Last weekend, Kendrick Brinson visited Sun City, Arizona, an age-restricted community for retirees, near Phoenix. The city was built over a ghost town, in 1960, and was the first of its kind in the U.S. Brinson, who is based in Atlanta, first visited Sun City three years ago, in advance of Sun City’s fiftieth anniversary. On this, her eighth visit, she brought her iPhone, and posted a selection of her photos to The New Yorker’s Instagram feed. Click-through for a slideshow: http://nyr.kr/T619U0
(Source: newyorker.com)
Kendrick Brinson is taking over The New Yorker’s Instagram feed this weekend, posting from Sun City, Arizona, an age-restricted city of more than forty thousand retirees. Follow @newyorkermag on Instagram for updates.
So much for “health-care Monday,” which had Washington and the media world in a rare tizzy. Shortly after ten o’clock this morning, John Roberts and his colleagues handed down a bunch of rulings, some of them significant, such as one that struck down part of the Arizona immigration law, but none of them pertaining to the Affordable Health Care for America Act, a.k.a. Obamacare. The justices, like producers of a Hollywood soap opera, were keeping their best plot twist for the end.
John Cassidy on how the Supreme Court gave hope to both sides on health care: http://nyr.kr/MTu2LH
Alex Koppelman breaks down the Supreme Court’s ruling today on immigration in Arizona: http://nyr.kr/MQitsc
Kelefa Sanneh on the Supreme Court’s decision about immigration law, “Another Anticlimax…”: http://nyr.kr/KXNcpK
The Boy who Cried Birther: http://nyr.kr/KRnSMk
Zachary Kanin forecasts the big news stories of 2012 in this week’s Cartoon Issue: http://nyr.kr/qCIh2F