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‘Special Finished’ Bourbons, Blind Test And Power Ranked

When it comes to bourbon whiskey, you have a lot of choices out there. There are the classic low-proof bottles, barrel-proof releases, single barrels, limited editions, high-rye, low-rye … the list goes on and on. Another great section of the bourbon world is special barrel-finished bourbons or secondary cask finishes. Those are barrels that — no surprise here — go into a second barrel (vs. the standard new American oak) for finishing to add new flavor elements.

For this blind taste, I’m grabbing eight bourbons finished in everything from a second new oak barrel to various wine casks, brandy casks, and dessert wine casks. The throughline for all of this is the taste. I’m basically looking at whether or not I’d actually like to drink this in the real world (outside of tastings). I’m also looking at whether or not these live up to what’s promised on the label.

How can I do that in a blind tasting? Well, I’m going to guess which type of barrel these bourbons were finished in. It’s a test of my mettle and the clarity of the finish on these whiskeys. Our lineup today is:

  • Cedar Ridge Iowa Bourbon Double Barrel
  • Penelope Rose Cask Finish
  • Woodford Reserve Honey Barrel Finished Bourbon
  • Bardstown Bourbon Company Chateau de Laubade
  • Daviess County Cabernet Sauvignon Cask Finish
  • Barrell Vantage
  • Woodinville Moscatel Finish
  • I.W. Harper Cabernet Cask Finish

Okay, let’s find a great whiskey for you to try!

Also Read: The Top 5 UPROXX Bourbon Posts Of The Last Six Months

Part 1: The Tasting

Special Finish Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Taste 1

Special Finish Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

This opens with a faint hint of toasted oak with a burnt sugar vibe next to Christmas spices, dusty dark chocolate powder, vanilla cake, and pecan shells. The palate leans into the woody spices with star anise, allspice berries, cardamon pods, and full sticks of cinnamon over butterscotch candies, more of that dark chocolate, and a hint of rum-raisin. The end has a light black tea vibe with dates and prunes dusted by all that woody spice and packed into a fresh pine box.

My Barrel Guess:

Toasted oak? Burnt sugars? Fresh Pine? This has to be a double oaked. You feel that fresh barrel come through and really lean into the woodiness of the spices.

Taste 2

Special Finish Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

Soft orange blossoms and white flowers on a summer day pop on the light nose with a hint of candied cherry soaked dipped in dark chocolate with a hint of vanilla underneath it all. The palate holds onto the lightness with a strawberry and cream vibe next to tart raspberry and lush vanilla with a hint of dusty cinnamon that’s more sweet than sharp. The end has a hint of fresh herbs with more tart red berries and brand new porch wicker.

My Barrel Guess:

Light florals and tart berries … this feels like a light wine finish.

Taste 3

Special Finish Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

Hello, honey cask! The nose has a lovely floral honey note with a hint of orange peels studded with cloves next to Almond Joy and a touch of Graham Cracker dipped in honey and dusted with cinnamon. The palate has a touch of fresh ginger next to more fresh honey with a hint of sticky toffee pudding underneath it all. The end has a touch of old cedar with a whisper of coconut tobacco next to creamy honey cut with vanilla.

My Barrel Guess:

Yeah, this is a honey cask through and through.

Taste 4

Special Finish Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

This hits on complex notes on the nose from old leather, dried sage, cellared oak, roasted almonds rolled in toffee, sultanas, and then deep winter spice: freshly ground nutmeg, mace, cardamom, sharp cinnamon. The palate has a silky vanilla foundation with more sultanas over top, fresh and meaty dates, ginger snaps, and prunes mingle. The end has a gingerbread vibe next to cherry bark and grape must with more of those spices pouring into an old cedar humidor that used to hold tobacco.

My Barrel Guess:

This is a fancy brandy finish for sure. Those dried fruits and old wood give it away. It’s a refined one.

Taste 5

Special Finish Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

Sour red wine with mulled wine spices comes through on the nose with tart apples, fresh honey, and plenty of vanilla. The taste holds onto that spicy and sour mulled red wine vibe as a hint of tannic oak and vanilla butter creep in. The end kind of washes out but holds onto the red wine with plenty of oakiness and vanilla and spice.

