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A designer’s job is to act as translator.
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How do we use design – and brands – to identify ourselves?
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5 min
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This is the biggest and hardest question of them all, says Antonelli.
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Almost exactly eight months after his father left him in New York, Xerxes Adam was awakened to the hottest summer day of the year by the invasion of a rather […]
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For one thing, it’s cheap.
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Khakpour is working on a novel and a collection of short stories.
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Khakpour loves the 19th-century novel and the absurdist 20th-century novel equally.
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Khakpour has a convenient Internet addiction.
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A sense of humor was always Khakpour’s best defense.
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“Wow! This girl can write!,” can cut both ways, Khakpour says.
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Khakpour wanted to play with the fragmented nature of memory.
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Khakpour says she’s never known a time outside of crisis.
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7 min
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Xerxes serves Fruity Pebbles to his visiting father, who is deeply offended by the offering.
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Don’t cut your fingernails at night.
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9/11 was a major kick in the ass, Khakpour says.
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Since her novel came out, Khakpour has been getting lots of fan mail from Iranian bloggers.
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Iranian women, Khakpour says, are the real force in the household.
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Khakpour remembers a rattling Amtrak encounter.
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6 min
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After 9/11, Khakpour says, Middle Easterners were all lumped into one category.
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4 min
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Khakpour feels she has become more Iranian with age.
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7 min
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Born in Iran, raised in Los Angeles, living in New York – the many sides of Porochista Khakpour.
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A brief conversation with Joan Blades, Co-Founder of MomsRising.org.
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6 min
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