1. How do you solve a problem like North Korea?
James Franco and Seth Rogen. (Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
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Sony's decision to cancel the Christmas release of the North Korea-mocking The Interview is expected to lose it about $20 million.
[Vox / Kelsey McKinney]
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Other estimates go as high as $100 million.
[FiveThirtyEight / Nate Silver]
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The US government reportedly believes North Korea was behind the hacks against Sony that set these events into motion, but other have their doubts.
[Wired / Kim Zetter]
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North Korea reportedly employs thousands of specially trained hackers for cyberwarfare.
[Vox / Max Fisher]
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A Steve Carell-starring film set in North Korea has already been cancelled before shooting even began.
[Slate / Elliot Hannon]
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Some theaters wanted to replace The Interview with Team America: World Police (which also mocks North Korea), but Team America's studio put the kibosh on that.
[Vox / Kelsey McKinney]
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The scene of The Interview where North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Un is assassinated has leaked, and doesn't look that great.
[Vox / Zack Beauchamp]
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Adrian Hong: "North Korea is not funny. It is hard to imagine a comparable comedy emerging about quirky Islamic State slavers."
[The Atlantic / Adrian Hong]
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Adam Sternbergh: "this is most certainly the death knell for the kinds of comedies in which real-life foreign dictators come to a fiery end and/or turn out to be alien cockroaches."
[NY Mag / Adam Sternvergh]
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The film's screenwriter, Dan Sterling, on canceling the movie after terrorist threats: "Comedians shouldn’t be held accountable for acts of violence."
[Creative Screenwriting / Melissa Maroff]
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The movie's getting compared to the Nazi-mocking Charlie Chaplin classic The Great Dictator. That doesn't make a whole lot of sense.
[Washington Post / Adam Taylor]
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The case for a US government bailout of The Interview.
[NY Mag / Jonathan Chait]
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Mitt Romney's take, in case you wanted it: "@SonyPictures don’t cave, fight: release @TheInterview free online globally. Ask viewers for voluntary $5 contribution to fight #Ebola."
[Mitt Romney]
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Ross Douthat: this incident will make movie studios less inclined to take risks, and they play things way too safe as it is.
[NYT / Ross Douthat]
2. Nebraska and Oklahoma narc on Colorado
A budtender pours marijuana from a jar at a medical marijuana dispensary in California. (David McNew / Getty Images News)
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Nebraska and Oklahoma are suing Colorado for legalizing marijuana.
[Vox / German Lopez]
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The basic argument: the federal marijuana ban should trump Colorado's, and Colorado is harming neighboring states by increasing stoned driving and cross-border trafficking.
-
Colorado's Attorney General: "We believe this suit is without merit and we will vigorously defend against it in the US Supreme Court."
[Denver Post and The Cannabist / John Ingold]
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Marijuana Policy Project lobbyist Dan Riffle: Nebraska and Oklahoma don't have standing to sue, meaning the case should be dismissed out of hand.
[Dan Riffle]
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While the Justice Department has let Colorado and Washington legalize marijuana, it's reserved the right to step in on stuff like stoned driving and inter-state trafficking, which Nebraska and Oklahoma are complaining about.
[Huffington Post / Ryan Grim and Ryan Reilly]
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Sheriffs in Nebraska have been complaining about an increase in marijuana trafficking from Colorado for months.
[LA Times / Jenny Deam]
3. Misc.
-
Serial's big surprise: a satisfying ending.
[Vox / Libby Nelson]
-
24 hour day care centers are now a thing.
[Pacific Standard / Alissa Quart]
-
Traditional pensions were created as a way to drain support for unions, and now unions are among the only groups defending them.
[Bloomberg View / Stephen Mihm]
-
19 Reasons Santa Is Actually In Favour Of Full Communism Now.
[BuzzFeed / Tom Phillips and Hannah Jewell]
-
Without its investment in Alibaba, Yahoo! is, by some estimates, worth less than $0.
[NYT / Nicholas Carlson]
-
More Ayn Rand parodies should heavily reference her intense love for cats.
[New Yorker / Mallory Ortberg]
4. Verbatim
-
"I didn’t become a journalist to peddle indignation on Facebook."
[Slate / Jordan Weissmann]
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"When people are competing to see who can come up with the wittiest and most hilarious quip about why we should disbelieve rape victims, something has gone horribly wrong."
[Slate Star Codex / Scott Alexander]
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"The notion that traumatic events can be repressed and later recovered is the most pernicious bit of folklore ever to infect psychology and psychiatry."
[Richard McNally via Pacific Standard / Ed Cara]
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"The ability of machines to generate human speech predates even electricity."
[The Atlantic / Cari Romm]
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"Julie Beck contributed thought leadership to this article."
[The Atlantic / Robinson Meyer]
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