Some Insufficient Words About Stephen Sondheim: A Reprise

Stephen Sondheim died November 26, 2021. I am re-sharing the following article I wrote at the time.

Stephen Sondheim died Friday. Describing him as a “composer,” “lyricist” or even an “American musical theatre legend” feels too limiting, like calling Shakespeare a guy who wrote plays, and Sondheim is very much the 20th Century Shakespeare, a visionary who revolutionized an art form. This would’ve been true if Sondheim had died from his heart attack at 49 , but he lived to 91 and was only more innovative in his later years.

I’m neither qualified nor emotionally ready to articulate Sondheim’s place in history. I can only discuss what he means to me, if you’ll forgive the indulgence.

I clearly recall the first time I heard a Sondheim song. Yes, this makes me incredibly middle-aged, but I watched the first-ever broadcast of the Fox network on April 5, 1987. There were two airings that night of the pilots for “Married … with Children” and “The Tracey Ullman Show.” During the first Ullman sketch, “The Makeover,” she sings Sondheim’s “I Feel Pretty” in front of a mirror. (Music by Leonard Bernstein.)

 youtu.be 

Thirteen-year-old me hadn’t yet seen the musical West Side Story . For all I knew, this song was written for “The Tracey Ullman Show.” The lyrics were clever — “And so pretty, Miss America should just resign.” — and infectious but not empty confection. There was heart: “See the pretty girl in that mirror there! What mirror where?”

This was how I “met” Stephen Sondheim. The same year, he was bringing Into The Woods to Broadway. That show is witty and fantastic, a personal inspiration, but I wouldn’t see it until years later. No, I didn’t really know and appreciate the name Sondheim until May 1990 when Madonna released her concept album I’m Breathless . The album’s big hit is “Vogue,” which is amazing but doesn’t actually fit on the album. The “concept” is that the songs are all performed by Breathless Mahoney, Madonna’s character (more or less) from the Dick Tracy movie. It was a big deal that Sondheim wrote three songs for a Madonna album and comic-book movie — “Sooner Or Later,” “More,” and “What Can You Lose.”

Madonna was reportedly uncertain that she could pull off the jazzy torch song. Sondheim also had his concerns but he encouraged her and the result isn’t simply a great song. It’s Madonna’s best performance. She is Breathless Mahoney. This isn’t the same person who sang “Like a Prayer” a year earlier.

 www.youtube.com 

“Sooner Or Later” won an Oscar, but my personal favorite track from the album is “More.” It’s a fun number that also (spoiler alert) reinforces Breathless’s true villainous nature. There’s more of that classic Sondheim wordplay that has inspired my own desperate attempts to form sentences:

Got my guy and my sky of blue
Now, however, I own the view
More is better than nothing, true
But nothing’s better than more, more, more
Nothing’s better than more

Here’s actress Sami Staitman, when she was all of 16, performing “More” with just a piano accompaniment.

 www.youtube.com 

 I’m Breathless is when I officially became a Stephen Sondheim fan. When people tried to spell my name “Steven” or pronounce it “SteFAN,” I’d respond, “No, it’s STEPHEN like Sondheim.” This had remarkably little impact in Greenville, South Carolina.

Broadway felt like a world away at the time, so I’d listen to Sondheim’s work alone in my room, imagining the performances in my mind. I personally consider Gypsy a deeper and more compelling deconstruction of “the American dream” than The Great Gatsby . Sondheim and F. Scott Fitzgerald were both 29 when they produced their classic work, but unlike Gatsby , Gypsy was an unqualified commercial and critical hit in its day. Sondheim also wouldn’t climb into a bottle for the rest of the life.

I had the privilege to see the Patti LuPone production of Gypsy in 2008, and I noticed how two of my favorite songs — “All I Need Is The Girl” and “You Gotta Have A Gimmick” — advance the character of Louise, who doesn’t sing a word in them. The former is a catchy pop number that Frank Sinatra covered in 1968, but Laura Benanti, who rightly won a Tony, masterfully conveys the song’s true pathos. It’s also a torch song, but Louise is the one carrying the torch.

 www.youtube.com 

There’s nothing more I can really say other than urging you to listen to or watch West Side Story,   Gypsy , Sweeney Todd,   Company,   Into The Woods,   Sunday In The Park With George,   A Little Night Music , Assassins, and A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum (yes, he wrote the music and lyrics for that comedy classic).

Sondheim had a tough childhood, but he didn’t let this define him or his work, which was darker and more complex that what came before him but nonetheless uplifting. He believed in redemption and compassion. The world is nasty, brutish, and short but we can make it less so if we care for others lost in the same wood. No one is alone. 

Perhaps this is why Sondheim is known for his generosity and kindness to other artists, including but not limited to Jonathan Larson and Lin-Manuel Miranda. In his 2011 memoir, Look I Made A Hat , Sondheim writes:  “Of all the forms of contemporary pop music, rap is the closest to traditional musical theater (its roots are in vaudeville), both in its vamp-heavy rhythmic drive and in its verbal playfulness.”

& last week, when I wrote him to say his ears must be burning from the countless Sondheim kindnesses being shared from the generations of writers he mentored, he wrote this in reply. Steve: you repaid your debt to Oscar 1000 times over. We love you. I love you. THANK YOU. -LMMpic.twitter.com/6aeHW4CWFH

— Lin-Manuel Miranda (@Lin-Manuel Miranda) 1637979299 

Thumbing his nose at musical theatre snobs, he goes on to say:

I would have expected more songwriters to pick up on it, including myself. But not until rap became omnipresently popular did I try to make it work: I imitated it in a passage for the Witch to sing during the opening number of Into the Woods. But I was never able to find another appropriate use for the technique, or perhaps I didn’t have the imagination to

[Lin-Manuel] Miranda does. Rap is a natural language for him and he is a master of the form, but enough of a traditionalist to know the way he can utilize its theatrical potential: he is already experimenting with it in a piece about Alexander Hamilton.

Sondheim never chased trends but he always remained relevant. He never stopped making the hat. 

 www.youtube.com   

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Byron York Calls Out Latest Biden Admin Attempt To ‘Counter Misinformation’ About Increased Food Costs

Calling it a ’cause for concern’, Byron York points out the latest attempt by the Biden Administration to ‘counter misinformation’: questioning reports about the increased cost of food and other items thanks to Bidenomics:

This is more than a ’cause for concern’, it’s straight up gaslighting and propaganda.

