Edward Snowden and the Constitution as wallpaper
The man charged with espionage appeared Monday in front of the backdrop of the nation’s founding document.
Latest Style Stories
One local author joins a flock of tweets in Twitter Fiction Festival
Lara Prescott won one of 25 official slots in this week’s live-streaming storytelling event.
Will Oyster find pearls in its e-book app?
Oyster develops an app for Apple devices that allows readers unlimited access to 100,000-plus e-book titles.
Edward Snowden’s constitutional wallpaper
Addressing SXSW conference by video link, fugitive NSA leaker uses a familiar image as his backdrop.
Backstage: Keegan stars in real legal drama over zoning
The semiprofessional theater faces issues over the proper zoning for its Dupont Circle building.
Remembering Joe McGinniss, author of one of the best nonfiction books ever
‘Fatal Vision’ remains a nearly unmatched clinic in muscular storytelling
‘Freddy’s BBQ Joint’ from ‘House of Cards’ for sale
The Baltimore storefront used on the show can be yours.
Actor Woody Harrelson is now a local hotelier
He, along with Baltimore businessman John Dwyer, recently bought the Inn at the Black Olive for $4.5 million.
How to watch any movie, easily, from your computer, for free
PopcornTime makes torrenting as easy as Netflix. The only problem? It’s illegal.
A piece of Mount Vernon sells for $18.6 million
The “River View Estate” in Fairfax county Virginia gets a new owner less than a year after it went on the market.
President Obama has all the ‘Game of Thrones’ spoilers
The show’s creators confirm that the president gets to view season four of “Game of Thrones” early.
The happiest post we’ve ever done
Different cities around the world offer their own video takes on Pharrell’s hit “Happy.”
Terry Teachout among finalists for $10,000 Marfield Prize for arts writing
Annual award from the Arts Club of Washington will be presented April 26.
Marianne Williamson, self-help guru, wants to heal D.C.
She is an independent congressional candidate for Henry Waxman’s California congressional seat.
Edward Snowden and the Constitution as wallpaper
The man charged with espionage appeared Monday in front of the backdrop of the nation’s founding document.
Dems nod to Ted Cruz with Dr. Seuss reading
Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) took a page from the tea party favorite’s playbook reading Dr. Seuss’s “The Lorax” on the Senate floor.
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