My Barrel Guess:

Red wine finish. 100 percent sure. A little too proofed down though.

Taste 6

Special Finish Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

Dark chocolate tobacco leaves infused with dried chili peppers mingle on the nose with toasted coconut, fresh ginger, cherry root beer, and pineapple cores with a hint of espresso. The palate mixes orchard wood with espresso cream next to creamy eggnog, green tea, and savory green herbs. The end leans into spiced sticky toffee pudding with black-tea-soaked dates, plenty of cinnamon, and rich vanilla cream next to pink peppercorns, coconut cake, and smoked plum tobacco packed into a cedar box.

My Barrel Guess:

This is delicious! It’s really all over the place, so I’m not really zeroing in on a single cask. That likely means it’s a whiskey finished in a lot of casks and blended.

Taste 7

Special Finish Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

This opens with a mix of dark chocolate powder, smoked apricot, and burnt orange with a good dose of wet wicker and five spice. The palate leans into toffee and almonds (Almond Roca!) with peach pits, plums, and a touch of vanilla yellow cake. The end leans into the plums with a brown sugar vibe next to light Christmas spices, dry wicker, choco-spiced tobacco, and Almond Roca.
My Barrel Guess:

That Almond Roca gives this away as a Woodinville. That sweetness also leans into a dessert wine finish too.

Taste 8

Special Finish Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

Sweet cherry and caramel mix on the nose with sour red wine, vanilla, and dry porch wicker. The palate marries the tartness of the cherries with winter spices, creating a mulled wine spiked with a whiskey vibe next to a hint of cedar and black tea. The end leans into eggnog with plenty of nutmeg and creaminess with a hint of dark chocolate and a last blast of the cherry before the proofing water kicks in.

My Barrel Guess:

This had a clear red wine finish vibe. It was a little short-winded though.

Part 2: The Ranking

Special Finish Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

8. I.W. Harper Cabernet Cask Finish — Taste 8

I.W. Harper Cabernet Cask Finish
Diageo

ABV: 45%

Average Price: $70

The Whiskey:

This Diageo whiskey is a sourced Kentucky bourbon that’s aged at the famed Stitzel-Weller distillery for four years. The whiskey is then finished in red wine barrels from California before blending, proofing, and bottling.

Bottom Line:

This had a nice enough palate but kind of washed out at the end, that’s the only reason it’s last here. This is a fine whiskey otherwise. The red wine is clear on the palate as well, which is another nice touch.

7. Daviess County Cabernet Savignon Cask Finish — Taste 5

Daviess County
Lux Row

ABV: 48%

Average Price: $54

The Whiskey:

This whiskey combines two mash bill programs. Rye-heavy and wheat-heavy bourbon barrels are aged for five years before they’re vatted and then re-filled into Cab casks from Napa. That juice then rests for a final spell before batching, proofing, and bottling as-is.

Bottom Line:

This was a clearly nice whiskey with a fine palate. It wasn’t arresting like some of the other pours on the list today, but it was clearly red wine finished. I’d say maybe use this for solid cocktails regularly and an on-the-rocks sipper in a pinch.

6. Cedar Ridge Iowa Bourbon Double Barrel — Taste 1

Cedar Ridge Double Barrel
Cedar Ridge

ABV: 52.5%

Average Price: $50

The Whiskey:

This whiskey from craft distillery favorite Cedar Ridge combines their beloved whiskey with new oak one more time. The juice has a classic base of 74 percent corn, 14 percent rye, and 12 percent malted barely. After about four or five years, that whiskey is reloaded into brand new charred American oak barrels for a final finish.

Bottom Line:

This was a nice change of pace from the sweeter wine and brandy finishes. Still, this was light and very woody, though that’s the point. The only reason it’s a little lower on this ranking is that it didn’t pop as much as the rest. Otherwise, this is a good grab if you’re in the Midwest.

