
Commentary
-
Our commentary partners will help you reach your own conclusions on complex topics.
I watched the Hulu show Fleischmanns in trouble with particular interests given that just a few years ago true story, the book changed my life. On the surface Fleischman is in trouble is a show about divorce, but it’s it’s really about aging and ambition. And that moment that you you stop and you look around, you realize you’re not waiting for your life to start. This is it. There’s also been a very interesting cultural reaction to the show. It describes with startling accuracy, the midlife reckoning faced by a very particular subset of women. These are women whose on the surface privilege makes them very hard to describe with any real sense of empathy. Except I read the book that the show is based on shortly after getting divorced myself. And by the time I turn the last page, I was like sitting there open mouth, having just learned with razor sharp specificity, what had just happened to my marriage, and my life. So a big part of the release I felt when reading the book was the acknowledgement that you know, it’s a simple one, you would think, but not in our society, that while parenting is extremely difficult, parenting and working an outside job is more difficult. It’s almost impossible. In fact, unless those Affer mentioned privileges are in place, given that there is next to no structural support for parents in our society. The book holds that the condescension that suggests that stay at home mothers have the you know, the hardest job creates the risk of ignoring what’s happening to working mothers, which is that, frankly, they’re trapped in a system designed to break them.
You know, I worked and I and I also picked up the kids after school. And then I spent the rest of the day ignoring half of my job or half of my family depending on who had the most pressing need of the moment. And like so many other mothers like I made the playdates and I volunteered for the pumpkin patches, and I worried about the 529 accounts and I calendar, the whatever the PTA meetings, and if something came up with, you know, a child and they had to be picked up or they were sick, I was the one switching the meeting to the zoom and just you know, doing everything at once, because I could until I couldn’t. But what I was missing with the language to explain that I was doing too much while pretending that I was not. What Fleischmann is in trouble did was the book first and then the show as well gave me the language to describe the anger that I felt the rage of having so much of my day and my mental space and everything taken up by this avalanche of work that was seemingly invisible from the outside. And much of it was self imposed or imposed by cultural expectations. But it was there Nevertheless, the show reveals to us how silly the whole thing is the school admissions and the social networking and the dinner parties and all of it while also acknowledging its emotional weight. When as a professional or a parent or a woman, is it ever good enough? The answer not just from society, but from ourselves seems to be never and it is refreshing to see right there on the screen and an acknowledgement that we all of us are completely profoundly and legitimately exhausted.
-
Trump’s ‘Gulf of America’ renaming is mere political spectacle
Aboard Air Force One, en route to the Super Bowl in New Orleans, President Trump held a news conference. As the flight entered international waters over the Gulf of Mexico, he issued an executive order renaming it the “Gulf of America” and declaring Feb. 9 as “Gulf of America Day.” The order, titled Restoring Names… -
President Trump politicizes DC plane crash as Americans mourn
Sixty-seven people died when a Black Hawk helicopter crashed into American Airlines Flight 5342 as it came in for a landing at Reagan National Airport on the night of Jan. 29 outside of Washington, D.C. Investigators are still examining the accident and putting details together, but believe that the helicopter was flying at too high… -
Project 2025 is Trumpism on steroids
President Trump has already taken several actions that align with Project 2025, a far-right blueprint for Trump’s second term developed by the Heritage Foundation. Among other intiatives, his administration has moved to eliminate DEI programs, reinstate service members dismissed for refusing the COVID-19 vaccine, and revive “Schedule F,” a policy making it easier to fire… -
Trump wastes no time marginalizing vulnerable communities
On Jan. 20, President Trump gave an inaugural speech after starting his second term, promising to bring the U.S. into a “golden age” and saying he wanted to be remembered as a “unifier.” After that speech, Trump signed 26 executive orders over the rest of Inauguration Day alone, some of them highly controversial and divisive,… -
LA needs your help, not your political commentary
It’s been one week since a series of wildfires began in Los Angeles, California that has since claimed at least 25 lives and forced at least 92,000 residents to evacuate. Firefighters estimate that they’ve still only contained as little as 17% of the Palisades Fire, and warn that very high winds might continue feeding the…
Latest Opinions
-
Getty Images
New England city votes to become a sanctuary for transgender community
-
U.S. Army photo by Michel Sauret
Team USA athletes making life-changing memories at Invictus 2025
-
Getty Images
China recruiting ‘planetary defense’ unit to protect Earth from 2032 asteroid
-
Getty Images
Plans to buy armored Tesla vehicles suddenly gone from State Department list
-
UAF
Ukraine unveils underground ‘Hell-making’ missile facility
Popular Opinions
-
In addition to the facts, we believe it’s vital to hear perspectives from all sides of the political spectrum.