The Insult-A-Columnist Holiday Food Drive is a great way to express your distaste for this columnist while also helping feed people near you.
Author: Rex Huppke, USA TODAY
An expert’s guide to outdoor Christmas decorations: Winning is everything!
There’s an art to outdoor Christmas decorations. And I’m sorry to report that you’re doing it wrong. Follow these simple tips to achieve perfection.
Forget thoughts and prayers: Colorado Springs shooting is what comes from anti-LGBTQ hate
For months we’ve heard anti-LGBTQ rhetoric from Republicans. And now a mass shooting at Club Q in Colorado Springs. It’s cause and effect.
Five steps to an enlightened Thanksgiving dinner: Don’t go, and if you do, wear pajamas
On this day before Thanksgiving, I ask all Americans to come together and acknowledge our one shared truth: Thanksgiving is an awful holiday.
My dog’s eternal belief it can catch a squirrel is a lesson for us all as midterms loom
A dog’s never-ending belief it will catch a squirrel is a lesson in optimism. Maybe we could use it as the 2022 midterm elections approach.
Trick-or-treating MUST happen on Oct. 31, and six other rules from the King of Halloween
It has become abundantly clear America needs a refresher course on the hard-and-fast rules of Halloween. Things have gotten a bit out of hand.
Exactly how many people does Dr. Oz want involved in an abortion decision? Let’s count.
As GOP senate candidate Mehmet Oz made clear Tuesday, the GOP believes abortion decisions are between a woman, her doctor and local political leaders.
Hey, Texas! Instead of scary school DNA kits for ‘safety,’ how about some gun safety laws?
Texas schools are handing out kits that encourage parents to to collect their children’s DNA in case of an “emergency.” Post-Uvalde, this seems cold.
Kanye West, Tommy Tuberville and the antisemitic, racist, no good, very bad weekend
Comments from Kanye West and U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville made for a big weekend of repulsive, high-profile displays of antisemitism and racism.
Ken Paxton heroically runs from subpoena. Here’s a new political ad embracing his bravery.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton fleeing a subpoena shows the Republican Party’s new approach to law and order: Consequences for thee, not for me.