And yet one anomalous price from one store in Idaho 11 months ago was ripping through people’s social media feeds as if it explained the entire economy. One Democratic official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe private conversations, said: “What are we supposed to do, tell the president or Chuck Schumer to send a tweet saying, ‘Hey, most Big Macs aren’t that expensive?’ It would look ridiculous.” A spokesperson from McDonald’s did not return a request for comment.

The Big Mac conundrum reflects what Biden aides and senior Democratic officials regard as one of their most vexing challenges ahead of the 2024 presidential election. Even as inflation has fallen to a manageable 3 percent, and although the labor market has remained hot amid strong growth, voters still don’t like the economy, and they blame the president.

Inflation eased in October in latest sign of cooling economy

Overcoming this discontent — and understanding what is driving it — has become a central priority of the White House and Democratic lawmakers, leading to a fierce debate among economists, pollsters and other experts.

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It’s just one example from Idaho! Don’t believe what you’re seeing or paying! Inflation is manageable! The labor market is hot! Why are you blaming the President?!

Orwell wasn’t an instruction manual, WaPo.

Sure does.

It doesn’t matter if the president can’t deliver the message coherently: the message is a lie. Inflation, while down, is still up over when Biden took office, prices are still up, people are working multiple jobs to make ends meet, and they see this with their own eyes. They’re living it daily.

This notion messaging can change reality is a joke.

Because they aren’t impacted by those policies at all.

It’s propaganda on the level of North Korea or Pravda. Seriously.

How do you ‘message’ your way out of this? Using less electricity but paying 13% more. And this is happening to millions of Americans.

But he’s the best president ever!

They’re going to try really, really hard to get you to deny reality and basic math.

It’s not conservatives, that’s for sure.

And don’t question it.

They don’t want open discourse, because it means things will be even worse for them.

That’s the command.

We wish them the best of luck.

Yes, it would be.

Are they going to mandate price caps and controls to make things cheaper (and more scarce)?

And love censorship. They’ve been smacked down in court for their love of censorship.

Speaking of, how is this not a direct violation of the court’s ruling?

The 5th Circuit ruled that the government cannot collude with social media companies to infringe on American’s First Amendment rights, and here’s the Biden administration doing just that.

Why is no one holding them accountable?

That’s what this is all about: keeping Biden in the White House and stopping Trump (or another Republican) from winning.

And the bad economy is going to turn people off to Biden. It just is, and they know this.

No, because the information is bad for them. Biden’s poll numbers have been in the tank for a while, and they’re not getting better.

And they can’t censor this. The grocery store and the gas pump can’t get suspended from Twitter.

Yes, they are. The irony isn’t lost on us.

They really do. The sad part is, some people will believe them.

As will countless others who have to budget to buy groceries.

This writer is a mom with two teens and one pre-teen boy. You can’t hide the rising food prices from moms. We know.

Not only is the Administration arrogant enough to think they can gaslight us into ignoring reality, they are using misinformation to counter actual facts: inflation, while lower, is still up and so are prices. They are also blatantly defying the court’s ruling in Missouri v. Biden, and will not face any consequences for it. 

Unless we hold them accountable.

***

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Why frozen pizza is the best pizza

Debates about pizza are a lot like debates about religion, or politics, or monetary policy: There are a lot of strongly held beliefs, but very little is ever truly resolved.

Yet if one were to make a list of candidates for the best pizza in New York City—which, with apologies to Chicago, Detroit, and New Haven, is a reasonable proxy for the best pizza in America—then Di Fara Pizza would almost certainly make the cut.

Di Fara is something of a legend among pizza enthusiasts. In 2009, The New York Times called it “one of the most acclaimed and sought-after pizza shops in New York City.” The shop has repeatedly won contests for best pizza in New York and has at times been overrun by bustling crowds and long lines. A slice of Di Fara isn’t just a piece of pizza; it’s a tradition, a public ritual, a foodie culture event.

Di Fara is located on Avenue J in a heavily Orthodox Jewish neighborhood of Brooklyn called Midwood. Taking the subway from Manhattan takes the better part of an hour, and when you arrive, you encounter a shop that has been open since 1965 and looks the part: Outside, there’s a large, heavily weathered sign advertising “PIZZA” and “ITALIAN HEROS,” though most of the place’s nonpizza items were discontinued long ago. Inside, Di Fara is what one might politely call unassuming—or, less politely, dilapidated.

After you order a slice, it takes about five minutes to heat it up in one of the shop’s gas-powered metal ovens. The slice also looks unassuming. There is nothing on the plate or in the shop to visibly signal this is trendy food, sought after by connoisseurs. There is no pretense in the presentation of the product, which is served on a paper plate and a tear of tinfoil. Aside from a slightly elevated price of $5, there is little to indicate this slice is all that different from any of the other hundreds or thousands of slices of pizza one could eat in the greater New York area.

Instead, it is simply, casually, almost indifferently excellent, an edible lesson in pizza perfection. The cheesy top is bubbly and gently browned; the not-too-sweet sauce tastes like summer-fresh tomatoes; the crust is crackly and buttery, with the hint of warm softness one can obtain only from freshly heated bread.

Di Fara was founded by Domenico DeMarco, an Italian immigrant who passed away in 2022. When he died, New York Times restaurant critic Pete Wells described him as “a living link between the cooking of Southern Italy, where he was born in 1936, and New York City’s corner-slice culture.” DeMarco was famously fussy about ingredients, and the results are apparent in every astounding bite.

A slice from Di Fara simply tastes better than I ever imagined pizza could. Months later, I can still recall the sublime balance of flavors, the light and crispy texture. I can say with certainty it is the single most delicious, most satisfying piece of pizza I have ever had.

But Di Fara does not make the best pizza in America. Nor does any other celebrated pizza shop in New York or elsewhere. Not even Chicago.

The best pizza in America doesn’t come from an oven in Brooklyn or some other cult foodie mecca, where it was fastidiously handmade by some aging artisan. It comes from the freezer case at your local grocery store, where it arrived on a semitruck after being constructed on an assembly line at a nondescript factory in the middle of the country.

