friends than ever before, who all lined up to sample her delicious dolmas and meatballs. If her piano playing was anything as good as her culinary skills, she must have been a delight to listen to. 

For years, I have imagined connecting to my family’s heritage and traditions by playing music, but the choice of instruments has confounded me.

My mother’s mother, a preacher’s daughter, born in North Carolina in the early 1900s, washed dishes to pay for her room and board to attend college for a couple of years. She and her older sister both majored in piano but my grandmother dropped out to provide for her nine younger siblings. 

My mother, raised in North Carolina, had played the organ at church in her youth. She was also the relief organist during her graduate school years at Chapel Hill. She did not continue playing the organ as an adult, but she kept a small, upright piano, and atop it sat a tiny bust of Beethoven glued to a mayonnaise jar lid, a prize my grandmother had apparently won in a contest during college. My mother played occasionally when I was growing up. I recall somber hits like “One Tin Soldier” and “Do You Know Where You’re Going To?” being played at home, leaving me—a sensitive child—pondering violence, morality, and my life’s purpose at too-young an age. During holiday visits with her friends, with the help of some libations, my mother would play and belt out church hymns at the piano, especially “Whispering Hope.” But the piano always seemed too large and looming for me. My mother eventually passed it onto my older sister, who now keeps it in her living room.

Although I believe that the women who came before me would have made music professionally if it had been possible, they worked hard their whole lives under difficult conditions. My mother’s mother cared for her siblings as a young adult before marrying and having four children of her own. Her life entailed relentless farm chores and constant worries about money and food. My father’s mother had to learn to cook, crochet, and entertain, also caring for her younger brothers and sisters and, later, two children. She would wake up at three in the morning to quiz my father and make him breakfast before his high school exams. My own mother played the organ in part to give her some time away from a tense household. I imagine the pressures and constraints my foremothers experienced in their daily lives, and I can see how playing music gave them some measure of agency, beauty, pleasure, and freedom. Music made space for them—and sparked joy—where reality would not. 

For years, I have imagined connecting to my family’s heritage and traditions by playing music, but the choice of instruments has confounded me. My own musical upbringing consisted of piano lessons given by the next-door neighbor, several excruciatingly slow months of learning “Hot Cross Buns” on the recorder in elementary school, and voice lessons, youth chorus, and choral camp. I won the “most musical” award in middle school chorus, where I annihilated my peer playing Name That Tune. In a conversation about instruments, my mother confided that, like me, she had not wanted to play the piano as a child; she had wanted to play the viola but her mother had insisted she play the piano and organ. Growing up during the ’80s, Liberace was the pianist I at once admired and could never emulate: I had no confident flair, no flashy jacket, no candelabra. The piano was heavy, imposing, and commanded too much attention. Choral music turned out to be easier for me since it required no hand-eye coordination or stage presence. I could harmonize and the whole point was to blend in with the group.

Considering the musical roots of my ancestors, the Istanbulites and North Carolinians, I reasoned that picking up the Appalachian dulcimer was a good bridge between old and new world heritage, a portable instrument I could play—to explore my own identity and to create new family memories. 

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The Appalachian dulcimer touched on another significant branch of my identity formation: the hippies. Although I was born well after Woodstock, hippies had always felt like my people. Their openness to androgyny, earthy foods, and global outlook has always appealed to me. As a teen, I preferred the acoustic sound and conviction of ’60s folk music to the boy-band music of my contemporaries, and I would listen to Woodstock recordings on repeat in my cluttered, peace-sign-filled bedroom. During my teen years I attended a summer camp in the Virginia mountains, where all the meals were vegetarian and campers were barred from having exclusive romantic relationships, and where I’m sure the mountain dulcimer was played during our evening gatherings. After completing our communal daily chores, like scrubbing the shared bathrooms, quiet time in the cabin included listening to the camp-sanctioned tapes on the cabin tape player, including Paul McCartney’s “Blackbird” and Joni Mitchell’s “Big Yellow Taxi.” Although this was also the era of Whitney Houston and Poison, our camp-approved cassettes were filled with carefully chosen protest music and folk songs. 

The camp influenced me for years. I did not eat meat for nearly a decade. Later, in college, Joni Mitchell’s Blue evoked everything worth feeling: loss, playfulness, frustration, love. (Mitchell wrote most of the album in Greece on an Appalachian dulcimer, but I did not know this until I began to investigate the instrument’s history.) The sound of the dulcimer has resonated with me for most of my life, the frets of its fretboard like notches in my own timeline. 


What could have fizzled out as a weekend infatuation turned into a full-blown obsession, an online epic quest. After the festival, I decided that a dulcimer was something I really needed, but I never just need things; I also crave learning about them deeply from the people who already know. When the late-summer threat of hurricanes confined me to home after the folk festival, I started researching dulcimers and dulcimer makers. 

I am a person for whom learning is specialized and obsessive. My grad school dissertation explored hope chests and wedding traditions among Turkish women. Writing on a topic few scholars (or even many everyday people) purported to care about—and discovering some very beautiful, overlooked stories in the process—sweetened my sense of relentless curiosity. Reaching out to both obvious and unlikely experts, I discovered that most people love to talk about their passions. Sitting at my red kitchen table in my Houston studio apartment, I was surrounded by library books decked out in a cascade of neon bookmark tabs; flush with even more information on my laptop and my interview notes, I felt a kind of informational splendor. In trying to understand my personal interests from many angles, I’ve interviewed museum curators, jewelers, hobbyists, authors, and primary investigators on clinical trials and researched all corners of the internet. I’ve even ended up writing about subjects I never planned to, like redwood burls and bone broth. There is a pleasure in assessing the magnitude of what can be known and in having the tenacity of trying to know it, a geeky thrill of the hunt.

In pursuing the dulcimer, I learned about a musicologist who traveled to Appalachia to gather stories and songs, dulcimer makers whose awkward instruments evolved into art, and how dulcimers pervaded the West Coast music scene in the ’70s. I read the biographies of luthiers—people who make and repair stringed instruments—and dulcimer makers in Appalachia who crafted them over decades. After knowing nothing about the dulcimer, respected dulcimer brands and popular songs became etched into my consciousness over that long, quiet, stormy weekend.

Just as a line connects two points, the mountain dulcimer’s strings link people through time and space. 

I was looking for the origin story of the dulcimer in the same way that I had tried to make sense of my own mixed identity. As an American instrument, the mountain dulcimer’s legend is ripe for embellishment. It’s boxy and stringy, like a lot of primitive instruments from all over the world. Who brought over the dulcimer’s shapes and sounds to the US? And who could claim it? Asking these questions brought me to new possibilities and rabbit holes. I veered into mythmaking about the dulcimer’s origins to try to bring together my North Carolinian and Middle Eastern roots. My research was not systematic: it was guided by dreams and hunches. I will forever be the kid hopeful that the shiny glint on the ground is something worth looking at. 

My investigation into the instrument’s Appalachian history brought me to claims that the early colonies in North Carolina had included Sephardic Jews from the Iberian Peninsula, who mixed with Indigenous tribes living in the area. Drawing both sides of my family heritage closely together, I was excited about the mountain dulcimer’s possible Middle Eastern origins. When I skimmed a book that suggested that the mountain dulcimer came from this heritage, I had to reach out to the author. As it turned out, she was a professor of marketing, like my father had been, and had attended many academic conferences with him. In looking for ties between the mountain dulcimer and my heritage, I found a connection I had not been looking for, one between my father and a colleague. Just as a line connects two points, the mountain dulcimer’s strings link people through time and space. 


After the storm cleared, I called a man I had discovered in an old newspaper article online. I was surprised and glad he answered my phone call. He lived in my town, and we discussed dulcimer lessons in the future as well as his experience in holding dulcimer clinics and repairing instruments. An object that had been an abstraction was suddenly becoming real.

Soon after my phone call, the shopping started. I hunted for dulcimers on eBay, Craigslist, and Elderly Instruments, casting my net beyond North Carolina, dulcimer country. I reasoned that California would be a good location to search because that’s where the hippies had flocked. I was not disappointed in my hunch—there were many West Coast dulcimers. Mountain dulcimers are relatively simple to make compared to more complex instruments, like guitars and violins, which is why they became popular to play in Appalachia. Unlike the banjo, which was created in the New World by enslaved Africans and their descendants, the dulcimer has fuzzy beginnings. Origin stories of the dulcimer often cite Germany and France as the home of its prototypes; it was made and played regionally in Appalachia from the 1800s on, and after gaining popularity, was mass produced during the folk revival. Eventually, by the ’60s, they became very popular in California.  

