
A feast for the eyes (with a side order of bacon)
"Russ's Kitchenette Diner," 1977.
Andrew Mark Satter/Andrew mark Satter
The mall isn't known for photo shows (though in 2021 it did host a pop-up for the Photographic Resource Center). This one has a reason for being on those particular premises. Russ's was at the corner of First and Rogers streets. By Satter's calculation, that means his photographs are now hanging 'within a few hundred feet' of where the diner was.
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The gallery is open during regular CambridgeSide hours: Monday-Saturday, 11 a.m.-8 p.m., and Sunday, 11 a.m.-6 p.m.
Louisa Vilardi, "Andrew Satter."
Louisa Vilardi
The restaurant opened in 1937, a classic
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Russ's has two later claims to fame. Shortly after it closed, the diner was used for a scene in the 1978 film 'The Brink's Job.' And it's the subject of a 27-minute documentary, 'Down Around Here,' that aired on GBH in 1996. Director David Sutherland, a Russ's regular, shot it around the time Satter was taking his photographs, during the mid-'70s.
Andrew Satter, "Morning News," 1974.
Andrew Mark Satter/Andrew mark Satter
Over the course of 2½ years, Satter shot hundreds of photographs of the diner, both inside and out. He quickly earned the trust of employees and patrons by giving them prints of photographs he took of them. Young started displaying the pictures in the diner. It was a pop-up ahead of its time.
In a blurb for a book of Satter's diner photographs, 'Walk-Ins Welcome,' the crime novelist Dennis Lehane says that each image 'feels like a short story.' Certainly, Satter has stories to tell about them.
Andrew Satter, "Charlie," 1974.
Andrew Mark Satter/Andrew mark Satter
In one photograph, the diner's cook, Charlie Diamandis, sits in a back corner behind two white plastic buckets and a pile of spud skins. 'Charlie would peel 100 pounds of potatoes every day,' Satter said.
Another photograph shows a waitress, Geri Silva. When it's suggested that Silva looked like the sort of server who calls customers 'Honey' or 'Dear,' Satter shook his hand. 'No, it was 'hon': 'You want your regular order, hon?''
Andrew Satter, "Geri," 1975.
Andrew Mark Satter/Andrew mark Satter
Did Satter have a regular order? 'A western omelet, a bran muffin — Russ baked them fresh every day — and, let's see, I hadn't started to drink coffee yet, so tea.'
Satter will give a free talk about the Diner Project in the gallery on Level 2 at CambridgeSide on April 12, from 1 to 3 p.m., and 'Down Around Here' will be shown.
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Buzz Feed
6 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
27 Chewy Items To Make You A Dog Ownership Genius
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Our sweet boy recently began to lose mobility in his rear end and gets super upset when he is unable to get around independently; this gives him the comfort he needs to just relax and lie down while enjoying a treat!" —Elizabeth Price: $19.99+ (available in three sizes) A jar of Zesty Paws Aller-Immune Bites for dogs, which are packed with wild-caught Alaskan salmon and probiotics to help keep your pup's immune system in tip-top shape in between vet visits. Promising review: "My dog Charlie scratches and chews all over himself almost constantly. Since putting him on this chew daily, his symptoms have greatly reduced. He has only been using the product for a week, and every day shows improvement. I'm hoping in a few days, he'll be symptom-free. Furthermore, he thinks he's getting a daily treat and is so excited when I offer him his daily dose. 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Overall, this bed exceeded all my needs. He now has a bed in every room, and this one is by far his favorite." —DoYouHaveChangeForADollarPrice: $63.99+ (available in three sizes and two colors) A sliding sushi-themed puzzle for the dog who is super restless and gets bored easily. This will keep them occupied long enough for you to maybe even get some work done of your own! Promising review: "Our dog quickly figured out how to get treats out of this puzzle toy, but it is so handy because he loves it, and it calms him and occupies him whenever we leave. Love this!" —LinmarpiePrice: $16.95 A nonskid slow-feeder bowl because your puppy may be known to scarf down the food a little too fast and accidentally make themselves sick. Promising review: "Our Zoey was a fast eater. By fast, I mean her food was gone in less than a minute. As she aged, we noticed her vomiting and belching more, in part because she was eating so fast. Once we purchased this bowl, it forced her to slow down. 