The best pizza in America is made by Red Baron, a catchall mass-market brand owned by the frozen-food megacorporation Schwan’s. Red Baron makes frozen pizza with a variety of toppings and in an array of styles, from Thin & Crispy to Classic Crust to Deep Dish, because big corporations don’t judge if you prefer Chicago-style. Personally, I’m fond of Brick Oven Pepperoni, but the particulars are largely irrelevant. Whereas a Di Fara slice tastes indifferently excellent, Red Baron tastes merely indifferent. The sauce is a little too spicy and a little too sweet, without the lively burst of tomato flavor. The cheese and pepperoni have a salty, fatty, processed edge to them. The crust is a little too crispy and a little too brittle. After you pull a Red Baron pizza out of the oven and take your first, slightly-too-hot bite, you are likely to react with a shrug and the thought: Sure, not bad! Judged strictly on its culinary merits—taste, texture, smell, visual appeal—Red Baron is vaguely competent at best. If you cook it properly, it can be reasonably enjoyable, especially in times of stress or exhaustion, but it is never memorable.

Red Baron’s merits are not culinary, at least not in the usual sense. Its virtues have more to do with convenience, consistency, and price.

Red Baron is never great pizza, but it is never bad pizza either. It’s also shockingly inexpensive: A whole pizza costs about the same as a single slice from Di Fara. Unlike a hot slice from Di Fara, which can only be found in a couple of locations in New York, Red Baron can be found in grocery stores practically anywhere in the country—and in household freezers anywhere in the country.

Red Baron is the best pizza not because it’s the tastiest, but because it’s cheap, abundant, and always there.

Red Baron—along with its many mass-market, corporate-produced, grocery-store-freezer-case contemporaries, such as DiGiorno—represents a kind of culinary miracle, the product of decades of technological innovation and industrial processes, as well as the complex cultural evolution of pizza itself, which began not as an artisanal delicacy but as a lowly, versatile, inexpensive street food for the poor.

Red Baron is not only the best pizza in America: It is, in at least one underappreciated way, the most authentic.

Pizza Freedom

Pizza as we know it originated as a regional street food in Naples, Italy. From the earliest recorded observations, it was a flexible, forgettable food, an on-the-go bite for lazzaroni, or day laborers.Because it was so adaptable, and because it was associated with a class of workers whose lives were unstructured and unplanned, pizza was also associated with a kind of live-as-thou-wilt lifestyle freedom.

In the mid-1830s, Alexandre Dumas, the French novelist behind books like The Three Musketeers, traveled to the Italian city, and several years later he published Sketches of Naples, a book about his experiences. Several long passages of the book are devoted to the lazzaroni and to one of their primary foods of choice, pizza.

“Other men have houses,” wrote Dumas, “other men have villas, other men have palaces, the lazzarone has the world. The lazzarone has no master, the lazzarone is amenable to no laws, the lazzarone is above social exigencies; he sleeps when he is sleepy, he eats when he is hungry, he drinks when he is thirsty.”

The lazarrone diet, in Dumas’ telling, consisted primarily of two foods: watermelon in the summer, and in the winter a curious and deceptively complex dish called pizza. “At first sight,” he wrote, “the pizza appears to be a simple dish, upon examination it proves to be compound. The pizza is prepared with bacon, with lard, with cheese, with tomatas, with fish.”

The revolving selection of toppings wasn’t just a nod to differing tastes; it was a marker of the city economy’s health. “The price of the pizza rises and falls according to the abundance or scarcity of the year. When the fish-pizza sells at a half grain, the fishing has been good; when the oil-pizza sells at a grain, the yield of olives has been bad. The rate at which the pizza sells is, also, influenced by the greater or less degree of freshness; it will be easily understood that yesterday’s pizza will not bring the same price as today’s.” Pizza, Dumas declared, was “the gastronomic thermometer of the market.” (Even in its earliest incarnations, pizza had something in common with monetary policy.)

In the century after Dumas described pizza in Naples, pizza began to spread—first around Italy, and then to the shores of the U.S., following waves of Italian immigration. Lombardi’s, often recognized as the first dedicated U.S. pizzeria, opened on Spring Street in Manhattan in 1905, selling pizzas for five cents; as always, it was a thermometer of the market. Other pizzerias soon followed, mostly in the New York area, and eventually beyond. Pizza was initially treated as an Italian specialty food, but even the earliest iterations were Americanized, adapted to domestic tastes and ingredients.

As Italian pizza began to take root in America in the early 1900s, another innovation was in the works: frozen food.

A man named Clarence Birdseye had begun experimenting with methods to rapidly freeze all sorts of food, with a focus on fish and vegetables, using methods designed to lock in fresh flavor. Some forms of frozen food already existed when Birdseye began his experiments, but they were slow frozen, resulting in mushy, flavorless food. They were considered so awful that New York passed a law that banned giving frozen food to prisoners. It also required stores to prominently note the presence of frozen foodstuffs in large lettering above their entryways.

Birdseye saw a different future for frozen food. As a young man he’d worked a series of jobs that took him to far-flung places—the untamed West of the early 1900s, the remote chill of Labrador, Canada—and on his journeys he always missed the taste of fresh food. Like many men of the era, he believed in the power of science and industry; he ended up with hundreds of patents to his name, many of which had nothing to do with food. Unlike many men of the era, he was obsessed with preparing food. His early letters were filled with recipes he’d developed using novel ingredients.

This combination of interests and experience combined in 1924, when Birdseye obtained a patent for a novel method of freezing fish, based heavily on a quick freezing method he’d learned from the Inuit while working in Canada. Some early freezing machines had existed as early as the mid-1800s, but Birdseye was the first to both grasp and develop such a product’s commercial potential.

As Mark Kurlansky writes in his 2012 biography, Birdseye, many of the man’s important innovations came not from one-off technological improvements but from the development and marketing of freezing infrastructure. He not only had to implement methods to store and transport frozen food; he had to convince skeptical grocery store owners and consumers that frozen food was in fact worthwhile. He lent expensive freezers to grocers for free so long as they carried his products. He staged elaborate dinners for investors, revealing only at the end that everything they’d eaten had been frozen. He was as much a marketer as an inventor.

At the heart of Birdseye’s project was a belief in technological progress and the power of industrialization to improve the world. It was a fundamentally different worldview than the one shared by most elite consumers today, which elevates labor-intensive, relatively rare craft products. Understanding Birdseye’s innovations, Kurlansky writes, means understanding that his worldview was shaped by an inescapable localism. “We need to grasp that people who are accustomed only to artisanal goods long for the industrial. It is only when the usual product is industrial that the artisanal is longed for.”

The Frozen Pizza Revolution

So it was with pizza. In the years after World War II, pizza became a staple of American dining both out and at home. By the late 1950s, make-at-home pizza recipes were appearing in Betty Crocker cookbooks, still labeled as Italian specialties.

