Your Car’s Future Is Loaded With Subscriptions

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This week, we learn how automakers adopted the subscription model where drivers pay to unlock features, and why the used car…

Aarian Marshall: OK, so I am making a Matza Kugel. So instead of the noodles, you use matza with mushroom and it calls for Swiss chard, but I think I’m gonna use kale. And I tested it last weekend. It was really delicious. And then I’m making matzo, well soup obviously. But I have to make a vegetarian and they have a nice vegetarian option. And then we’re making salmon and my husband’s in charge of that and I don’t know what’s happening there.

Lauren Goode: That sounds delightful. Yep. I wish I could join. Come on down. Thank you. I could be your your stranger that you invite in. Oh, that’s right. Yeah. I was raised Catholic. I’m a bit of a recovering Catholic, you might say, but I have in fact joined Passovers before Adam Rogers invited me. Our fellow WIRED one, Adam Rogers, invited me to a Zoom Passover during the pandemic and it was really lovely

Michael Calore: That’s cool. I have never been

Lauren Goode: Aarian. I think Mike’s looking for an invite.

Aarian Marshall: Yep. Mike, come on up.

Michael Calore: OK. I’ll bring all my vegan recipes with me.

Lauren Goode: That really sounds wonderful, and that’s a good recommendation. Bon Appétit is just, it’s great. Yeah, it’s, it’s like I’m doing a little. Yep. You know, chef’s kiss. Solid content.

Michael Calore: Yeah. Speaking of solid content, Lauren, what is your recommendation?

Lauren Goode: My recommendation is a documentary. I finally got around to watching The Beauty and the Bloodshed, which is an Oscar-nominated documentary by Laura Pores about Nan Golden, a photographer turned activist, who in recent years has been most well known for her activism that helped take the Sackler name off of many art museums around the world, and really brought attention to what the Sackler family did to perpetuate the opioid crisis. It’s a really great documentary. It’s on HBO, and I highly recommend it.

Michael Calore: I think you can rent it elsewhere too, if you don’t have HBO Max.

Lauren Goode: Oh, you can? OK. I didn’t realize that. Yeah. But yeah, as always, I say on this show, if anyone needs an HBO Max login, let me know. I think I might actually be out of logins to handout, but but yeah if you have to get it somewhere else, I recommend renting it.

Michael Calore: I watched this also. Mm-hmm. And I really loved it because I went into it thinking it was just, You know the Nan Golden life story, and there is a lot in there about her and about her work, but also just like her community and her family. Is, the stories that come out are just fascinating.

Lauren Goode: It really is.

Michael Calore: Yeah. And her modern day activism is really well documented too.

Lauren Goode: Right, the story of her work is really bookended by her family life. What her upbringing was like, and a very traumatic event that happened in her younger years, and then really brings it back to that at the end and helps explain her drive in some of her activism.

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