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I will continue to keep my baby on this product." —MinniePrice: $17.83+ (originally $23.90, available in two styles and four quantities) A practically indestructible Kong chew toy you can fill with your dog's favorite treat so they can get all their energy out and enjoy a lil' snack at the same time. Promising review: "Being on the market like forever just might be the proof dog owners need to actually buy this toy. It comes in all dog sizes and has a lot of potential. For my rescue dog, it doesn't need to be stuffed with treats or peanut butter (too fattening). She loves it for the erratic bouncing action. A regular ball bores the heck out of her. Plus, she's exercising more muscle groups, trying to grab a hold of it. And the Kong is about as indestructible as they come. Buy it once and wait 'til the end of days before it wears out." —StephenPrice: $7.99+ (originally $8.99, available in six sizes) A level-two difficulty Hide N Slide puzzle perfect for the pup who has little to no experience with puzzles. This is a great way to introduce your dog to the world of puzzling! Promising review: "Love this! You put either kibble or bits of treats in the holes and slide over the cover. It gives my dog a challenge to find and eat the treat, and it takes her a bit of time to get all the holes emptied, yet it is very doable for them to figure it out. They move the slider cover with their nose, and I like the stimulation it gives them." —Nora Price: $17.94 (originally $24.99, available in two colors) A fleece pet carrier bag with mesh panels and a spring wire frame that's approved by most airlines so your companion can travel in comfort. I have one of these for my dog, and she loves cuddling in it even when we're not traveling! 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But once she took that first crunchy bite, it was game over — she's absolutely hooked! Now, these treats are her go-to favorite. She'll sit, stay, and maybe even do a backflip if it means getting one. The 14-ounce tub is the perfect size to keep her tail wagging without running out too soon. If your pup needs a high-value treat to bring out their inner superstar, these are a must-try! Willow gives them two paws up!" —KathyPrice: $4.99+ (originally $5.99+; available in five sizes and in a pack of two)


Cosmopolitan
a day ago
- Cosmopolitan
What Is Decentering Men?
I have no idea when or where I first encountered the phrase 'decentering men.' All I know is that by the time it weaved its way into my vocabulary a few years ago, I seemed to understand it instinctively. This concept, wherever it came from, put words to something I'd been experiencing in my own life both consciously and subconsciously as my relationship to men—what I wanted from them, how I saw them, and how I saw myself in terms of them—began to shift in the latter half of my 20s. According to writer Sherese (Charlie) Taylor, who coined the phrase in her 2019 book, Decentering Men, that's the point. 'This phrase resonates because it gives language to a quiet, growing rage,' she tells Cosmo. 'It speaks to the exhaustion of organizing your life around men's potential, opinions, or comfort. It speaks to the clarity that comes when you finally stop contorting yourself, when you finally say, 'I will not sacrifice myself for a system that was built to consume me.'' In recent years, 'decentering men' has fully entered the zeitgeist, reaching buzzword status on TikTok and even popping up in conversations with stars like Hannah Berner and Paige Desorbo, who've discussed the concept on their Giggly Squad podcast as well as in a recent interview with CBS. 'Decentering men means when you wake up in the morning, do not base all your decisions around a man,' Berner told co-host Gayle King. But as with anything that gains traction online, the internet virality decentering men is currently enjoying leaves it vulnerable to potential misuse and misconceptions. So if you, like me, woke up one day to find this phrase had suddenly taken up residence in your brain without knowing exactly where it came from or what it means, here's an expert-backed guide to the trend that is actually not, in fact, as Taylor puts it, 'a cute trend,' but rather 'a political response, a rejection of the lie that our power comes from proximity to men.' Below, everything aspiring male decentrists should know about decentering men, from what it is to why it's popping off right now and what it really means to decenter men from your life—including your love life. 'To decenter men is to actively interrogate and undo the ways patriarchy has taught us to center them in our thoughts, decisions, and self-worth,' explains Taylor. 'Patriarchy embeds itself deep in our psyche. It teaches us that men are the prize, the rescuer, the final destination.' To decenter men is to acknowledge and unlearn these internalized beliefs and the systems they uphold and to reorient our lives around new ones. Gender equality writer and influencer Sommer Tothill adds that to understand what it means to decenter men, it may first be helpful to think about what it means to center them—which is something so ingrained in society that it can be difficult to identify. 'Essentially, women center men when we orient our life plans around securing a romantic relationship with a man,' Tothill explains, adding that women are also culturally pressured into maintaining these relationships even if they are not healthy, rewarding, or safe. But decentering men, and the ways in which life under patriarchy first teaches us to center them, is about more than the 'happily ever after' model of romantic relationships as the end-all, be-all that Disney movies of yore are (somewhat reductively albeit not unfairly) accused of spoon-feeding generations of young girls. The pressure women feel from a young age to get a boyfriend, a ring, a wedding, to orient our lives around the crowning achievement of locking it down with a man in the eyes of the law and all of our Instagram followers, is one of the most obvious manifestations of centering men at work. But the roots go much deeper. 'Women's entire lives are defined by patriarchal systems engineered to exploit our time and labour; it's so built into the fabric of society that we can even fail to notice it,' says Tothill. 