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Substack Reads: The business of air miles, Bowie’s favorite books, and cold compost
Who would come forward in a time of crisis? Which groups of friends would step up their support just when you needed it most? Elliot Kirschner explores what connects us all
This past weekend, I went to the dry cleaners to drop off some shirts. It’s become a rarity for me in a world of increasingly informal wardrobes, working from home, and doing my own laundry. Still, sometimes an article of clothing needs professional attention.
When I arrived, a man walked in just before me with a bag full of clothes. I must confess, I was a little frustrated wondering how long this would take. He was picking up as well as dropping off and I speculated on what careers today require this much dry cleaning.
The customer was chatting with the man behind the counter, wishing him a happy new year. Standard small talk for early January. But I realized they were using first names—clearly a level of familiarity greater than infrequent encounters.
The customer then asked the man behind the counter how his wife was doing. The tone was hushed and serious. I could tell this wasn’t a casual question.
Frequent-flier programs are big business, with airlines uniquely positioned to maximize the economics of point schemes. Marc Rubinstein looks at how they work, where points come from, and where they go
Accessing the party lounge (photo by Found Image Holdings/Getty Images)
More than a million people signed up for American Airlines’ frequent flyer program in its first three months of launch, and other airlines quickly followed. Within a few years, an estimated 75% of business travelers had joined at least one program.
Initially, the schemes allowed members to claim the occasional free flight (usually to Hawaii) in the course of their regular business travel. Then, in 1988, Delta introduced a Triple Mileage scheme which allowed travelers to clock up points at a turbo-charged rate. It led to a frequent-flying frenzy, as the industry’s first “points guys” emerged to play the game the programs spawned. Flying back and forth between two short-leg cities, a rewards ticket to Hawaii could be earned in just eight continuous hours of flying. “One of the most popular ones was Dallas to Austin,” an early points maven told the New York Times. “People would do that eight, nine, 10 times in a day.”
Who is Banksy? It is a question that has taunted the art world for two decades.
As a graffiti artist, he has committed criminal damage. Which is why I’m including him in Behind the Crimes.
I uncovered a ‘lost’ interview with the secretive stenciller.
When researching the artist’s background, I came across an old report which had lain in a tape archive for more than a decade and a half. Even the journalist who had interviewed the then-unknown Banksy had forgotten about it—even though he had seen the artist’s face without a mask.
Today, Banksy could genuinely claim to be the world’s most famous artist. Some of his work sells for tens of millions of dollars.
Molecular biologist turned cookbook author Nik Sharma invited readers into an experiment on weighing vs. measuring. And the results answer a few key questions…
Does a difference of 20 ml really matter? That’s a little over 1 Tbsp. Most folks will say it doesn’t. I agree with this sentiment but with reservations. It all depends on context, and many recipes can be flexible so that these differences might be irrelevant. 20 ml of a liquid like water, milk, or oil might not make a big difference when adding a cup when preparing a soup, a stew, or even when frying food. However, the absence of 20 ml in a recipe might affect the texture of a cake, bread, or cookie. The type of ingredient being measured also matters; if I use too much or too little vinegar or lemon juice in a recipe, its effect on taste and texture can be disastrous. This numerical difference in weights can also manifest itself in a very different way. Imagine making a soup with 8 cups of water or stock; each cup is 20 ml less than it should be. At the end of the recipe, I’m now 160 ml short. When I serve people soup, I use a ladle. If my ladle accurately picks up 1 cup of soup every time, the last bowl will be 240 ml - 160 ml = 80 ml, or 1/3 cup less than it should be. In this instance, a small error gets amplified and accumulated to make a bigger impact, and whoever gets the last 2/3 cup of soup will be pretty annoyed.
“We will each write a ghost story,” pronounced Lord Byron, shepherding their entertainment/tension nexus to the next level with this supernatural challenge (Claire was exempt). The two published heavyweights got to work straightaway: Byron wrote a spooky vignette, a fragment of which appears at the end of his poem Mazeppa, and Shelley cooked up the poetic A Fragment of a Ghost Story. Polidori hit a home run, hatching the idea that would become his novel The Vampyre, now credited as the first modern vampire novel.
Mary, on the other hand, was stuck.
“I thought and pondered—vainly,” she wrote. “I felt that blank incapability of invention which is the greatest misery of authorship, when dull Nothing replies to our anxious invocations. Have you thought of a story? I was asked each morning, and each morning I was forced to reply with a mortifying negative.”
Often winter’s bleakness is buoyed by the sense of renewal that comes with a new year. Something has ended, which makes room for something else to begin, with all its attendant optimism and opportunity. But the days are cold, my home is cold, the sun goes down early, the world is frightening, and I’ve found the sense of transition that I usually enjoy around this time to be eerily absent. My life remains continuous; fundamentally changed in some ways, but also exactly the same. It’s weird sometimes.
Contemplating this while I worked the compost at my community garden this week, I noticed that my piles were also a little low-energy. It has been cold. The pace of decomposition has slowed to a crawl. The heat of the piles dissipates quickly, discharging into the air in sighs of sleepy steam. Food scraps linger for weeks that, in warmer seasons, would have disappeared in days. This made me reconsider my expectations for the season. In compost work, winter is for resting. Everything slows down. Renewal doesn’t come until spring, when the days get longer and the earth warms up, and decomposition—and its accompanying cycle of regeneration—can begin again. So I figured that I might stay cold for a little while longer. It’s okay to be sleepy, not particularly filled with hope right now, and to keep myself in hibernation.
Congratulations to the following writers celebrating publication.
Luke Burgis will be working on his book The One and the Ninety-Nine this year:
Luke Burgis2d
My antidote to whatever happens in 2024: writing. I am very happy to finally be able to announce this. Book coming late 2025/early 2026. Subscribers will be able to come along for the ride as I dig into the work. Thank you for all of your support so far!
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Kerry Nichols announces preorders of her new book, Puppy Brain: How Our Dogs Learn, Think, and Love:
IT’S HERE! Today, you can finally pre-order your copy of Puppy Brain: How Our Dogs Learn, Think, and Love, on sale April 30th! And save your receipt: We will be announcing a very special gift with pre-order in the coming weeks! So many of you have asked for book updates over the last two years — I can’t believe I’m finally getting to share this news with…
@Eric Topol and I share many interests, and this conversation just scratches the surface. We discuss… The latest science on healthspan and lifespan, Balancing evidence and affluenza when it comes to body scanning, Generative AI and LLMs as major accelerants in medicine, Impacts of other powerful technologies: mRNA, GLP-1 agonists, gene editing – and what’s to come…
Substack Reads is a weekly roundup of writing, ideas, art, and audio from the world of Substack. Posts are recommended by staff and readers, and curated and edited from Substack’s U.K. outpost by Hannah Ray.
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