I discovered a dulcimer for sale in Northern California, a brand my soon-to-be teacher recommended. I corresponded with its owner, our identities hidden by a string of anonymous numbers through Craigslist. She was looking for a “good home” for her instrument, someone who could “make it sing again.” I hesitated: I did not know if I could be a good home for an instrument I had never played.

But I did not reveal that to the owner. I had just decided a dulcimer was something I needed, suddenly and with great fervor. She told me that the instrument had belonged to a loved one, who had stored it for decades after losing a limb to disease. It had been sitting in the closet, pristinely kept as if waiting to be unshelved. I wanted to own that dulcimer; I respected its stories and wanted to make it play again.

The next day, I called my local dulcimer expert, whom I still had not met in person. “Solid walnut? I cannot recommend that for you,” he said. Although the brand was respected, the wood was not amenable to a sweet sound. He told me that solid walnut dulcimers have a solemn, dampened tone. I thought of the sad walnut dulcimer, whose owner could not play it in the 30 years before her death; its purported melancholic sound seemed just right for that instrument’s history. I wanted to play it, to care for it, but my teacher convinced me otherwise. I dreaded telling the seller that I would not be the new owner of her dulcimer. When I apologized for not buying it, she told me she was disappointed, but she knew that it would eventually go to the right place.

Before the transaction had been canceled, a series of dulcimer stories and photographs had come my way through our online correspondence. My admiration for the instrument had made the owner cry and remember her loved one. Alongside family stories, she had sent me scanned photos and tales of her relatives: yellowed photos of Daniel Boone-dressed strangers outdoors, aging loved ones in black dinner gowns on memorable vacations, and campsite dulcimer jam sessions. This dulcimer had transported me to another person’s world: one of divorce, illness, grief, renewal, and, finally, peace. I was grateful for the tenderness the instrument had given me already, even before I had the chance to play it. Her loving stories lingered around me like the dulcimer’s notes.

She was looking for a “good home” for her instrument, someone who could “make it sing again.” I hesitated: I did not know if I could be a good home for an instrument I had never played.

I found another dulcimer for sale in Southern California. In the listing’s photo it laid in an open case on a park bench, world-weary but compelling, like it had been busking for a lifetime. I tried to research its label barely visible through the sound holes, where makers often sign or label their instruments, peering at the blurry photo, guessing possible makers. I entered a combination of names and initials into my keyboard, not sure what I hoped to find or why I stalked an instrument I had never even heard. I forwarded the ad to the dulcimer teacher, hoping that he could assess this instrument. He never followed up; maybe it too was made of walnut and not worth his time. I dreamed of finding something special for a good price, but I did not know about dulcimer quality.

Possessed of a big imagination, I’ve often imposed value where it did not exist. When I was 4, we lived in an old house with Victorian-era faceted crystal doorknobs. Thinking that translucent, hard, and shiny meant precious, like diamonds, I believed we were living among jewels. The doorknobs had a certain romance, but romance does not translate to treasure. In the dulcimer world, I could not distinguish a storied, quality instrument from a kit-built one.

When I found another dulcimer on eBay, I called the teacher, still a stranger, to convince me that I was crazy to waste my money on something I had not yet played. In a calm voice, he instructed me to come to his house to “disabuse” myself of this idea. I got in the car, not really sure what I was doing driving to a stranger’s house in an unfamiliar neighborhood. Walking up the front steps, I felt nervous. Was I really doing this? Better to meet internet-vetted musicians than completely unknown people, I supposed.

An old man with a kind smile invited me through his front door. He had wild hair and identical clogs to my own, except his were exactly my age. I stepped on aged Oriental rugs as I walked through his home, surrounded by colored glass and a band’s worth of instruments. A pair of antique performance violins cuddled like identical twins in their crushed velvet, mint-colored case. 

We sat down in his small living room. He began to play a few chords, and then invited me to choose my own plastic pick and play his dulcimer. He showed me how to strum and set me free to play. Three strings—past, present, and future—unified in one connective strum. I inhaled deeply to keep from crying. Yes, this is beautiful.

I stayed at my teacher’s house for two hours, practicing “You are My Sunshine” and watching his fingers slow-dancing on the frets with quiet skill. He told me stories about his velvet-lined vintage violin cases and other treasures, and I went home happy.