'Decentering men is a conscious pushback against this exploitation.' Because that exploitation is so accepted as a default societal setting, its force often goes unnoticed—even and especially by the women it drains. 'I coined the term 'decentering men' when I realized I was exhausted from living with a man-shaped shadow in every decision,' says Taylor. 'It felt like I was living at 85 percent, waiting for someone to permit me to hit 100. That's what patriarchy does. It teaches women to hold back until we are chosen. Decentering men is a practice of naming that, confronting it, and choosing to live as sovereign women on our own terms.' Decentering men has quickly gained popularity since Taylor coined the term in 2019, becoming even more widespread in the last few years. Sex researcher Melissa A. Fabello, PhD, attributes this recent boom to the rise of TikTok and the breakneck speed with which trends gain traction on the platform, as well as the simultaneous increase in awareness of South Korea's 4B movement in the US, which encourages women to abstain entirely from dating, marrying, sex, and having children with men. Of course, both 4B and decentering men owe their recent rise in American consciousness to a current political climate that has reinforced and reinvigorated a regressive culture of misogyny. 'It's cruelly obvious in recent years that the patriarchal structures that define our society, as well as individual men, have little interest in actively advancing women's liberation,' says Tothill. 'After a string of high-profile political disappointments for women—the repeal of reproductive rights in the US, for example—women are realizing they will not be protected by men or male systems of power. So we are asking ourselves: do men even deserve our attention?' Meanwhile, for all the political regression in the air at the moment, our current era remains the first time in modern history that women have had the social and economic opportunity to choose singlehood, notes feminist dating coach Lily Womble, founder of Date Brazen and author of Thank You, More Please. Although, of course, it's worth noting that for many women, staying single remains financially risky if not impossible. Still, as women increasingly gain access to modern freedoms like financial independence and the ability to shape our lives on our terms, 'it's critical that we weigh those freedoms against the risks our relationships with men can pose to them,' says Tothill. The more freedom we get from men, the more we realize how much we have to lose to them. If decentering men is having a moment, it's because 'women are paying attention,' says Taylor. 'We are watching Roe v. Wade be reversed. We are watching incel culture go mainstream. We are watching our rights be stripped away, our safety threatened, our labor exploited, and our autonomy questioned. We are watching the rise of fascism cloaked in tradwife aesthetics, where women's value is reduced to submission and domesticity. And we are done pretending that this is normal. That is why it's resonating. Because women are waking up, and we are tired.' So if centering men begins with the societal pressure women face to build their lives around securing a romantic relationship with one, does decentering them have to mean going boy sober? Short answer, no, not necessarily. While, as Febos noted, decentering men is related to the 4B movement, it does not demand the same commitment to swearing off men entirely. In fact, Womble says the idea that decentering men means you can't or shouldn't date them is one of the biggest misconceptions surrounding it. 'The problem that the decentering men movement is aptly responding to is the patriarchal culture that tells women to shrink what they want and settle for emotionally lackluster relationships,' says Womble. 'Considering this patriarchal conditioning, of course women are taught that to date men is to inherently settle for and center them.' According to Womble, decentering men in your dating life is not about removing them from it entirely, but rather recentering yourself and your desires. And if those desires happen to include a relationship with a man, women are well within their rights to pursue that without compromising their values. 'The problem is when you make men (specifically those who were wrong for you) the focus—whether that's going on mediocre dates, staying in 'just okay' or even toxic relationships, or stopping your dating life altogether, even when you want partnership,' says Womble. 'I see women often turn their exes into 'evidence' that the relationship they want doesn't exist. That's another way of centering men instead of their own desires.' For some women, of course, decentering men may indeed involve forgoing romantic or sexual relationships with them. Because at its core, decentering men is about interrogating the societal conditioning that encourages women to prioritize romantic commitment to men and the heteropatriarchal structures with which it intersects. For some women, this may include 'asking themselves where they learned to chase concepts like marriage and nuclear family and whether or not that desire is authentic,' says Febos. 'It could look like valuing and enjoying being single, putting friends back at the center of one's life.' Either way, 'this isn't about rejecting love,' says Taylor. 'It's about rejecting the patriarchal conditioning that tells us we must suffer for it, earn it, or mold ourselves to be worthy of it.'
