Fast Playback and the Art of Speed Leisure
Consuming media in double- and triple-time may be more efficient, but at what cost?

Consuming media in double- and triple-time may be more efficient, but at what cost?

General Motors announced yet another vehicle recall today, marking its 29th in the United States this year.

The United Nations Security Council is planning to vote on Thursday about whether to ask the International Criminal Court to investigate claims of war crimes in Syria.

Both the New York Daily News and the New York Post reported on Wednesday about a brief cocktail reception held Tuesday evening at the 9/11 Museum, which opened the following day.

The planned headquarters for the Department of Homeland Security is 11 years behind schedule and $1.5 billion over budget, and officials are increasingly considering just calling the whole project a mulligan.

The Justice Department plans on making public a 2011 memo detailing the legal justification for killing suspected terrorists overseas, even if they are American citizens.

A series of back-and-forth 11th-hour reversals has come to a temporary lull as, almost an hour before Russell Bucklew was scheduled to be executed in Missouri, Justice Samuel Alito has halted the execution.

Three years after the Central Intelligence Agency used vaccination programs as part of a campaign to track down Osama Bin Laden, the White House has promised that that particular tactic is no longer part of the agency’s playbook.

Officials at federal health agencies, including the Department of Health and Human Services and National Institute of Health, have been accused of ethical misconduct.

The Justice Department unsealed an indictment on Monday charging five members of China’s People’s Liberations Army with committing cyberattacks.