He showed me how to strum and set me free to play. Three strings—past, present, and future—unified in one connective strum. I inhaled deeply to keep from crying. Yes, this is beautiful.

After I played the dulcimer for the first time, my daughter had her first youth orchestra rehearsal. I watched as her teacher tuned the instruments. She asked all the violins to play one note as she knelt down to scan their sounds. When she heard a renegade tone, she turned to and tuned the outlier with the attention of a cat stalking its prey. Slowly, she made her way through the instruments—honing their tones, bringing their sounds in line with each other. These children have vastly different interests, but they come together for the music. In this age of extreme solipsism, playing one note as a group felt like a powerful achievement. 

I think about their harmony as I think of my friendship with my new dulcimer teacher and the common friends we share from other parts of our lives. A different kind of tuning is taking place for me: I was becoming attuned to a community of musicians. 


On eBay, I found a dulcimer that was the same make as my teacher’s. The top was spruce, which would produce a good sound. An online auction was closing in a couple of hours and I had to decide whether to bid on it. After one free short lesson, did it make sense to bid? Would I win? My husband Mark teased me through my frenzy of worry. I knelt on the floor between stints of jumping around and screeching with anticipation after I made my bid, and we watched the seconds turn over. The uncertainty hung in the air like the last chord of an interrupted song, a minor note waiting for a strong finish. What had just happened?

At the end of the most exciting 10 minutes of my life, I was a new dulcimer owner. 

I exchanged emails with the seller for a week. I learned about his profession, his marriage, his long-term habit of collecting, and his other instruments—prized dulcimers that had grazed, however lightly, the lives of luthiers and famous musicians. Our correspondence became a collection of its own, a meditation on value and shared interests, on lasting relationships and beloved objects.

I remember, while I waited for my dulcimer to arrive, how I could not sleep. I stayed up late that first night, the adrenaline from the auction too high for me to downregulate. I couldn’t stop thinking about my instrument on the way and all its possibilities: who had played this dulcimer before me, who I would meet because of it, and how joyful and sweet our music would one day sound.


Trained as a cultural anthropologist, Ayla Samli writes with particular attention to what makes us human, including our social, inner, and material worlds. She lives in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, where she is working on an essay collection. Her writing has appeared in Orion Magazine, The Rumpus, Entropy, So It Goes, and elsewhere. 

Editor: Cheri Lucas Rowlands
Copyeditor: Krista Stevens



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Monday, May 13, 2024

Dear Tim Cook: Be a Decent Human Being and Delete this Revolting Apple Ad

In this open letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook, Matt Zoller Seitz explains why the company’s recent “Crush” ad—which promotes the new iPad Pro—is disturbing, destructive, and a slap in the face to all artists, musicians, and people who (try to) create for a living.

Sonny and Cher sing “All I Ever Need is You” as the device destroys some of the most beautiful objects a creative person could ever hope to have, or see: a trumpet, camera lenses, an upright piano, paints, a metronome, a clay maquette, a wooden anatomical reference model, vinyl albums, a framed photo, and most disturbingly (because they suggest destructive violence against children’s toys, and against the child in all of us) a ceramic Angry Birds figure and a stack of rubber emoji balls.

We now have a world in which actors or musicians go on social media and display the twenty or fifty dollar residuals checks they received for work that aired dozens or even hundreds of times on a streaming platform or got millions of plays on Spotify, and that, in the eras of broadcast networks and vinyl records, or cable TV and compact discs, could have paid for a child’s braces, or a semester of college.



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Ecstasy’s Odyssey

In this piece for The New York Review of Books, Mike Jay reports on the shifting science and cultural attitudes around MDMA, and how today’s research is overwhelmingly positive. The once-demonized designer club drug of the ’80s and ’90s has shown so much psychotherapy potential in the past few decades, as well as social benefits at the individual and group levels—and beyond.

The most eye-catching animal experiment of recent years has been the neuroscientist GĂĽl Dölen’s work, also at Johns Hopkins, on the behavior of octopuses under MDMA’s influence. Prior to the experiment the creatures were solitary, but as the drug took hold Dölen observed them unfurling their arms and embracing their fellows. Her conclusion that “at least one otherwise tightly wound octopus” appeared to be “really just having a good time” achieved the kind of breakthrough media coverage that Ricaurte’s deadly monkey trials had gotten sixteen years earlier.