But pizza of the era was, by definition, artisanal, local, handmade, and labor-intensive. It tasted best when fresh from the oven, which meant you had to be pretty close to where it was cooked in order to enjoy it properly. The problem for pizza was much the same that Birdseye had identified for fish and vegetables: How could people enjoy fresh food without proximity to where it was produced?

Thanks in part to Birdseye’s innovations, Americans in the postwar era had started buying freezers and refrigerators for their homes. Local entrepreneurs were the first to spot the opportunity: Like other food, pizza could be chilled and reheated at home. In June 1950, The New York Times described a Boston company selling refrigerated pizzas that could be warmed up in the oven; the cost, by this time, was 49 cents a pie. “The tangy pies have a bread-textured crust and are delightfully seasoned with oregano, thyme and a variety of spices,” the Times reported, while recommending that consumers bake them longer than the packaging instructions recommend. Just two weeks after opening, the New York outpost of the company was already churning out 3,000 pizzas a day. Clearly this was an idea with promise.

Other producers sprang up around the country, often to great success: As a 2020 CNBC story on the history of frozen pizza notes, ads in Massachusetts touted frozen pizzas for just 33 cents—even then, everything was more expensive in New York—while the frozen and refrigerated pizza business boomed everywhere from Akron, Ohio, to Chicago.

True industrial production came to pizza in the early 1960s, thanks to a Minnesota couple named Jim and Rose Totino. In 1951, when the couple opened an Italian restaurant in Minneapolis, pizza was still enough of an unknown that Rose reportedly had to bake her bank’s loan officer a pizza in order to get funding approved, according to an obituary in the Minneapolis Star Tribune. But the business expanded, and in 1962 the company started making frozen pizzas en masse in a factory in St. Louis Park, Minnesota, a short drive from Minneapolis.

By the early 1970s, their brand, Totino’s, was the best-selling frozen pizza in the country. A magazine ad picturing Rose advertised “quality, variety and innovation” while touting such new products as “Pizza Slices” and “Microwave Pizza.” In 1974, the company recorded $50 million in sales, and the couple sold their brand to Pillsbury for $20 million in 1975. The following year, Schwan’s launched Red Baron, which would be marketed by a fleet of World War II–era stunt planes. By 2022 it would be the country’s second-most-popular frozen brand, with more than $250 million in sales in the first four months of the year alone.

Even Bad Pizza

There is a saying about pizza: Pizza is like sex—even when it’s bad, it’s still pretty good. Serious foodies and sexual progressives (but I repeat myself) might disagree, with some cause.

But the old saw is at least directionally true. Even the worst pizza is usually not so awful, and the merely mediocre examples are, if considerably short of exquisite, often quite satisfying.

Red Baron pizza is far better than bad. At its best, it’s a pleasantly tacky treat that’s superior to its competition—that includes DiGiorno, the best-selling frozen pizza brand. When DiGiorno came to market in 1995, it was the first frozen pizza to offer a rising crust that expanded into soft, chewy pizza dough when cooked. This helped the brand compete against fresh-baked takeout and delivery pizzas, hence the brand’s long-running slogan: It’s not delivery. It’s DiGiorno.

DiGiorno’s rising crust pizza was a triumph of industrial innovation that launched the brand to the top of the frozen pizza sales charts. It was also a heavy, bready, crust-dominated pizza that could be enjoyable for a few bites but was simply too dense to truly enjoy after more than a slice. The sales figures say millions of frozen pizza fans disagree with me, but I find Red Baron superior for its balance of peppery sauce, molten cheese, and thin-but-not-too-crackly crust.

Red Baron’s relative lightness makes it ideal when consumed late at night after a drink (or several) when your local delivery spot has closed for the evening. My favorite local pizzeria stops delivering around 10 p.m. on weeknights. Red Baron, in contrast, respects my night-owl tendencies; as long as I’ve got a box in my freezer, I can have a warm and crispy pie ready in about half an hour, regardless of the time.

Red Baron’s around-the-clock availability is complemented by its almost absurdly low price point. Even in an expensive grocery market like Washington, D.C., a whole pepperoni pizza—which provides a little more than 1,300 calories—typically sells for roughly $7, and supermarket sales occasionally bring the cost down to half that. My favorite local delivery option starts at $22, and that’s before add-on toppings, delivery, and tip. Red Baron might not taste quite as good, but it’s a fraction of the cost.

Even as food inflation has skyrocketed since 2020, frozen pizzas have stayed affordable, leading to an 11 percent jump in overall frozen pizza sales in 2022, according to Restaurant Business. As in 17th century Naples, pizza remains a thermometer of the economy.

As for the taste and texture, Red Baron is a standout, at least among its peers—and not only according to me.

In July, Consumer Reports published superlatives for frozen pizzas that put Red Baron Classic at the very top, with an Editor’s Choice award. “Red Baron is the crowd pleaser,” the magazine declared. “You get the distinct taste of crust, sauce, and cheese in each bite.” That might sound like a low bar: It’s pizza that, uh, tastes more or less like pizza. But in the sprawling universe of frozen pies, it’s more than enough to rise to the top.

That universe is almost comically vast. In October 2022, a Twitter user named Michael Bradley shared a video of the frozen pizza selection at a Woodman’s grocery store in Wisconsin. The video lasted just a single minute, but as the camera strolled past case after case and aisle after aisle of frozen pizza, it seemed to go on practically forever, offering endless permutations of frozen crust, sauce, and cheese waiting to be reheated at home. The video, simply captioned “a frozen pizza section in Wisconsin,” became enough of a viral sensation that it was featured on the Today show.

Frozen food has been with us for most of a century, and frozen pizza has been a staple for over 50 years. Yet even now, the sheer, silly abundance of the stuff remains enough to astound. The variety and expansiveness of a frozen pizza section in Wisconsin is literally awesome: It can provoke a kind of awe.

That abundance is what Red Baron represents. Red Baron is not, objectively, the single best pizza, period. This year, Pizza Today named a New Haven, Connecticut, pizzeria as the nation’s top pizza joint. The best pizza I’ve ever had, based on a large but not completist sample, is a slice from Di Fara—but Di Fara is in New York, and I live in Washington, D.C. (And while Di Fara will ship frozen pizzas packed with dry ice to my door, they have nothing on the price and convenience of Red Baron.)

Meanwhile, Red Baron is never farther away than a short trip to the grocery store. Most of the time, it’s in my freezer. That’s why, for me and millions of others, it is frequently the best pizza that is reasonably affordable and available right now. It’s not a bucket-list item for adventuresome foodies, but it is a tasty, filling, and cheap snack for today’s lazzaroni: the working-class eater who owns little but has no masters and is amenable to no laws.

