国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Image

Weekend Reading: It’s OK to Be a Jerk Sometimes

In this weekly roundup, we scour the Web for our favorite long-form magazine and newspaper articles, collecting them here and on Longreads and Twitter. This installment focuses on bicycle etiquette, the art of body building, and the religious nature of ivory.

Published: 
Image

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

This week, Slate posted an by Jim Saska suggesting that all cyclists are not assholes. It鈥檚 merely the one or two reckless ones you鈥檝e encountered that stand out in your mind, as opposed to the hundreds who pass you by without incident, that fuel your prejudice. This may well be the case, but in my personal experience, it helps to be a bit of an asshole when you鈥檙e on a bike.

Back when I lived in New York I used to be a delivery boy for a lobster restaraunt. This involved zipping at high speed through New York City traffic, squirming between city buses and avoiding the dreaded suddenly-open-car-door. I did it for about four months before I was unceremoniously released from my duties. I鈥檝e still never had a lobster roll.

Of course, my employers were completely justified. I was terrible at it, and when your job consists of pretty much one thing鈥攇etting food from point A to point B in a reasonable amount of time鈥攜ou can鈥檛 suck at it. I wasn鈥檛 terrible because I was slow (despite working primarily on the Internet, I鈥檓 in reasonable human condition), but because I was too polite.

I obeyed traffic laws, waited patiently for pedestrians to clear the way, never jumped out in front of cars; I was a model citizen. The one time I came close to clipping someone on the sidewalk, I stopped, turned around, and went back to make sure they were OK. That鈥檚 not how you deliver food in New York in a timely fashion. You have to be willing to go the wrong way, cut people off, and generally be an unapologetic, cosmically-charged delivery comet, dead set on getting the probably-very-stoned occupants of the East Village their food before they turn on each other or their neighbors. That generally means being an asshole.

Anyway, without further ado, here鈥檚 what you should take the time to read this weekend:

You may be surprised to learn that your hatred of cyclists is based on a deep emotional bias. .

鈥淚f you are a city driver, you have undoubtedly been scared half to death by some maniac cutting across traffic like Frogger on a . Such emotionally charged events stand out in our associative memory far more than mundane events, like a cyclist riding peacefully alongside your vehicle. The affect heuristic is compounded by the idea of聽negativity dominance鈥攂ad events stand out more than good ones. This causes you to overestimate both the amount and the severity of upsetting events, like almost getting some dirty hipster鈥檚 blood on your windshield.鈥

Since the 1970s, Alaska has been more reliant on oil than it cares to admit. What happens when the oil rush runs out? .

鈥淏ut it is the pipeline鈥檚 uncertain future that poses Alaska鈥檚 greatest existential dilemma. For a third of a century, the energy industry has underwritten not only Alaska鈥檚 finances but also its rugged, individualist self-image. Oil revenues have allowed the state鈥檚 residents to live the libertarian dream of Alaska鈥檚 past鈥擜laskans pay no state sales or income taxes鈥攚hile enjoying all the benefits of life in a prosperous welfare state. As an energy lawyer I met in Anchorage drily observed, Alaskans may talk like Texans, but they live like Norwegians.鈥

The fascinating story of bodybuilder Steve Reeves, the man who made fitness into an art form and set the stage for future muscle-bound icons like Schwarzenegger and Stallone. .

鈥淗e was phenomenally good at it. He was naturally gifted in a way that still makes other bodybuilders very sincerely freak out. During his first four months of training, he put on 30 pounds of muscle, which is obviously ludicrous. There are stories about crowds sort of helplessly following him around as he walked on Muscle Beach鈥攈e had that kind of charisma.鈥

Visit Sweden鈥檚 Cape Bjare, a land that has come to be ruled by the lowly potato. .听

鈥淚ndeed, in Cape Bjare, a potato is not just a potato; a potato is also something like a grape. Ever since the Cape鈥檚 farmers began harvesting their potatoes early, a few generations ago, a viticulture of sorts has been blossoming here. Locals speak of terroirs and tasting notes and trace flavor to sand levels in the soil or a particular farm鈥檚 proximity to the sea. Certain varieties, like the Old Swedish Red, can go for as much as $100 per pound. When the year鈥檚 first new potato is picked, in May, the event is televised live across Sweden. In early June, the Cape鈥檚 restaurant week is kicked off with ‘Parans Dag,’ ‘Potatoes Day’ in the local dialect.鈥

The ivory trade is still going strong. But it鈥檚 not just about money, religion plays a large role in the slaughter. Can true believers be turned away from the grisly practice? .

鈥淎lthough the world has found substitutes for every one of ivory鈥檚 practical uses鈥攂illiard balls, piano keys, brush handles鈥攊ts religious use is frozen in amber, and its role as a political symbol persists. Last year Lebanon鈥檚 President Michel Sleiman gave Pope Benedict XVI an ivory-and-gold thurible. In 2007 Philippine President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo gave an ivory Santo Ni帽o to Pope Benedict XVI. For Christmas in 1987 President Ronald Reagan and Nancy Reagan bought an ivory Madonna originally presented to them as a state gift by Pope John Paul II. All these gifts made international headlines. Even Kenya鈥檚 President Daniel arap Moi, father of the global ivory ban, once gave Pope John Paul II an elephant tusk. Moi would later make a bigger symbolic gesture, setting fire to 13 tons of Kenyan ivory, perhaps the most iconic act in conservation history.鈥

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online