We might also ask what science will tell us about MDMA in twenty-five years, and how the effusive positivity of the current moment will have aged. Doblin’s keynote speech at the MAPS conference predicted not simply medically licensed MDMA but a wholesale transformation of society by the drug: from conflict resolution to a world of “spiritualized humanity” and “net-zero trauma by 2070.” Whatever the likelihood of its fulfillment—and however “net-zero trauma” might be measured—this expansive vision suggests that MDMA’s future applications are unlikely to be entirely medical.



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Friday, May 10, 2024

An A-List Animal Trainer Prepares a Great Dane for His Film DĂ©but

This is a lovely insight into the world of Bill Berloni, an animal trainer who has seen it all after decades of working in Hollywood. Concentrating on his experience with Bing, a Great Dane who is starring in an adaptation of “The Friend” by Sigrid Nunez, we see Berloni’s passion—and Bing’s professionalism.

In February, 2020, Berloni, Siegel, and McGehee rolled into Iowa. It was just after the Presidential caucuses. They’d been searching for six months and still didn’t have their co-star. Preproduction was scheduled to begin in a month. They took a meeting with their latest prospect at an obedience-training club in Des Moines. This one’s name was Bing. He was nearly two years old and was a bit less muscular and intimidating than some of the others they’d seen, with a gentler air. Berloni put him through his paces, giving him a range of standard commands, and Bing responded with elegance and ease.

“If you don’t hire this dog, I’m going to represent him,” Berloni said.



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A Beloved Alley Cat Now Lives in the Watergate. Was She Kidnapped, or Rescued?

Mystery, theft, backstabbing, a cute cat—it’s all in the story of Kitty Snows, a community cat that went missing, to the chagrin of her multiple guardians. Discovered to be in a high-rise apartment, the debate on whether she was cat-napped or rescued is still raging. Read this compelling piece to decide for yourself.

Over the next 2½ years, Kitty Snows got to know her neighbors, and they got to know her. She began to accept hand-fed treats and gentle pats on the head. She crashed college house parties near the George Washington University campus.She slipped into homes and napped on couches. The Foggy Bottom Association sold her likeness on T-shirts, mugs and trucker hats.In December 2022, she won the association’s Appreciation Award for “community service and the joy she brings to many who cross her path.”

And then, this February, Kitty Snows vanished.



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Our Campus. Our Crisis.

The staff of the Columbia Daily Spectator had a front-row seat to the encampments and crackdowns that shook US politics. They were better positioned than anyone to cover what happened on their campus—and that’s why New York gave them a cover story. This is a tremendous first draft of history, told through quotes, reflections, and photographs:

Laura, a senior: It’s so hard to be here and to know that the tuition I pay is going to fund the genocide in Gaza. I’d been doing marches and protests all year in solidarity. But there was never a moment where I felt hopeful. Like, Joe Biden’s not going to care. And then—hearing that there was this escalation planned—it was like, Okay, we could be in a situation where we suddenly have negotiating power.

The planning was super-confidential. If you wanted to let someone in on it, you had to swear them to secrecy, one-on-one. I went to my professor’s office, and I was like, “Put your phone on airplane mode. Disconnect from Wi-Fi. This is what’s happening.”

Liam,* a junior: For me, joining was a bit of an impulsive decision. I was like, I just need to do it. I take out $50,000 in student loans every single year, and it sucks. I have to work 20 hours a week to pay off the interest. I hate sitting here knowing I’m working my ass off only so my money can go to supporting genocide. It boiled down to my integrity—we are the students of this school, we are their funding.

K., a senior: I had learned so much about the precedent of organizing at Columbia and understanding that we have this massive history of protests and that there are all these eyes on us. I have so much privilege being here. I’m from a first-gen, low-income background. So I knew that if there was ever going to be an escalation, it was something I wanted to be a part of. I consulted a lot of my friends about it, and at first a lot of us were questioning whether this would be a fully planned, well-thought-out action, which in hindsight is ridiculous. It was incredibly well planned. And it made sense that they had to withhold certain information for safety and security.



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The Top 5 Longreads of the Week

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In this week’s edition:

  • Military influencers and warrior-culture capitalism.
  • The joy of science, imagination, and discovery.
  • Booking a table at a hot restaurant—for a price.
  • The one-euro-house scheme that changed life in Sicily.
  • An oral history of Go, 25 years later.