5. Penelope Rose Cask Finish — Taste 2

Penelope Rose Cask
Penelope

ABV: 47%

Average Price: $52

The Whiskey:

This whiskey takes Penelope’s beloved and multi-award-winning four-grain bourbon blend — 76 percent corn, 14 percent wheat, seven percent rye, and three percent malted barley — and re-barrels it in hand-selected French Grenache Rosé Wine Casks from the Southern Rhône of France. Once those barrels hit just the right flavor notes, they’re vatted, proofed, and bottled as-is.

Bottom Line:

This had a nice lightness to it thanks to that rose barrel, which really came through on the palate. Overall, this is a lighter whiskey with a nice palate that’s perfect for easy sipping on a slow day.

4. Barrell Vantage — Taste 6

Barrell Vantage
Barrell Craft Spirits

ABV: 57.22%

Average Price: $80

The Whiskey:

This brand new release from Barrell Craft Spirits really leans into unique and rare finishings. The blend is a mix of Indiana, Tennessee, and Kentucky bourbons that were finished in three different oaks separately before blending. In this case, that’s Japanese Mizunara casks, French, and American oak. Different toast and char levels were used for the barrels to achieve a unique palate that builds on the heritage of Barrell’s other triple cask-finished whiskeys (Dovetail, Seagrass, and Armida).

Bottom Line:

Ah, that makes sense as the palate didn’t land on one distinct barrel vibe. Still, this was delicious. Buy this whiskey, especially if you like something new and fresh with a deep flavor profile.

This is also where I’m splitting hairs with the ranking. This could be number one on another day. Today, it’s a little lower since the next three are a little clearer cut on the palate.

3. Woodinville Moscatel Finish — Taste 7

Woodinville Bourbon Moscatel Finish
Woodinville

ABV: 50%

Average Price: $70

The Whiskey:

This whiskey starts as Woodinville’s award-winning five-year-old bourbon. That juice is then re-barreled into Moscatel wine casks for a finish maturation period. After nearly a year, the whiskey goes into the bottle having just been touched by water but otherwise as-is.

Bottom Line:

This is just delicious. It’s also now available nationwide, so you might be able to try it even if you don’t live in Washington state this year.

2. Woodford Reserve Honey Barrel Finished Bourbon — Taste 3

Woodford Reserve Honey Barrel
Brown-Forman

ABV: 45.2%

Average Price: $60

The Whiskey:

This brand-new whiskey from Woodford Reserve takes classic Woodford bourbon that’s aged at least four years and finishes it with some honeyed oak. The bourbon is filled into barrels that aged honey for a final maturation before blending, very light proofing, and bottling.

Bottom Line:

This hit the honey barrel finish out of the park. There was a clear sense of the finish with a nice bourbon edge still underpinning everything. It was also very easy drinking and delightful to sip.

1. Bardstown Bourbon Company Chateau de Laubade — Taste 4

BBC Bourbon
Bardstown Bourbon Company

ABV: 53.5%

Average Price: $160

The Whiskey:

This bourbon is a blend of 12-year-old, low-rye bourbon from Kentucky and 10-year-old, very-low-rye bourbon from Tennessee. The whiskeys were re-barreled into Armagnac casks from the famed Chateau de Laubade. One set spent two years mellowing on the bottom floor of the rickhouse while another set spent 16 months mellowing on the top floor. After that, the barrels were vatted and bottled as-is.

Bottom Line:

This is a beautiful sip of whiskey. If you can find it buy a couple — you won’t see it again until next year.

Part 3: Final Thoughts

Special Finish Bourbon Blind
Zach Johnston

Overall, this was a nice panel of whiskeys. Each one delivered on what was promised on the label. That’s not always true, I can assure you. I really liked all of these, though the bottom three are more in the cocktail base column for me.

The top five were all nice enough to recommend as sippers or for great cocktails. That said, the top three are the prime cuts. If you can find any of those at your local liquor store or high-end whiskey bar, you’ll be in for a real treat. Good luck out there!

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Ted Lasso Might Have A Cameo In ‘FIFA 23’

Ted Lasso is one of the best shows on television right now. The Apple TV exclusive just won multiple Emmys and people are giddy about upcoming seasons. Someone else that may be excited for the future of the show is the devs over at EA who working on FIFA 23.