That sort of virtue, the fruit of industrialization and mass production, of consistency and affordability, is often overlooked in today’s culture—in food especially, but in other goods as well. We live in an era of awesome abundance, of inexpensive availability, of good-enough stuff that is the best not because it’s the most exquisite but because it’s cheap and instantly available and sometimes even surprisingly good for the price. As the story of Clarence Birdseye reminds us, it is only because of that taken-for-granted abundance that we can fully appreciate the elevated excellence of the Di Faras of the world.

Ironically, Di Fara, too, was once considered something of a déclassé product by the pizza elites of the world. Di Fara heats single slices in gas-powered metal ovens that reach lower temperatures than the wood-fired, whole-pizza brick ovens that some pizza purists consider truly authentic. But over time, Di Fara won over the skeptics by demonstrating the delicate, delicious virtues of single-slice setups. The debate about the best pizza will never be resolved, but perhaps someday the industrially produced wonder that is Red Baron will finally make the list.



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How Europe’s far-right is using the Gaza war to whip up divisions against faith communities

The October 7 atrocities promise political gains for the far-right across Europe, which has been boosted by Geert Wilders’ – aka the ‘Dutch Trump’ – gains in the Netherlands.

Veteran anti-Islam populist leader Geert Wilders’ dramatic gains in the Dutch elections this week sent shockwaves across Europe, where far-right ideology is on the rise. 

Known as the “Dutch Trump,” partly for his swept-back dyed hairstyle, but more so for his rants against immigrants and Muslims, which have included calling Moroccans “scum” and holding competitions for cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed, Wilders has built a career from his self-appointed mission to stop an “Islamic invasion” of the West. Among his promises is to move the Dutch embassy in Israel to Jerusalem in a show of support for the Netherlands’ “close friend and the one true democracy in the Middle East.”

Nationalist and far-right leaders around Europe were quick to praise Wilders’ achievement. In France, Marine Le Pen said it “confirms the growing attachment to the defence of national identities.”

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, sent his praise, saying: “The winds of change are here! Congratulations.”

Since the Hamas attack on October 7, it has been suggested that these hard-right European leaders have been using the conflict to stir up divisions against faith communities. Accusations have been made that the demonisation of religious groups is a deliberate ploy by populists to promote their anti-immigrant agenda, and, ultimately, achieve their political goals. And, as so often with the far-right, the hypocrisy is astounding.

In France, the far-right leader Marine Le Pen, who is expected to make her fourth presidency bid in 2027, has been on a mission, to, as the Israeli newspaper Haaretz describes, “rebrand the extremist, antisemitic party she inherited from her father Jean-Marie Le Pen.”

The Israel-Hamas war presents, according to the Haaretz report, “a glittering opportunity for Europe’s right-wing populists, where leaders like Orbán are pointing to their countries as sanctuaries for Jews and Christians.”

Jean-Marie Le Pen was repeatedly convicted of antisemitic hate speech. The founder of the then National Front party also played down the scope of the Holocaust.

Recognising the need to scrub the party’s image, Le Pen kicked her father out of the party and changed its name from the National Front to the National Rally. In an attempt to ‘cleanse’ her party further, on November 12, the leader attended a march in Paris against rising antisemitism in France. Her presence attracted a cacophony of criticism, with critics saying it was an attempt to leverage the Israel/Hamas war to make herself more palatable to mainstream voters. Critics also argued that despite growing political legitimacy, the once-pariah party has failed to shake off its antisemitic heritage.

French government spokesman Olivier Veran said that Marine Le Pen’s party “does not have a place” at what is dubbed as a “grand civic march.”

Through fears that the French way of life is being upended by a migrant – mainly Muslim – ‘submersion,’ Marine Le Pen has a long history of anti-Muslim hate speech. In 2015, she appeared in court for allegedly inciting racial hatred over comments that she made during a party rally in Lyon in 2010, when she compared Muslims praying in the streets to the Nazi occupation.

Similar opportunistic hypocrisy over faith communities in the wake of the war in Gaza can be found within the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party. Founded in 2013, the AfD is known for its Euroscepticism, and for opposing immigration in Germany. Felix Flein, who was appointed as Germany’s antisemitism commissioner in 2018, has accused the AfD of condoning antisemitism and backing forces that have sought to downplay the Holocaust.

He accused the party of wanting to ban the kosher slaughter of meat. “If the AfD wants to curtail Jewish dietary laws, that is a threat to Jewish life,” Klein told DW.

But as Haaretz reports, the recent devastation in Gaza has resulted in the AfD seizing the moment to “shelve its antisemitism, at least in public, and unleash instead its unabashed Islamophobic agenda.”

In Hungary, Viktor Orbán has shown just how confused the hard right can become about all those groups they hate. A recently unveiled billboard campaign raised concerns that the far-right Hungarian prime minister is returning to using antisemitic tropes to further his political goals at home.

In 2019, a controversial campaign funded by the Hungarian government, took aim at the Hungarian-American businessman George Soros (a familiar villain among the Right) and then-European commission president, Jean-Claude Juncker. The campaign prompted the commission to accuse Budapest of promoting a conspiracy theory.

Orbán appears to be returning to a familiar strategy, with the unveiling of a billboard showing Ursula von der Leyen, president of the commission, and Alex Soros, current chair of the world’s largest human rights funder, the Open Society Foundations, and son of George Soros. The slogan on the billboards, which are part of a so-called national consultation “on the defence of our sovereignty,” reads: “Let’s not dance to their tune.”

The new campaign has renewed concerns that the Hungarian government is promoting antisemitic narratives. Attila Ara-Kovács, a member of the European parliament from Hungary’s opposition Democratic Coalition party, warns:

“Orbán tried to undermine Juncker by linking him to Soros, now he’s trying to do that with Soros’ son and von der Leyen.”

“The European Commission led by von der Leyen is too soft” on Orbán, the parliamentarian said, adding that the Hungarian government’s behaviour was “antisemitic and anti-EU.”

Following the unveiling of the propaganda campaign against Soros, Orbán’s newfound solidarity with Israel and the Jewish people has been called into question, not surprisingly.

Over the past decade, Viktor Orbán and Benjamin Netanyahu have formed what has been described as a “fruitful political partnership.”

