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Why You’ll Never Be an Online Star
Much like the economy at large, the media eco-system favors big players over independent creators.
Keep readingAmy Swan graduated from the Rochester Institute of Technology in 1994 with concentrations in both illustration and design. She began her career in publishing at Freetime Graphix as a designer, and later assistant art director, creating arts and entertainment publications. After two years in Rochester, she relocated for a one-year creative artist position at Nutmeg Mills in Tampa, where she designed and illustrated graphics for apparel. In 1997, she moved to Boston and settled into an art director role at the Atlantic, where she stayed for eight years commissioning art and designing advertising, marketing, and circulation materials for print and online. Currently she is a freelance designer and art director for various clients, including the Washington Monthly, where she has served as art director since 2009. She lives just outside of Boston with her husband, two children, and three cats.
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Much like the economy at large, the media eco-system favors big players over independent creators.
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A new book treats old age, or ‘gerontocracy,’ as the central crisis of modern politics. The framing obscures more than it explains.
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In the 1980s, serious people feared World War III and acted to prevent it. Today, our slouch toward World War III is being orchestrated by egotistical sociopaths.
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Nicholas Lemann’s family history illuminates what it means to be Jewish in America and explains how we choose our religious and ethnic identities.
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Two rulings this year, including one this month, have laid bare the court’s fundamental misinterpretation of the landmark law and the Reconstruction Era Constitutional amendments that transformed America.
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I studied with the late Harvard professor who had a nuanced understanding of class and race in America.
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The Los Angeles Republican mayoral candidate was seen as a cutting-edge adopter of artificial intelligence, but it only cut down his chances of winning.
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