1. Full Metal Sponcon

Jasper Craven | The Baffler | April 3, 2024 | 4,546 words

In 2018, Eddie Gallagher, a Navy SEAL, was court-martialed for allegedly murdering a prisoner in Iraq. If you followed the high-profile case, or listened to the excellent podcast about it, called The Thread, you likely know that Gallagher was acquitted after a key witness changed his story on the stand. The only charge that stuck pertained to Gallagher posing for photographs with the prisoner’s corpse. (He texted one image to a friend in California, with the message, “Good story behind this, got him with my hunting knife.”) Gallagher was feted by conservative media and quickly pardoned by Donald Trump. And where has he been since? Apparently, hawking seasoned salt—as well as gun silencers, knives, and jiujitsu clinics. As Jasper Craven shows, Gallagher has spent the last several years turning himself into a brand—when he’s selling stuff, he’s really selling himself. He’s also written a book, started a podcast, and launched a foundation to support police officers and service members accused of crimes; among the beneficiaries to date is Daniel Penny, the former Marine who in 2023 choked an unarmed Black man to death on the New York subway. Gallagher embraces the backlash against his history of violence—in fact, it’s central to his appeal to consumers. Craven positions Gallagher in a “weird world” of influencers that includes “the likes of acquitted Kenosha shooter Kyle Rittenhouse, who has written a memoir and recently partnered with a body armor company, and disgraced General Michael Flynn, who gives speeches, sells merch, and promotes a precious metals exchange.” This incisive feature offers a window into the commodification of right-wing aggression, anti-wokeness, and Trumpism. Call it warrior-culture capitalism, and call it gross, because that’s what it is. —SD

2. Discovering the First Other Earths

Lisa Kaltenegger | Nautilus | May 8, 2024 | 2,247 words

I love that this piece about planetary science starts with coffee. Lisa Kaltenegger is a scientist who tries to identify habitable worlds by modeling their light fingerprints. In this excerpt from her book, Alien Earths: The New Science of Planet Hunting in the Cosmos, Kaltenegger is in Vienna—a land of great coffee—but alas, is stuck at a conference with terrible caffeine options in Styrofoam cups. Thus, with her drink woes, Kaltenegger becomes instantly relatable. With a disgusting coffee in hand, and anxious about entering a room late (which is also relatable), she dithers in a hall to look at posters when she bumps into William Borucki, an American astronomer at the NASA Ames Research Center. Borucki launched the Kepler mission—looking for other worlds—and informs Kaltenegger of the discovery of two new planets. This is her eureka moment, which she shares joyfully: “Suddenly, my research to find life in the cosmos went from visionary to practical, from far-fetched to applied, from future-oriented to needed-right-now.” Modeling these new planets, Kaltenegger discovers they could potentially support life. I never appreciated that scientists daydream about their work, but Kaltenegger is open in her fantasies, her excitement brimming from every word: “I saw two worlds covered in endless oceans and waves that never broke onto a shore. . . . Would the wind carry the smell of salt from the oceans as it does on Earth?” The topic of new worlds that could support life is a fascinating one, of course, but it’s Kaltenegger’s humanity that brings her writing to life. —CW

3. Why You Can’t Get a Restaurant Reservation

Adam Iscoe | The New Yorker | April 22, 2024 | 5,505 words

Adam Iscoe writes 5,000 words on NYC’s restaurant reservation ecosystem that I didn’t know I needed. His story is especially fitting this week, as I’ve tried to secure reservations at a restaurant—any nice restaurant—for Mother’s Day. “In the new world order, desirable reservations are like currency; booking confirmations for 4 Charles Prime Rib, a clubby West Village steakhouse, have recently been spotted on Hinge and Tinder profiles.” Iscoe writes a fair number of lines like this that make me laugh, eye-roll, and feel despair all at once. But while I could have stopped reading at any point, his great reporting and bits of humor kept the piece from becoming a hate read. Iscoe describes an exhausting world in which you have to join exclusive membership clubs like Dorsia to snag hard-to-get tables at the hottest restaurants, or search online marketplaces like Appointment Trader to buy reservations from a reseller. A reseller could be anyone: a college student making reservations with fake phone numbers and email addresses on their parents’ luxury credit card, a private reservationist for celebrities, or a “script kiddie” that uses bots to amass “a thousand reservations with the hopes of selling fifty of them.” As Iscoe reveals, reselling can be shockingly lucrative: “Another reseller, PerceptiveWash44, told me that he makes reservations while watching TV,” he writes. “Last year, he made eighty thousand dollars reselling reservations.” I admit there was a time, when my husband and I were childless and living in San Francisco, that we regularly dined out and spent over $500 on a single meal. Those days are long behind us, and I’m certainly not going to shell out $500-$1,000 today, simply for a reservation. Luckily, after a few hours of searching online, I managed to book a table for Sunday at a restaurant I know my mother will enjoy. Granted, I booked it through OpenTable, a platform for commoners. In the end, though, all that really matters is the time spent with her over a nice meal. —CLR

