#MagazineTime: Kinks In Mono, T2, RTJ
This month's flip through disposable media listens to the Kinks they way they intended and wonders if anyone has seen 'Trainspotting 2'.
This month's flip through disposable media listens to the Kinks they way they intended and wonders if anyone has seen 'Trainspotting 2'.
Boycott culture, real enemies and getting things wrong + this day in history w/Voice of America and our song of the day by Nikki Lane on your Morning Monarchy for February 17, 2017.
Merger minds, ticket schemes and magazine time + this day in history w/Iran options and our song of the day by London Grammar on your Morning Monarchy for February 3, 2017.
The latest new installment in the Media Monarchy kingdom is a monthly look at that oh-so-disposable, yet undeniably influential form of dinosaur media that refuses to go extinct, the magazine.
Snopes schadenfreude, Mr. Metropolis and a gift guide + this day in history w/the Federal Reserve Act and our song of the day by Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings on your Morning Monarchy for December 23, 2016.
This week on the New World Next Week: the green Chicken Littles continue with their enviro doom porn; a Newsweek journo is caught fingering US intel in Putin-Trump conspiracy story; and Americans fear everything.
This week on the New World Next Week: the green Chicken Littles continue with their enviro doom porn; a Newsweek journo is caught fingering US intel in Putin-Trump conspiracy story; and Americans fear everything.
Statist festivals, short stories and bad jingles + this day in history w/“Route 66″ and our song of the day by Sonny Knight and the Lakers on your Morning Monarchy for October 7, 2016.
The media, the mergers and "Meet The Flockers" + this day in history w/30 September Movement and our song of the day by Warpaint on your Morning Monarchy for September 30, 2016.
Past studies have shown that reading books can benefit people in a multitude of ways, physically, mentally, and intellectually. Now in a new study, people who read a book for about 30 minutes a day were found to live approximately 2 years longer than those who didn’t read at all. [1]
In previous research, curling up with a good book has been shown to improve people’s social skills by improving their ability to read the thoughts and feelings of others.