In a special report on the Israeli and Hungarian prime ministers, Haaretz describes the parallels between the two men as “astonishing.” It informs how the pair have known each other for over a decade, sharing a web of political contacts and advisers reaching from Jerusalem to Washington.

“They have given each other advice on political messaging – including on what phrases to use in speeches,” said one senior Israeli official.

The roots of Orbán’s strong bond with Israel and its prime minister have been scrutinised in the wake of the current conflict in the Middle East. In a report on the relationship between the two leaders, Balkin Insight argues: “Hungary’s solidarity with Israel may seem contradictory in light of its propaganda against US billionaire Soros and the historical antisemitic figures in the Fidesz party’s intellectual milieu.”

Rafaela Dancygier, a Princeton University political scientist, has voiced similar concerns, warning that the Hamas October 7 atrocities promise political gains for the far-right across Europe.

“They allow these parties to demonise Muslims in Europe and to advocate for severe immigration restrictions – which they have been doing all along, but now just with added ammunition,” she explains. But there is a twist.

“To some, the far right now appears more respectable than the far left,” where several prominent figures have hailed Hamas’ October 7 massacre, or at least cast it as legitimate resistance,” she says.

In Britain, where, as we know, a cohort of right-wing Tory MPs stand beside Viktor Orbán (Tory MP Sir Edward Leigh quite literally at a gathering in Budapest), similar hypocrisy involving earlier demonisation and recent lauding of faith communities among the Right, has been evident in recent weeks.

In the strange topsy turvey post-October 7 world, traditional homes of anti-semitism have now taken up the pro-Israel cause.  The Daily Mail, for example, backed Hitler and Mosley in the 1930s and opposed Jewish immigration. For the Mail in 1930, Hitler, his party and their success, represented the “birth of Germany as a nation.” In 1934, the newspaper ran with the headline “Hurrah for the Blackshirts” in an article celebrating Oswald Mosley and the British Union of Fascists (BUF). The piece was authored by Lord Rothermere, the then owner of the Daily Mail, who praised Mosley and the Blackshirts, seeing them as the correct party to “take over responsibility for [British] national affairs.”

Since the recent conflict in Gaza broke out, the same newspaper has been decidedly pro-Israel, with reports elevating pro-Israel rallies, while deriding the pro-Palestine ‘mob.’ Sharing similar language as the former home secretary Suella Braverman, the right-wing papers seized on the pro-Palestine marches, presenting them as a symbolic attack on British values.

And look who the Express gunned for this week… George Soros, the same figure targeted by Vitkor Orban’s new campaign which has sparked concerns that the Hungarian government is promoting antisemitic narratives. The Express’ ‘exclusive’ report takes aim at Soros’ apparent funding of openDemocracy, and backing of a recent “Break Up of Britain?” conference in Edinburgh.

Sadly, in Britain, which is home to a successful multi-racial, multi-faith democracy, both antisemitic and Islamophobic hate crimes have risen since October 7, as they have around the world.

UN Human Rights Chief Volker Türk warns against the “inflammatory, toxic and hateful rhetoric” that has been “used by political leaders.”

Thankfully our home secretary was, eventually, sacked for what was seen as provoking far-right hostility by using incendiary terms like ‘hate marchers’ and ‘mobs.’ But her inflammatory narrative lives on within right-wing political and media circles.

It could be argued that right-wing factions are being noisily pro-Israel to deliberately create divisions and chaos inside Labour. A ploy which seems to be working.

As we know, the Tories’ ratings in the polls are dismal, but as Haaretz argues in a report on how the Israel/Hamas war is rattling British politics, the conflict is “far more resonant and convulsive for the riding-high-in-the polls Labour.”

In resolutely resisting demands for a ceasefire from his own constituencies, instead calling for a “humanitarian pause” in hostilities, Starmer has been hit by an internal rebellion, with eight frontbenchers resigning over his position.

Naturally, the right-wing press has seized the opportunity to exaggerate Labour’s divisions over Gaza. ‘Shots fired Sir Keir Starmer civil war erupts as Sadiq Khan and Anas Sarwar join Labour MPs defying him by calling for a ceasefire,’ was a recent headline in the Sun.

The damage done to Britain over 13 years of Tory rule is undeniable, and the Gaza war does offer a distraction from the Tories’ appalling governance. More cynically still, it could be argued, it gives them the chance to demonise Muslims, who historically have been more likely to vote Labour.

Europe’s far-right may have been given a boost by Geert Wilders’ gains in the Netherlands, but strangely, Britain, where neofascism does not have widespread appeal, could emerge as a model against the populist tide.  Maybe, just maybe, the sacking of a hard-right home secretary, shows that a more centrist tradition in the Conversative Party still just about breathes. That, together with people’s continued support for the right to protest, might mark a slight turn in the tide. At least we can live in hope.

Right-Wing Media Watch – Tory press glorify Hunt’s ‘cynical’ tax cuts

The Chancellor’s Autumn Statement dominated the front pages this week and if you paid too much attention to the Tory newspapers, you could be mistaken in thinking that he was on the side of working people.

‘New Year’s Wayhey,’ splashed the Sun. ‘We’ve delivered on triple lock to protect you,’ effused the Express. ‘Biggest tax cuts since the 1980s,’ raved both the Mail and the Telegraph, seizing the words spoken by Hunt during the statement.

Their reports of course made no reference to reactions by the unions, which all agreed that it was a politically motivated attempt to bolster the party’s dismal poll ratings while noting how investment in public services – which are on their knees – failed to get a mention.

In fact, the whole budget depends on five years of projected public expenditure cuts for ‘unprotected’ services which includes universities, local government, environmental protection, and above all, welfare.

UNISON leader Christina McAnea summed the Statement up in a few words: “A cynical ploy that won’t fool the public.”

As the poor souls working on the news desks at the right-wing press were under orders to conjure up captions that sold the Statement as something for ordinary people to celebrate, the liberal press offered more truthful analysis. ‘Biggest tax cuts since 1980s’: Who are they kidding?’, asked the Independent’s front page, while the Guardian called the cuts for their timing, saying: “Hunt reveals £20bn in tax cuts as Tories move on to election footing.”

But for Camilla Tominey, the Telegraph’s associate editor, Hunt has pulled a ‘rabbit out of the hat’ in a ‘belated bid to cast a new spell on voters.’

“An impressive feat of prestidigitation,” the PM and Chancellor have performed in “taking the fight to Labour – at last,” Tominey argued.