4. Sicily Sold Homes for One Euro. This Is What Happened Next.

Lisa Abend | AFAR | April 30, 2024 | 3,001 words

You’ve seen the ads: a home in Italy for a euro. I have had many questions. Can you really buy a home in Europe for a euro? What’s the catch? Are people taking advantage of the offer? What’s happened as a result? Lisa Abend’s entertaining journey of discovery starts in Cammarata, Italy, a community in Sicily located about 40 miles southeast of Palermo. There, some homes have stood abandoned for decades after residents migrated, looking for modern conveniences in larger centers. Recently, some young locals have returned, post-education, looking for a quieter life. In a bid to reinvigorate their community, they’re actively encouraging owners of abandoned properties to sell to foreigners via a group called StreetTo. They’ll even help you navigate red tape and find contractors to renovate your new dream home. What’s more, to get you out of your new courtyard and into the local piazza, they “organize exhibitions, concerts, and gatherings for townspeople old and new.” If you’re thinking of booking a flight to shop for real estate, however, Abend suggests that you prepare yourself for disrepair. While many dwellings are severely dilapidated, they’re not beyond hope—yet their rehab will cost much more than the touted price tag. Abend also interviews Michael McCubbin, a man who, after working for chef Jamie Oliver in London for 17 years, moved to Italy and made it his home, motivated by low real estate prices. An accomplished chef, he’s turned his house into a community kitchen. “These days, the Good Kitchen also supplies weekly meals for the elderly and has taught some of Mussomeli’s youth to cook,” Abend writes. “A clutch of older men use the space as an afternoon hangout, and there’s also a free Sunday afternoon lunch. (The only requirement for those with means is that they bring something to share.)” While properties typically cost more than a single euro and require extensive renovation, one thing seems clear from Abend’s fun fact-finding mission: both buyers and locals seem to be getting more than what they bargained for. —KS

5. How ‘Go,’ the Wildest, Druggiest, Horniest Cult Movie of 1999 Got Made (And Almost Didn’t)

Paul Schrodt | GQ | April 30, 2024 | 7,543 words

I can’t remember if I saw the movie Go in the theater, but I’m guessing I didn’t. (Not many did, thanks in large part to The Matrix sucking up all the oxygen at the multiplex around that time.) I have seen it approximately eight gazillion times since then, however, which made Paul Schrodt’s oral history for GQ even more of a delight than it would have been anyway. The gang’s mostly all here: director Doug Liman (who made this in his transition from Swingers indie golden boy to The Bourne Identity franchise A-lister); screenwriter John August; the cast, save for Katie Holmes and Taye Diggs. But crucially, the piece communicates how much fun it can be to make a movie outside of the tentpole factory. Improvisational shoots, handheld cameras, and a crew of rising stars who are utterly sold on the director’s vision—it all makes clear that the movie’s enduring cult success stems from the “dance like no one’s watching” ethos of its creation. People tend to compare Go to Pulp Fiction because of its nonlinear timeline and crime elements, but it’s really more like Wet Hot American Summer—small, scrappy, and overflowing with the love the cast and crew had for the project. That’s a rare thing these days outside the arthouse circuit, and I have a feeling that number eight gazillion and one is right around the corner. —PR

Audience Award

Streaming Behind Bars

Philip Vance Smith II | Film Comment | April 22, 2024 | 1,805 words

If you’ve seen any docuseries set in jails or prisons recently, you may have seen incarcerated people holding tablets. As Philip Vance Smith II writes from inside a medium-security prison, these aren’t just telecom devices to handle phone and payment services. They also deliver movies and television—at costs that vary from facility to facility, but are consistent in their exorbitance. —PR



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