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Joe Bernstein

A Soaring N.B.A. Star Brings His Friends Along for the Ride

By: Scott Cacciola   |   The New York Times   |   Dec 2022
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the Oklahoma City Thunder guard, is having a career season as one of the N.B.A.’s top scorers. He’s had a little help from his childhood friends.
Joe Bernstein

Remote Work Is Poised to Devastate America’s Cities

By: Eric Levitz   |   New York   |   Dec 2022
In order to survive, cities must let developers convert office buildings into housing.
Joe Bernstein

The rise of the scented-candle industrial complex

By: Sophie Elmhirst   |   The Economist   |   Dec 2022
Why is everyone waxing on about Diptyque?
Joe Bernstein

Liberals, Radicals, and the Making of a Literary Masterpiece

By: Keith Gessen   |   New Yorker   |   August 2022
Ivan Turgenev achieved greatness with a novel detested by almost everyone he cared about.
Joe Bernstein

Has the C.I.A. Done More Harm Than Good?

By: Amy Sorkin   |   New Yorker   |   October 2022
In the agency’s seventy-five years of existence, a lack of accountability has sustained dysfunction, ineptitude, and lawlessness.
Joe Bernstein

Is the Multiverse Where Originality Goes to Die?

By: Stephanie Burt   |   New Yorker   |   October 2022
The concept helps entertainment companies like Marvel Studios recycle old characters—but it can also unlock new kinds of storytelling.
Joe Bernstein

Seventy-five Years After Indian Partition, Who Owns the Narrative?

By: Parul Sehgal   |   New Yorker   |   December 2022
Literature once filled in archival gaps by saying the unsayable. Now a younger generation is devising new modes of telling the story and finding new stories to tell.
Joe Bernstein

Billionaire Trader Ken Griffin Navigates A Flock Of Black Swans

By: Maneet Ahuja & Chris Helman   |   Forbes   |   April 2022
War In Europe. The China-Russia Alliance. De-dollarization. How $47 billion Citadel is making the best out of the worst of times.
Joe Bernstein

The School That Calls the Police on Students Every Other Day

By: Jennifer Gould   |   Propublica   |   Dec 2022
An Illinois school for students with disabilities has routinely used the police to handle discipline, resulting in the highest arrest rate of any district in the country. In one recent year, half of Garrison School students were arrested.
Joe Bernstein

How a Sprawling Hospital Chain Ignited Its Own Staffing Crisis

By: Rebecca Robbins, Katie Thomas & Jessica Silver-Greenberg   |   The New York Times   |   Dec 2022
Ascension, one of the country’s largest health systems, spent years cutting jobs, leaving it flat-footed when the pandemic hit.
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