Americans Shani Davis and Chad Hedrick — two of the world’s fastest skaters 10 years ago — were both scheduled for the 1500-meter speed skating event in the 2006 Winter Olympics. For weeks before the match, they bickered in
“I’m in no shape to exercise.” Overhearing this sentence in a coffee shop, I glanced over to see an obese fellow holding a gooey pastry and a drink topped with whipped cream. He and his buddy laughed, but there
Several years ago, I joined a small group visiting the set of Saturday Night Live after its Friday night rehearsal. During the visit, executive producer Lorne Michaels discussed SNL’s creative process — emphasizing that the show’s extraordinarily tight schedule
The surveillance cameras throughout the streets of Amsterdam looked really boring to Jill Magid, a conceptual artist. So for her next street-art project, Jill wanted to decorate those dull cameras with rhinestones. But when she presented her plan to
Inspiring Fortitude: Homeless Student Pedals Bike 6 Hours To College It’s been a hot, dry summer in Georgia. But sweltering heat couldn’t stop Fred Barley, a homeless college student. Nor could more than 50 miles of scorching
Above is a thank-you note I received from Oban, the four-year-old grandson of our neighbor, after he and I fed cracked corn to the two ducks in our community’s pond. (It reads: “Dear Sam, Thank you for taking me
Creativity isn’t a talent granted to a privileged few — it’s innate in all humans. And the ebb and flow of personal creativity helps determine whether or lives — and our work — are bright or bleak, eye-opening or
Susan Batson is a world-famous acting coach who has worked with clients such as Nicole Kidman and Juliette Binoche, Jennifer Lopez and Chris Rock. On the entrance table where students sign in is a stone with the word “wisdom”
Roaming about the Cooper Hewitt museum in New York City, I ran across this insight from legendary industrial designer Henry Dreyfuss: “For research, I once got behind the counter in the clock section of a store. My first customer
New Yorker writer Andrew Marantz says “additive tourism” is travel to embellish the self — seeing new art, tasting new foods, hearing new music. “Subtractive tourism,” he explains, is travel taken to remove distractions keeping you from yourself —