Yahoo
6 days ago
- Yahoo
‘Poker Face' Season 2 Review: Rian Johnson Ups the Chaotic Ante in Peacock's Comforting Howcatchem
Sleuths, by and large, aren't given the luxury of lying low. Worn-down beat detectives are always getting called to the next crime scene. Part-time investigators can't resist a femme fatale's desperate pleas (or ample pocketbook). But even when you set aside their professional obligations, puzzle-solvers usually don't know what to do with themselves when the game is not yet afoot. Typically, gumshoes crack cases by compulsion. Take Rian Johnson's last 'Knives Out' mystery: At the start of 'Glass Onion,' Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig) has grown frustrated by the pandemic's stultifying effect on real-world brainteasers. With too much time off (and too much time moping in the tub), he thinks he's going insane. He's tried reading books, he's tried playing games, he's even enlisted help from a few similarly-minded peers (including Angela Lansbury and 'Poker Face' star Natasha Lyonne). But nothing helps. 'The last thing I need is a vacation,' he says. 'I need danger, the hunt, a challenge. I need… a great case.' More from IndieWire How 'Andor' Season 2 Production Design Gives the Empire Its Oppressive Weight 'Poker Face' Season 2: Costume Designing Wicked Looks for Cynthia Erivo's Quintuplets In 'Poker Face' Season 2, Johnson sees this quandary through the looking glass (onion). Lyonne's Charlie Cale has too many cases to solve and too little downtime in between. No matter where her baby blue Plymouth Barracuda takes her, there's another liar, another dead body, and another wrong waiting to be righted. Her situation, like her innate ability to identify a lie, is unique. She's not a cop on assignment. She's not a private eye looking for work. She's happy to make a living picking apples from an orchard or snagging foul balls in the minor leagues. And yet, death haunts Charlie wherever she goes, so it's only natural to wonder: Is her nose for bullshit a blessing or a curse? What a mystery! Resolving this dilemma gives 'Poker Face' Season 2 a sturdy spine, which is especially important since the individual vertebrae (aka the individual episodes) aren't quite as compelling (save, once again, for one true gem). Since we've known Charlie, she's been running. In the first season, she seeks justice for her murdered friend and, as a result of doing the right thing, has to go on the lam. Each week, she's in a new town, working a new gig, caught up in another suspicious story. The lone wolf lifestyle suits Charlie just fine — for a while. Her ebullient personality helps to make friends wherever she goes, but when some of those friends end up dead and the rest have to be left behind when it's time to skip town, well, those losses add up. As Season 2 starts, Charlie's traded one vengeful mob boss for another. She out-maneuvered Sterling Frost, Sr. (Ron Perlman), but after refusing to use her 'gift' to help another crime family, she now has to deal with Beatrix Hasp (Rhea Perlman). Here we go again: Charlie does the right thing, and her reward is a life spent in hiding. For a procedural, starting over is more of a comfort than an annoyance, and the first episode, directed by Johnson, offers numerous pleasures — five of which are all played by Cynthia Erivo! There's also a mini-montage of Charlie trying out odd jobs (and making new friends) before she's chased off by gun-toting mobsters. There's lovely cinematography by director of photography Jaron Presant, and Johnson savors every odd little eccentricity available in the wacky initial investigation. (His ability to reveal key details through playful yet carefully considered camera movements is downright Spielbergian.) Perhaps most importantly, Episode 1 also makes it clear Charlie is enjoying her life as best she can; that is, she's enjoying her life whenever she's not staring death in the face (those mobsters' bullets come awfully close) — a pattern that persists in her subsequent cases. While most of those aren't as satisfying as the first, Charlie always is: Generous and bright, like the long curly locks spilling out from under her various trucker