On Tuesday, the official Ted Lasso Twitter account tweeted out an image of Jason Sudeikis in what was unquestionably a scanner that is used to put people into video games. The official account for FIFA replied to that tweet with nothing more than the eyes emojis. Considering that Ted Lasso is a show about soccer, we feel like this might be a big hint about Lasso appearing in FIFA 23 in some way.

As far as collaborations go, this could potentially be a fun one if handled correctly. Lasso is a fun character who uses his positive attitude to coach his players on and off the pitch. It would be fun to get to experience that in some way in the game, even if it’s just a small cameo.

We do wonder where this cameo would appear, though. It feels like a safe bet that it will be part of the career mode in some way, but maybe they implement Lasso into some of the other modes, such as making him a card that can be unlocked in Ultimate Team. We’ll just have to wait and see what, exactly, EA has up its sleeve … if this is real, of course.

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Guns N’ Roses Announce A Massive New ‘Use Your Illusion I & II’ Box Set

There have been a lot of great vinyl releases lately, and Guns N’ Roses are adding to that. Today, the hard rock band announced that they’re celebrating their classic 1991 albums Use Your Illusion I and Use Your Illusion II with a new box set coming November 11.

Out of the set’s whopping total of 97 tracks, 63 are previously unreleased and will surely be exciting for fans to hear for the first time. To give them a taste, they’ve shared “You Could Be Mine (Live In New York, Ritz Theatre – May 16, 1991).”

You Could Be Mine” was one of the band’s hit singles and this brand new live version is a real treat. The box set will also include a Super Deluxe Seven-CD + Blu-ray, a Super Deluxe Twelve-LP + Blu-ray, Two-CD Deluxe Editions of Use Your Illusion I & II separately, as well as standard 1CD and 2LP versions of Use Your Illusion I and Use Your Illusion II separately. It is the first time that both records are being remastered, so it’s long overdue. Along with those collectibles, it comes with an exclusive 100-page hardcover book with unreleased photos and memorabilia.

Listen to “You Could Be Mine (Live In New York, Ritz Theatre – May 16, 1991)” above. Pre-order or find out more about the box set here.

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Malware Links Were Sent Out By 2K Support After One Of Their Vendors Was Hacked

If you’ve filed a ticket to 2K Support recently then you might want to avoid opening up any emails you’ve gotten back. Unfortunately, it looks like their vendor for supporting players has been compromised in a hack, but instead of stealing information from 2K itself, the hacker is trying to steal information from customers.

In an announcement from 2K Support, customers were warned that they should not open up any suspicious links even if it was from the official 2K support email. It also informed them that if they had already clicked the link, then they should change passwords and install two-factor authentication software. It sounds like whoever the hacker was, they were trying to steal passwords.

It’s worth noting that 2K Games and Rockstar Games, who dealt with their own hack this week, are owned by the same company, Take-Two Interactive. However, the two hacks do not appear to be related to each other, to anyone that may have been concerned about that.

The timing on this could not be worse, as 2K Games just had a major release with NBA 2K23 earlier this month. So if you got the game and are dealing with any support issues, you may want to try the phone line instead.

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Trump Aides Were Reportedly Shocked By His Stunning Ignorance And How He ‘Knew Nothing About So Many Things’

If it wasn’t apparent from his single term in office, Donald Trump wasn’t exactly prepared to become president of the United States. He’d never served elected office. He never seemed to learn how most of government works. He didn’t even seem to do much apart from watch TV, rage-tweet, and shout at reporters in front of deafening helicopters. So perhaps it’s not surprising that his aides were reportedly stunned by the depths of his ignorance.

As per Raw Story, journalists Peter Baker and Susan Glasser went on Morning Joe Tuesday to talk about their new book The Divider: Trump in the White House, 2017-2021. Co-host Jonathan Lemire dwelled on one of the latest shockingly weird revelations from his lone term in office: that he promised Jordan’s King Abdullah II that he’d give him the West Bank. Had Trump known anything about Jordan’s relationship with the Palestinian people, he’d have known that wasn’t anything Abdullah would have wanted.

To Baker and Glasser, this story is emblematic of Trump’s worldview, which Baker described as “very superficial and transactional.” It also speaks to his knowledge of foreign policy, which they said was “very, very much built on the basis of someone who didn’t spend a single day in office prior to becoming president and he had a lot to learn.”

