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  1. 14 de may. de 2024 · Nellie Bowles wasn’t always the TGIF queen you know and love at The Free Press. In fact, Nellie was, for a very long time, deeply embedded in the progressive left. Before Bari and Nellie met—and fell in love, blah blah blah—in 2019, Nellie was nothing short of a media darling.

  2. 15 de may. de 2024 · Nellie Bowles joins Bari Weiss to discuss her new book, “Morning After the Revolution,” out now! Listen to the full podcast: https: ...

    • 6 min
    • 32.5K
    • The Free Press
  3. 17 de may. de 2024 · Opinion. Wokeness Is Dying. We Might Miss It. In her new book, “Morning After the Revolution: Dispatches From the Wrong Side of History,” Nellie Bowles, a former New York Times journalist ...

  4. 10 de may. de 2024 · In “Morning After the Revolution,” the former New York Times reporter sets out to uncover a not-so-forbidden truth—that the left can be somewhat goofy. The journalist Nellie Bowles writes a ...

  5. 20 de may. de 2024 · When her colleagues suggested that asking such questions meant she was “on the wrong side of history,” Bowles did what any reporter worth her salt would do: she started investigating for herself. The answers she found were stranger—and funnier—than she expected. In her new book Morning After the Revolution, Bowles gives readers a front ...

  6. 26 de may. de 2024 · David Ignatius, Washington Post columnist and author of Phantom Orbit: A Thriller, joins The Realignment. David and Marshall why outer space defines the present and future of great power conflict, Ukraine's path forward, how to avert a hot war with China, the state of Biden's 2024 campaign, and why America is overdue for an era of political reform in the spirit of Theodore Roosevelt and the ...

  7. 20 de may. de 2024 · Bowles, 36, is a sarcastic and humorous observer, whose tone nods to the excesses and absurdity of these progressive efforts. “The ideology that came shrieking in would go on to reshape America in some ways that are interesting and even good, and in other ways that are appalling, but mostly in ways that are — I hate to say it — funny,” she writes in the book.