Follow along with Slate as we report from the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee. Look out for need-to-know dispatches from reporters Jim Newell and Aymann Ismail, along with What Next host Mary Harris. Read our coverage here: https://lnkd.in/eFVfZmi3
Slate Magazine
Book and Periodical Publishing
Brooklyn, NY 50,248 followers
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About us
Slate is a daily online magazine and podcast network that helped invent the voice of the web. Founded in 1996, Slate is a general-interest publication offering analysis and commentary about politics, news, business, technology, and culture. Slate’s strong editorial voice and witty take on current events have been recognized with numerous awards, including the National Magazine Award for General Excellence. Slate’s podcast network, established in 2005 with the launch of Political Gabfest, produces more than 20 podcasts, including Slow Burn, Culture Gabfest, What Next, Decoder Ring and more. Slate.com reaches more than 25M unique visitors and averages more than 40M pageviews every month. Slate's podcast network garnered more than 190 million downloads in 2022.
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http://www.slate.com/
External link for Slate Magazine
- Industry
- Book and Periodical Publishing
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- 201-500 employees
- Headquarters
- Brooklyn, NY
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- Privately Held
- Founded
- 1996
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Primary
15 Metrotech Center
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1707 L St NW
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15 Metrotech Center
Brooklyn, NY 11201, US
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Updates
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"I did walk away from more money to do this, and I didn’t know how much money I was going to be able to make doing cookies." Kerstyn Lott is one of the many so-called sugar cookie artists around the country who have opened bakeries out of their homes in recent years. The vast majority of these bakers are women with families. They sell custom sets of cookies decorated with royal icing or buttercream, and without any professional training as pastry chefs.
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Empty storefronts are eyesores, and also mean fewer neighborhood services for residents, less foot traffic on the street, and lower tax revenue for the city’s coffers. Before the pandemic, roughly 1 in every 20 New York City storefronts was empty—and that figure has now more than doubled. What was once thought to be a fleeting remnant of COVID-related closures is now endemic.