In talking to aides they discovered some shocking stuff. “He didn’t know the difference between the Baltics and Balkans,” Baker said. “One aide was saying he knew nothing about so many things, it was startling to them even after they spent time in his presence.”

It’s true: According to one of his national security advisors, John Bolton, Trump barely knew where Ukraine was. But maybe second time’s the charm! Trump has yet to formally announce his candidacy, but even though he’s a little busy with other pressing matters right now, he probably will. After all, not only will it give him a Mulligan on learning about world geography, it will also keep him out of the slammer.

(Via Raw Story)

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Twitch Updates Its Gambling Policy To Prohibit Which Kind Of Sites Can Be Streamed

If you’ve managed to be away from the public conscious for the last 10 years or so then you might not be aware that gambling and the United States have a much different relationship than it once did. After decades of being considered a taboo that was only legal in places like Las Vegas, the limitations on gambling have been going away over the years. It’s easier than ever to gamble, and as such, it’s easier than ever to show yourself gambling online.

What better place to show yourself gambling online than a site like Twitch? The site is best known for video games, but over time, it has grown a very dedicated group of streamers and viewers gambling. It even has a handful of influencers that focus entirely on gambling, and those influencers have caused some problems for Twitch recently. With so many people watching gambling streams, and influencers being paid to basically promote their gambling streams, people are, of course, doing it themselves because it looks fun. The result has been a gigantic gambling problem growing across the site, with one notable streamer becoming so addicted to gambling he began scamming their own viewers to feed it.

The results of the widespread gambling have led to other major streamers threatening to strike against the platform if something isn’t done to protect viewers from harmful gambling streams. All of this finally came to a head on Tuesday when Twitch announced that it will update its gambling policy to prohibit certain websites from being shown on stream. Some of the sites they used as an example were ones where users gamble with crypto, such as Bitcoin.

Gambling and Twitch have had a rocky relationship going back years. Nathan Grayson, a reporter for the Washington Post and formerly Kotaku, has been reporting on its presence on Twitch for some time and how it quickly became normalized. He explained in a pretty informative Twitter thread how Twitch reached this point where it had to ban these specific kinds of streams.

As for how this will impact viewers that do enjoy gambling streams, they will still be able to watch people play games like poker or discuss something like sports gambling, but you’re going to see a lot less of it coming from sites that Twitch deems as shady. It’s not a perfect fix by any means, but it’s certainly a start.

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Activist vows to continue after being criminally charged twice for helping voters who can’t read

Historically, people who cannot read and write have faced discrimination in the voting booths of America. Before the passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965, literacy tests were enacted as a way of disqualifying immigrants and the poor, who had less education, from casting a ballot. In the south, they were used to prevent Black people from registering to vote.

According to ProPublica, in 2022, around 48 million people in the United States struggle to read, about a fifth of the adult population. An analysis of voter turnout has found that in countries with lower literacy rates, voter turnout was lower as well.

“How the system is set up, it disenfranchises people,” voting rights advocate Olivia Coley-Pearson told ProPublica. Coley-Pearson is a city commissioner in Douglas, the county seat of Coffee County, Georgia. “It’s by design, I believe, because they want to maintain that power and that control.”


Recent laws passed in the south have made it more difficult for people to assist those who have difficulty reading at the voting booth. In 2021, Georgia passed a law that limits who can return or touch a completed ballot. Florida has made it more difficult for volunteers to ask voters if they need assistance and Texas passed a law prohibiting voters’ assistants from answering questions or paraphrasing complicated language on the ballot.

Fortunately, portions of the Texas law have been struck down.

No one knows firsthand how hard it is for people with difficulty reading to vote in the south more than Coley-Pearson. She’s been charged twice in Coffee County for trying to help people vote. “We’re a rural community, there are racial issues, educational issues, employment issues,” she told ProPublica.

“Most of the people who have trouble reading, writing and understanding, they’re not going to go vote. If you have a low voter turnout, that’s some of the reason why,” she told ProPublica.