hats, Charlie is an unnatural charmer, her wide smile and gravelly intonation a congenial contradiction that convincingly cultivates curiosity in wherever they're aimed. She makes the most out of her fleeting conversations with strangers, and only the liars among them are ever upset for sharing a few sentences with our affable star. It's a testament to Lyonne's well-honed charisma and attentive performance that Charlie remains the top draw despite an onslaught of shiny guest stars playing distinct characters. Katie Holmes is a delight as a fed-up mortician's wife more than ready to fly the coop. Gaby Hoffman's quick turn from straight-laced Cop of the Year candidate to a feral Florida Woman is batshit fun. Simon Rex settles in nicely as a washed-up pitcher looking to make a little money off losing. Melanie Lynskey and John Cho crackle with chemistry in the season's best episode (of the 10 screened for critics), and Erivo brings the perfect playful pitch to each of her nearly half-dozen characters. Two tweaks to the format help distinguish Season 2's journey from the original run: The first is a notable uptick in chaos — the situations Charlie finds herself in range from psychotic scams ('A New Lease on Death') to absurd send-ups ('One Last Job'), but each episode attempts to ratchet up whatever quirky quality it's working with, including an early entry that nearly goes supernatural ('Last Looks'). The other departure is simpler: Charlie, without crossing into spoilers, gets to come out of hiding. She's free to decide where to go and when, which allows the show to revel in an extended stay later on and serve the season's central conceit: Season 2, by and large, is about accepting who you are, even if living your best life doesn't mean living an easy life. Charlie yearns for enough time to appreciate 'the unobserved pageant of the ordinary,' as she calls the knickknacks filling up random cars, and thus, random lives. A life on the run doesn't allow for much rumination, but neither does a stationary one. Giving Charlie the time to experience both allows her to examine what she really wants, and what she really needs, without deluding herself into thinking things would be different if she wasn't being hounded by mobsters (or, on the flip-side, if she wasn't tied down to any one place or person). She's not like Benoit Blanc, always itching for the next great case to crack; she'd be perfectly happy floating in untroubled waters. She isn't a detective, and she's certainly not a cop; for all the odd jobs she's had, solving mysteries isn't one of them. Charlie is just a person in a unique position to help, so of course she's persistently hounded by people who need it — and lots of people need it! At a time in America when our institutional safety nets are being disbanded and the burden to support each other often comes down to individual efforts, Charlie's struggle feels all the more apt. She wants to help — she just also wishes there was less need for her to do so. And therein lies her salvation. Charlie can't help but love people. She's a people person. Even when she tries to stay out of their lives, she's inevitably drawn in by natural or circumstantial curiosity. Because Charlie thrives around people, so does 'Poker Face.' As a howcatchem procedural, it has to resolve similar issues as its lead: The formula requires a certain amount of repetition, just as the audience demands a new mystery each week. When episodes rely on people to bring them to life — be it famous guest stars, well-realized characters, life-affirming arcs, or all of the above — they're that much easier to enjoy. For the most part, 'Poker Face' Season 2 is quite easy to enjoy. After all, it knows helping people isn't a gift or a curse; it's a calling, and when you realize how fulfilling it can be, the only mystery left to solve is how to help others see the same thing. 'Poker Face' Season 2 premieres Thursday, May 8 on Peacock. Three episodes will be released the first week, then one episode weekly through the finale on July 10. Best of IndieWire The 25 Best Alfred Hitchcock Movies, Ranked Every IndieWire TV Review from 2020, Ranked by Grade from Best to Worst