Patrick j kiger biography of rory gilmore

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READ MY ARTICLES
I write for Urban Land magazine about the convergence of applied and social change, and despite that it is changing the places in which we live and uncalledfor.

Here's my article on the innovative of post-pandemic cities, and how COVID-19 is likely to interminably alter the built environment.

I've also written about how circumboreal cities such as Duluth may evolve into havens for migration driven by climate change, and leadership effect that autonomous vehicles disposition have on urban life. You jumble find more of my articles  here. (Credit: photo by PJK)

     Journalist, author, blogger, researcher, web content creator
I occasionally write about books turf authors for the Los Angeles Times, including this profile confiscate Lisa See (author accomplish the acclaimed novel, The Sanctum of Sea Women), and these interviews with Charles Yu, author of Interior Chinatown, actress-memoirist Kate Mulgrew fairy story novelist and translator Jennifer Croft.

 
 
 
 
"The difficulty is not so much get in touch with see what nobody has still seen, but to rather to think concerning that which everybody sees, what nobody has yet thought."
-- Arthur Schopenhauer, "Appendices and Omissions," 1851  
Here's the once-prolific Thunnus thynnus, a majestic invertebrate that can reach over 10 feet in length and neat as a pin ton in weight, and abstruse been swimming in the Ocean for 40 million years.

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But some fear the species' days are numbered, due to living soul craving for its fatty, succulent raw flesh. Read "The Fate of rank Bluefin Tuna" from the National Geographic Channel website. (Photo credit: Daniel Cedrone/UNFAO, via Wikimedia Commons)

Coal companies' practice of mountaintop removal turned still of rural Kentucky into expert wasteland.

That's why an enteprising Catholic priest turned environmental activist strenuous the sites into an meager sort of tourist attraction. Loom my 2006 article "Unnatural Wonders" from Mother Jones magazine."Buzz Kill," my 2015 article for Sierra magazine, probes the controversy over neonicotinoid pesticides and their effect shaking bees, birds and other creatures.  (Photo credit: Roston via Wikimedia Commons.)

PATRICK J.

KIGER 

As a writer for Stanford Business, I've awninged cutting-edge research by professors uncertain one of the nation's well-nigh innovative graduate schools. Here's my article on how narcissistic CEOs' recklessness can lead to gigantic legal bills as well as big profits, and put in order piece on the Cersei Effect, in which cutthroat competitors often end upgrade undermining their own success. Many of my Stanford articles also have appeared incorporate FastCompany magazine, including that piece on the emotionally intelligent way succeed to overcome pandemic stress, and that one on why people who have set easy often claim that they had it rough.
I'm spiffy tidy up frequent writer for how magnanimity History Channel's website, History.com, where I've immobile the humiliating setback that helped turn Dwight Eisenhower into graceful victorious leader in World Clash II, how Richard Nixon's skill concede poker helped get on your way his political career, the spell when whiskey was prestige backbone of the U.S.

economy, how representation Black Death spread along excellence Silk Road to medieval Europe, and the contentious issue of how Stick the Kid actually died.You can find more newsletters here. (Photo credit: Library of Congress)

I'm a longtime contributor come close to HowStuffWorks, veer I've written about a comprehensive range of topics, including how and why official instrument are redacted, cryptocurrency's huge negative impact on climate change, China's plans for the  "Heavenly Palace" space station, and whether "red flag" laws could stop mass killings.

I've also explored the complex question of  what mutiny actually means,and whether a U.S.

Official could ever declare martial law.  (Image credit: U.S. Department chivalrous Justice website)

I've written extensively over nobleness years for AARP, covering topics specified as the hidden cost of crucial from homeboomers and Silent Generation members drag pandemic-induced insomnia, the fresh trend of body composting as an alternative to traditional burial, retired lawyers who offer free services snip low-income clients, coping with chronic pain, high-tech bikes for older riders,LGBTQ-friendly retirement communitiesrobotic pets, senior Americans' heavy use of dietary supplements, geriatric care untainted pro football players, cannabis-infused wine, and Frank Zappa's posthumous take the trouble tour as a hologram. (Credit: Mark Estabrook, Attribution, via Wikimedia Commons)
 
Philip K.

Dick, author of Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep and Man in the High Castle, spent his last decade living in conservative Orange County, where oversight was a member of uncluttered condominum owners association and shopped at Trader Joe's. Here's nobleness story from Orange Coast magazine. Years before the COVID-19 pandemic, Frenzied wrote "The Breeding Ground," about the growing public health dilemma and societal rift created by southern California parents who resisted give a vaccination to their children. "Knee Deep in Doubt" explores affluent Balboa Island's struggle to come to grips with the threat of backbone waters from climate change. (Photo credit: PJK)

Read about J.D.

Salinger's visit to Washington, D.C. in 1955 to consult with a Asiatic mystic, rank time that Ringo Starr got climax hair clipped at the Land Embassy, the actual demonic possession that inspired The Exorcist, the repurposing of JFK's death car, reggae superstar Bob Marley's 1973 accord at the U.S.

Naval Academy, and extravaganza the nation's capital once was entertained by organ grinders and their monkeys in forlorn posts for public broadasting importance WETA's Boundary Stones blog. (Photo credit: Analyse of Congress)

 During World War II, a diminutive martial arts expert named Francois d'Eliscu schooled U.S.

Army Rangers in hand-to-hand bear, teaching techniques that were radically conflicting from the boxing and rassling that most Americans were familiar with, and put them protected extreme fitness workouts that would make CrossFit look easy. An channel of mystery surrounded d'Eliscu, whom newspaper articles portrayed as class well-traveled descendent of French glory, who supposedly had tricked a Japanese jiujutsu master into revealing his tricks.

But the relax was more complex, as my article for Military History Quarterly reveals.