In 2012, the chairman of Coffee County’s board of elections filed a complaint against Coley-Pearson and three other residents, alleging that they’d assisted voters who didn’t legally qualify for help.

“If someone asks me for help, I feel an obligation to try to assist if I could,” she testified at a 2016 hearing. “Sometimes things are done to try to maybe dis-encourage, or whatever, other people from voting, and I don’t feel like that is fair.”

A local district attorney’s office charged her with two felonies for signing a form that gave a false reason for why a voter needed assistance and for improperly assisting a voter. According to BuzzFeed News, there were no allegations that Coley-Pearson had told anyone who to vote for or pressed any buttons on the voting machine for those she assisted.

“This is supposed to cause fear in those who would dare stand up for themselves,” Nefertara Clark, Coley-Pearson’s attorney, said, according to BuzzFeed News.

After six years of having the felony charges hanging over her, in 2018, the trial ended in a hung jury. She was tried again and the new jury acquitted her of all charges. “Next to losing my son, the most horrible thing I’ve experienced in my life,” Coley-Pearson told 11 Alive News.

In October 2020, while assisting someone with low literacy skills vote in the presidential election, she was barred from returning to the polls for allegedly touching a voting machine. Coley-Pearson said she never touched the machine.

The county’s election supervisor, Misty Martin, called the police on Coley-Pearson and they issued a trespass warning barring her from the polls indefinitely. Later that morning, when she returned with another voter, she was arrested and charged with trespassing.

A state judge dropped the charge earlier this year if Coley-Pearson agreed to follow election law. “There was no evidence of any crime here,” Coley-Pearson told ProPublica. “It feels like you’re fighting a losing battle.”

Even though Coley-Pearson has been victorious in court, her supporters tell her they’re now afraid to vote because of her struggles. Unfortunately, these are the people who need their voices heard the most. “I say, ‘That’s exactly why you need to vote so we can stop stuff like that,'” she told ProPublica.

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Oh Great, Now ‘The Simpsons’ Has Somehow Wound Up Sucked Into The Orbit Of QAnon Nonsense In Germany

The world has been living with QAnon nonsense for five long years — the inevitable by-product of America electing a president who crafts his own facts while calling those that contradict him “fake news.” It might somehow be getting worse: The elaborate and deranged conspiracy theory/far right political movement has recently found a new cheerleader in Donald Trump. If that wasn’t bad enough, advocates are now even trying to suck The Simpsons into its tinfoil orbit.

As per Vice News, QAnon followers in Germany have read way, way too much into a recent gaffe by German lawmaker Friedrich Merz. Speaking about Ukraine, Merz misspoke, saying everyone will remember the day Russia invaded the neighboring nation. But he initially got the date wrong, saying it was September 24, not February 24. Whoops! At least it wasn’t as bad a slip of the tongue than MAGA lawmaker Ron Johnson saying “I condone” white supremacy.

Or was it? German Qanon-ers thought it was no flub but rather a promise that something major was going to happen later this week. But what exactly? With no other information to go on, one member of German Telegram seized upon…The Simpsons. They thought Merz was referring to episode 9 of season 24, aka “Homer Goes to Prep School.”

In the episode, from 2013, Homer becomes convinced that civilization is ill-prepared to survive a worldwide castastrophe and gets embroiled in the world of survivalist “preppers” (including one voiced by Tom Waits). QAnon advocates then read way, way too into the episode:

In particular, the characters discuss WROL, or Without Rule of Law, which is doomsday-prepper lingo for the complete breakdown of society after a major catastrophe.

The episode also features an electromagnetic pulse device, which QAnon followers believe will usher in “10 days of darkness” and ultimately the return of former President Donald Trump to the Oval Office.

The idea inevitably crossed the Atlantic, finding its way onto the QAnon wings of Telegram, YouTube, and Truth Social. They in turn took the conspiracy theorizing even further:

To back up their wild speculation, followers flagged other coincidences about the day—such as the fact that Sept. 24 on the Gregorian calendar converts to Sept. 11 on the Julian calendar. Others pointed out that it is the beginning of Rosh Hoshanah, the Jewish new year, though, like many of the claims, this is inaccurate as the holiday begins this year on the evening of Sept. 25.

