gallery
Paris Fashion Week: Stocked Up On Crazy
Richard Lawson · 03/12/09 03:34PMThe Top 13's Fifteen-Minutes-Long Party
Richard Lawson · 03/07/09 10:00AMWatchmen's New York
Richard Lawson · 03/05/09 05:19PMThe Day We Decided to Work From Home
Richard Lawson · 03/02/09 05:06PMThe Stork Club's Secret Hand Signals
Richard Lawson · 03/02/09 03:53PMThe Oscar Parties You'll Never Be Invited To
Richard Lawson · 02/23/09 11:24AMRed Carpet Oscar Fashions
Richard Lawson · 02/22/09 06:38PMNew York Fashion Week Day 7: The Beautiful People
Richard Lawson · 02/19/09 05:20PMNew York Fashion Week Day 6: The Little People
Richard Lawson · 02/18/09 05:29PMNew York Fashion Week Day 5: Wintour Sits Alone
Richard Lawson · 02/17/09 04:53PMParis Hilton Does Her Best Wintour
Ryan Tate · 02/17/09 07:15AMFashion Week: The Ladies Who Like Fashions
Richard Lawson · 02/16/09 10:34AMMichael Jackson's Jewel-Encrusted Neverland Auction
Richard Lawson · 02/15/09 02:00PMSpring Fashion Week, with Michelle Obama's New Wardrobe
Richard Lawson · 02/14/09 02:00PMThe CollegeHumor Show's Premiere Party
Richard Lawson · 02/06/09 12:25PMHillary Clinton Has a Fancy Book of Accomplishments Too!
Pareene · 01/16/09 02:42PMGlossy Book of Lies Will Save Bush Legacy
Pareene · 01/05/09 01:29PMIt's Beginning to Feel a Lot Like a Depression
Gabriel Snyder · 12/06/08 05:09PMYesterday, diminutive Robert Reich, one of Obama's economic superfriends and Clinton's Secretary of Labor, frighteningly used the D-word on his personal blog. The 533,000 jobs lost in November, he wrote, "begs the question of whether the meltdown we're experiencing should be called a Depression. We are falling off a cliff." Then this morning our new President of Hope announced a massive a public works program that's going to start with energy efficient lightbulbs. But why stop there? If the federal government is going to start printing money like it's a Depression, let's bring back the old New Deal arts project for artists, musicians, actors, and writers that ran from 1936 through 1943. The Library of Congress hosts a nice collection of posters the old WPA produced. Some of our favorites are after the jump.
Classic GM Ads: When Times Were Not So Terrible
Hamilton Nolan · 11/29/08 12:00PMPoor General Motors Corp may not be around forever if certain auto dealers on a bus ride cannot persuade the federal government to give the failing company $25 billion. Sad! Remember when GM cars ruled the roads, America ruled the world, and men were men? Those were the days. We've collected a gallery of ten classic GM ads from the good old days of the 1930s, to remind you of what once was, and what shall never be again. Weep for your autos: