Congress Continues To Make the Tax Code Ridiculously Hard To Understand
I shouldn't have to spend so much money on an accountant every year. But I don't really have a choice.
I shouldn't have to spend so much money on an accountant every year. But I don't really have a choice.
Arhoolie Records founder Chris Strachwitz's photos document blues, country, and Cajun music.
Buffett realized that what the consumer thought of him was ultimately more important than what he was.
In today's innovative economy, there's no excuse for sending a gift card. The staff at Reason is here with some inspiration.
Death's 1990 Spiritual Healing paints a right-wing culture warrior’s nightmare vision of America.
In separate criminal racketeering cases, prosecutors are using rap lyrics and the personal diary of a protester shot and killed by police as evidence.
Sophia Coppola's superb drama tackles an age-gap romance with nuance.
The pop singer's new concert film inadvertently makes the case for big businesses with sweeping market power.
Stop enabling thieves by owning stuff.
Thank Swifties, not Joe Biden, for Ticketmaster's consumer-friendly pricing policy.
When keeping cultural archives safe means stepping outside the law.
When keeping cultural archives safe means stepping outside the law
A calculated corporate deal propelled these radical rockers all the way to the Hall of Fame.
If you don't take Oliver Anthony's surprise hit song too seriously, it's a lot of fun. Regrettably, a lot of people are taking the song much too seriously indeed.
The rapper is a Bernie Sanders supporter who speaks out about gun rights and free speech.
Laws against displaying Nazi-esque iconography are well-intended, but they pose a threat to free speech and the principles of a free society.
The case could have long-term implications for how broadly fair use can be applied.
Author Kaitlyn Tiffany offers a history of fandoms.
The legendary graphic designer juxtaposes 18th- and 19th-century paintings with visualizations of how much life has improved over the centuries.
Meanwhile, content creators and corporations want copyright regulations for artificial intelligence.
"Flattery is toxic to love / So why, tell me, do you drink poison?"
Seven sheriff's deputies say the rapper subjected them to "embarrassment, ridicule, emotional distress, humiliation, and loss of reputation" after a drug bust on his house came up empty.
Turning every streaming service into TikTok is bad for the internet. It'll be disastrous for music.
"It's very easy for politicians to legislate freedom away," says Northwood University's Kristin Tokarev. "But it's incredibly hard to get back."
Asian adversaries aerially admire American angst and apathy.
The mystery writer and cultural critic is an outspoken defender of free thinking and cultural appropriation.
A new proposal to more than triple visa entry fees for performers will harm American audiences and culture.
The Vienna Green Party had demanded a scheduled performance of the reunited heavy metal band be canceled because of a 2016 incident in which singer Phil Anselmo threw out a Nazi salute.
The site crashed because Swift is very popular, not because antitrust enforcement is too weak.
Podcaster and music critic Rob Harvilla reminds us of the debts we owe to the tunes of that often cringeworthy decade.
"It's stories and songs and films cut apart and written over, leaving no trace and no remnant of whatever used to be," writes novelist and cultural critic Kat Rosenfield.
Social media, streaming, and a new era of digital self-censorship
Religious Kurds used social media to shut down a rap concert—and they're swinging their weight around politics, too.
Until next year's, because capitalism is always making things better.