October 2, 2017 3:57 PM EDT
Singer Ariana Grande made a heartfelt plea for gun control following Sunday night’s devastating Las Vegas shooting at a country music concert.
“My heart is breaking for Las Vegas. We need love, unity, peace, gun control & for people to look at this & call this what it is = terrorism,” the Dangerous Woman songstress wrote in a Twitter post shared Monday.
The shooter in Las Vegas has been identified by police as 64-year-old Stephen Paddock.
As the label suggests, Band of Outsiders, Scott Sternberg's Los Angeles-based company, was founded on rebellious values. But the designer's über-chic aesthetic could hardly be called renegade. He favors the nattily elegant look of Brooks Brothers classicskhakis, trench coats, double-breasted jacketsseen through ironic eyes.
"I knew I wanted to be part of the cultural dialogue somehow," says Sternberg, 33, a former CAA agent and self-described clotheshorse and geek. "Like a cinephile knows about film, I know about clothes.
This week, the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in two cases that will determine the fate of same-sex marriage in America. The court’s decision won’t come for months, but regardless of how the justices rule, David Von Drehle’s new cover story chronicles how, thanks to a massive shift in public opinion, gay marriage went from inconceivable to inevitable in less than two decades. To illustrate Von Drehle’s story, TIME invited same-sex couples in California and New York to share some intimate moments for photographer Peter Hapak.
HBO Brief spoilers for Sunday’s Boardwalk Empire up next: Between AMC’s Sunday finales and a large-ish print-magazine piece that I’ve been on deadline for, I didn’t get around to reviewing the very strong Boardwalk Empire episode, “Nights in Ballygran.” I’ve read elsewhere on the web that this was the show’s most Sopranos-esque episode yet; but to me, despite the Mob and Terence Winter’s Sopranos background, it was much more Deadwood-esque.
EVERY MAN A MURDERER by Heimito von Doderer. 373 pages. Knopf. $5.95.
A novel by Vienna’s Heimito von Doderer is rather like an Eames chair draped with an antimacassar. In their opulent detail, his scenes suggest those leisurely Victorian sagas in which the reader can hardly see the plot for the potted ferns. Beneath the surface clutter, however, a psychological novelist of power and perception is at work.
Though he is Austria’s most eminent novelist, Von Doderer did not become widely known in the U.