The bid to cut taxes has long been driven by the right-wing media, and internal Tory dynamics. Who can forget the front page of the Daily Mail following the disastrous Truss/Kwarteng mini budget. “At last, a TRUE Tory budget,” the newspaper gushed.

And we know where the impetus behind Truss’s ‘growth’ strategy came from – a network of think-tanks closely connected to Truss and her advisors. It also left the right-wing, Truss-loving media eating its words.

Only time will tell whether the triumphant claims made in the Tory press this week that Hunt has ‘waved his magic wand’ in the bid to woo voters, will bear any truth.

But given the crisis within the NHS, and with the nation’s schools literally crumbling, perhaps the public would like to see taxes increase so more can be spent on public services? A poll in the summer of 2022 when both Truss and Sunak were promising tax cuts during the Tory leadership race, suggested as much.

You can’t help but feel that Hunt’s bid to revive the Tories’ election chances will prove futile and this week’s grandiose headlines will leave the right-wing press eating their words, again.

As Chris, a 68-year-old from Manchester, told Right-Wing Watch: “Cheers for the pension rise Mr Hunt, but I still won’t be voting for you.”

Woke-bashing of the week – ‘Anti-woke’ columnist fails to gauge mood of country while inciting yet more hatred towards Palestinian cause

“If you ever wanted more evidence that Westminster is dangerously disconnected from the rest of the country, look no further than the events of last week,” wrote Matt Goodwin for the Daily Mail.

If you ever wanted more evidence of a ‘visible scholar on the hard right,’ as the New Statesman’s Oliver Eagleton described him, getting the current mood of the country wrong in another depressing bid to whip inflammatory rhetoric and hate towards the ‘woke Left,’ and those who support the Palestinian cause, then read the rest of Goodwin’s column.

In the op-ed, entitled: ‘The woke Left and extreme Islamism have joined forces to try and reshape society around values that are deeply divisive and unBritish,’ Goodwin, a professor of politics, argues against the sacking of Suella Braverman.  Most people in Britain are ‘absolutely convinced’ that our borders of ‘out of control,’ as “an assortment of activist lawyers, pressure groups and unelected judges, cheered on by the radical woke Left, blocked the only thing that might deter people against entering the country illegally,” he wrote.

“With Braverman gone, no frontline politician is left to voice the concerns of the vast majority of voters on issues such as immigration, multiculturalism and the breakdown of our borders.

“Nor is there anyone who will take on the two big threats that are rapidly undermining our shared identity, history, values and culture. And what are these threats to Britain, exactly?,” he asked, before pointing to the “hundred or so rallies held across the country as part of the ‘Palestinian Day of Action.’

Since when was calling for a ceasefire and peace considered ‘unBritish’ and against British values’? Adding to the insult is the fact that the majority of pro-Palestine marches in Britain have passed off peacefully, and it’s been far-right counter protestors who have predominantly caused disturbance, incited by the type of language Goodwin is using to frame his argument.

But for Goodwin, who has previously spewed out anti-woke insults, having condemned the ‘woke BBC’ for apparently suggesting much of the country want to see our borders flung open,” recent events are an example of, “The woke Left and radical Islamism are not just feeding off one another but are, together, undermining British values that have prevailed for centuries.”

Not only is coupling the ‘woke Left’ and ‘radical Islamism’ deliberately provocative and potentially inciteful, despite not really making sense, but the article fails to acknowledge the true mood of the country. Polling shows that most people (57 percent to 20 percent) think the sacking of Braverman was the right thing to do. That’s true even among Tory voters, though to a lesser extent (44 percent to 39 percent). Goodwin also ignores that the majority of people in Britain want to see a ceasefire in Gaza, as polling also shows, AND how the Supreme Court’s decision to stop the deportation of immigrants to Rwanda, has been widely praised in Britain.

Seemingly void of any fact-checking practices, it’s no wonder Wikipedia once voted to ban the Daily Mail as a reference on its site, citing a reputation for ‘poor fact checking and sensationalism.’

Gabrielle Pickard-Whitehead is author of Right-Wing Watch

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Suspended, expelled, quit: Who are the MPs sitting without the Labour whip? – LabourList | Latest UK Labour Party news, analysis and comment

Nine MPs elected to represent the Labour Party in 2019 are currently sitting as independents, with two Constituency Labour Parties recently picking candidates to stand against their former representatives.

This rolling list will be updated with the latest developments as we hear them about the MPs’ futures; let us know if you hear anything not included below at [email protected], on record or off.

All MPs featured and the party were contacted for comment.

Diane Abbott

Diane Abbott has been the Labour MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington since 1987, when she became the first Black woman elected to parliament. A long serving member of the Socialist Campaign Group, she served as Shadow Home Secretary under Jeremy Corbyn.

Abbott was suspended from the Labour whip in April 2023 after suggesting, in a letter to the Observer newspaper, that Irish people, Jews and Travellers do not experience racism. Abbott apologised for the widely condemned comments shortly after their publication, saying she wished to “wholly and unreservedly withdraw” her remarks and “disassociate” herself from them.

She said that “the errors arose in an initial draft being sent”, but that this was “no excuse”. An investigation is ongoing; the Guardian has reported that inquiry into her comments is likely to drag on for some months, thus potentially precluding Abbott from standing for re-selection in her north London seat.

Contacted for comment, Abbott’s office told LabourList: “She herself has described the investigation process as fraudulent, as Keir Starmer has already pronounced her guilt.”

Nick Brown 

One of Labour’s longest serving MPs, Brown was first elected to represent Newcastle-upon-Tyne East in 1983 and has held the seat ever since. Brown served as Labour’s chief whip Tony Blair and every successive party leader, leaving the role in 2021 to be replaced by fellow north east MP Alan Campbell.

In September 2022, it was reported that Brown had been suspended from the Labour party following a complaint to the party’s independent complaints system. The nature of the complaint has not been made public and Brown remains suspended while the investigation is ongoing.

Bambos Charalambous

Charalambous took Enfield Southgate from the Conservatives in 2017, having previously fought the seat in 2015. He had served on the front bench in a number of roles and was serving as shadow minister for the Middle East and North Africa when he was suspended from the Labour whip in June 2023 following an allegation of misconduct.

Commenting on this suspension, Charalambous said: “It is right and proper that process is allowed to take place. I will cooperate fully and play my full part. It is not appropriate to say anything further at this time.”

It is understood that a formal complaint was made to Labour’s independent complaints process, resulting in Charalambous being administratively suspended from the party – automatically suspending the whip in parliament.