Now, thanks to over-reading into a nine-year-old Simpsons episode, QAnon-ers are telling followers to expect “[e]verything from nuclear armageddon to a financial reset to widespread water poisoning and an armed revolution.”

Granted, The Simpsons has been eerily good at predicting the future. Insider estimates that it’s done so 21 times so far, including the once-improbably election of a certain dubious businessman. Maybe everything is connected. (Spoiler: It’s not. What did The Simpsons ever do to deserve this other than maybe stay on the air too long?)

(Via Vice)

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Lana Del Rey Is The Topic Of A New Course Offered At NYU

Earlier this year, NYU offered a course solely for learning about Taylor Swift, who later received an honorary doctorate from the prestigious school. Now, they’re offering a similar class, this time focused on Lana Del Rey.

The two-credit course taught by journalist and author Kathy Iandoli is called “Topics in Recorded Music: Lana Del Rey” and will run from October 20 to December 8. Read the course description below.

“Over the course of eight critically-acclaimed albums, the six-time Grammy nominated artist has introduced a sad core, melancholic, and baroque version of dream pop that in turn helped shift and reinvent the sound (and mood) of mainstream music beyond the 2010s. Through her arresting visuals and her thematic attention to mental health and tales of toxic, damaged love, Del Rey provided a new platform for artists of all genders to create ‘anti-pop’ works of substance that could live in a mainstream once categorized as bubblegum.”

Iandoli told Variety, “In so many ways, I feel like Lana Del Rey is both a blueprint and a cautionary tale, a complicated pop star who resonates so much with her fans, not because of how she makes them feel about her, but rather how she makes them feel about themselves. She has changed the parameters of baroque pop and now more specifically “sad girl pop” through her music, by expanding the subject matter which at times is controversial and challenging. There are so many pieces in this mosaic that we have now come to know as Lana Del Rey, and this course examines every dimension of it.”

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Powerful PSA uses reverse psychology to drum up support for assault weapons bill

Those of us who live in the United States have a strange relationship with gun violence, no matter where we fall on the beliefs-about-guns spectrum. We have to. Our mass shootings statistics are too bizarre, too absurd to be real, and yet here we are, constantly living in a combined state of denial, disbelief, disillusionment and despair.

We don’t have to live like this, and yet we do. Thanks to a well-funded gun lobby, our incredibly unhealthy ultra-partisan politics and debatable interpretations of the Second Amendment, most meaningful pieces of legislation put forth to curb our gun violence problem don’t get passed. Everything but the guns gets blamed for our mass shooting problem, so we keep reliving the same nightmare over and over and over again.

A group of moms lived that nightmare on the Fourth of July, when a gunman opened fire on a parade in Highland Park, Illinois, killing seven and wounding 48. They immediately banded together with a singular purpose—to convince the government to ban assault weapons, which are increasingly becoming the weapon of choice in mass shootings.


They formed March Fourth two days after the parade shooting and organized a march in Washington, D.C., less than a week later. “I just want to go to DC, scream at the top of our lungs that we want these weapons of war banned, and not shut up until they listen,” said founder Kitty Brandtner.

Her quote to WGN9 News was even more succinct: “They f**ked with the wrong moms.”

Now March Fourth is holding another march at the Capitol on September 22 and they’re inviting anyone and everyone to join them. In a powerful PSA promoting the march, Americans describe what they “love” and “enjoy” about living with mass shootings—a bit of reverse psychology that makes the absurdity of our reality painfully clear.

The truth is no one wants to live this way. And we don’t have to. We can choose to take action to at least attempt to prevent mass gun violence. The assault weapons ban that was in place from 1994 to 2004 had an impact. One analysis shared in The Conversation estimated that the risk of a person in the U.S. dying in a mass shooting was 70% lower during the ban.

Before someone swoops in with the “How do you define assault weapon?” argument, the current Assault Weapons Ban of 2021 bill that has passed the House and sits before the Senate offers a lengthy definition of the kinds of firearms it includes right up top. Read it here.

See more information about joining March Fourth’s September 22 march at the U.S. Capitol at wemarchfourth.org.