2026-04-11
1 小时 3 分钟I'm Dane Brugler.
I cover the NFL draft for The Athletic.
Our draft guide picked up the name The Beast because of the crazy amount of information that's included.
I'm looking at thousands of players putting together hundreds of scouting reports.
I've been covering this year's draft since last year's draft.
There is a lot in The Beast that you simply can't find anywhere else.
This is the kind of in-depth, unique journalism you get from The Athletic and The New York Times.
You can subscribe at nytimes. com slash subscribe.
From the New York Times, this is The Interview.
I'm David Marchese.
There are very few celebrity memoirs I've been more eager to read than Lena Dunham's fame-sick.
That's partly because she's such a sharp, funny writer.
It's also partly because her HBO show Girls was a true generational touchstone.
But a bigger part of it is because I knew she 'd have smart things
to say about what exactly she represented to people back in the 2010s.
Dunham, if you'll remember, was a lightning rod for so much discourse.
Her show was divisive and buzzy, sure, but probably not as much as she was.
During the Days of Girls, which Dunham created when she was only 24,
she was scolded for being unselfaware, an oversharer, privileged, not attractive enough, self-absorbed, you name it.
Now she did, and she'll admit this, have an unfortunate knack for putting her foot in her mouth.