Jeremy Corbyn

Keir Starmer has repeatedly made it clear that former leader Jeremy Corbyn will not stand as a Labour candidate again.

Representing Islington North since 1983, a Labour National Executive Committee motion barring him from candidacy at the next election passed in March 2023.

The motion claimed that the “Labour Party’s interests, and its political interests at the next general election, are not well served by Mr Corbyn running as a Labour Party candidate”.

But the former leader said in a statement at the time: “The NEC’s decision to block my candidacy for Islington North is a shameful attack on party democracy, party members and natural justice.”

Geraint Davies

Geraint Davies served as Labour MP for Croydon Central between 1997 and 2005, before being elected as the Labour and Co-operative member for Swansea West in 2010. He had the Labour whip suspended in June 2023, following a report in Politico that documented a series of allegations of sexual harassment against the MP.

Davies said he did not “recognise” the allegations, which a Labour spokesperson described as “incredibly serious allegations of completely unacceptable behaviour”, commenting: “If I have inadvertently caused offence to anyone, then I am naturally sorry.” An inquiry is ongoing.

Reached for comment by LabourList, Davies said he denied all allegations and is keen that the inquiry into the claims against him concludes as soon as possible.

Conor McGinn

McGinn has represented St Helen’s North since 2015, and between June 2021 and September 2022 served under Shabana Mahmood as deputy national campaign coordinator. Prior to his election, the Northern Ireland-born McGinn sat on Labour’s NEC.

In December 2022, it was reported that McGinn had been suspended from the party whip following a complaint to the party’s independent complaints system. McGinn has said that the complaint, the details of which have not been made public, was “entirely unfounded”.

He announced in May 2023 that he would not seek re-election and in October 2023 that he had left the Labour Party. David Baines has been selected to fight his seat.

Andy McDonald

Andy McDonald was elected as the Labour MP for Middlesbrough in 2012, having practiced as a solicitor for many years. He served in the Shadow Cabinet under Jeremy Corbyn and Keir Starmer, resigning in September 2021.

McDonald was suspended in October 2023 after speaking at a pro-Palestine rally, having told the event: “Until all people, Israelis and Palestinians, between the river and the sea can live in peaceful liberty.”

A Labour spokesperson commenting at the time said: “The comments made by Andy McDonald at the weekend were deeply offensive, particularly at a time of rising antisemitism which has left Jewish people fearful for their safety.”

McDonald said his comments should be understood as “a heartfelt plea for an end to the killings in Israel, Gaza, and the occupied West Bank, and for all peoples in the region to live in freedom without the threat of violence”, continuing: “I will be happy to explain these views to the investigation when it convenes, and trust that the whip will be restored.”

Christina Rees

Rees has been the Labour and Co-operative MP for Neath since 2015 and served as Shadow Secretary of State for Wales under Jeremy Corbyn.

She had the Labour whip suspended in October 2022, following reports that she had bullied members of her constituency staff. The Guardian reported claims that several of her staff had made statements detailing bullying by Rees to Labour headquarters, with one constituency source alleging that the behaviour had gone on for some years.

At the time, Rees said she was not aware of the details of the complaint but “fully cooperating with the investigation”.

Claudia Webbe

Webbe was elected as the Labour MP for Leicester East at the 2019 general election. She had previously served as a councillor in Islington and as a member of the NEC, where in 2018 she was elected chair of the disputes panel.

Claudia Webbe was convicted of harassment in November 2021 and lost her appeal for this conviction in May 2022, and Labour called on her to resign as an MP. She had the Labour whip suspended in September 2020 over the harassment charges and has not regained it.

Rajesh Agrawal has been selected to fight Leicester East at the next election.



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Newslinks for Sunday 26th November 2023 | Conservative Home

Promise to crack down on charities that are “forums for hate speech”

“The charity regulator has pledged to crack down on bodies that host anti-Semitic extremists amid “serious concerns” about activities linked to the Israel-Hamas conflict. Writing for The Telegraph, Orlando Fraser, the chairman of the Charity Commission, warned that charities “must not allow their premises” or events “to become forums for hate speech” or unlawful extremism, adding: “The commission will not stand by and permit charities to be abused in this way.” His intervention comes after campaigners contacted the watchdog over a series of videos of hateful sermons being preached at a series of mosques linked to charities, in the weeks following the Oct 7 attacks by Hamas. They include sermons featuring a call for victory over “the usurping Jews”, urging congregations to pray for the “oppressors” to be “destroyed”, and one stating that if all Muslims “just marched on Israel it’s all over, if they spat in the direction of Israel, it’s all over”.” – Sunday Telegraph

  • Charities must not become forums for hate speech over Gaza – Orlando Fraser, Sunday Telegraph
  • Tugendhat criticises BBC for barring its staff from joining the first national march against antisemitism – Sunday Times
  • Bowen admits he ‘got it wrong’ in Gaza hospital report for BBC but has ‘no regrets’ – Sunday Times
  • Cameron’s Foreign Office is undermining Israel – Stephen Pollard, Sunday Telegraph
  • Foreign Secretary’s decision to chastise Israel’s leadership was unwise – Leader, Sunday Telegraph

Anderson claims he was offered “a lot of money” to defect to Reform UK

“The Conservative Party deputy chairman, Lee Anderson, has been secretly recorded claiming that he was offered “a lot of money” to defect to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party. Anderson, 56, made the comments at a “Lagers with Lee” meeting at Cambridge Rugby Club last month after saying: “We’re not taping this, are we?” In the recording of the event, hosted by South Cambridgeshire Conservative Association, the Tory MP for Ashfield revealed that he had been approached to defect to Reform UK.” – Sunday Times

  • Farage tells friends he has ‘one last shot’ to return to frontline politics – The Sun on Sunday
  • A vote for Farage will hand power to Labour – Leader, Mail on Sunday

Cleverly’s Rwanda comments prompt “backlash” from Conservative MPs

“Downing Street has moved to quell a Conservative backlash over the new Home Secretary’s warning that people should not “fixate” on the Government’s flagship Rwanda migration scheme. A No 10 source insisted that ministers were “completely committed” to plans set out by the Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda…Mr Cleverly, who replaced Suella Braverman in this month’s reshuffle, also told The Times that leaving the European Convention on Human Rights would jeopardise “key cooperation” with countries such as France, Albania and Bulgaria, which has helped drive down illegal migration. In remarks that particularly irked some of his colleagues he also warned against “hyperbole” in discussions around overall levels of migration.” – Sunday Telegraph

  • Jenrick on “resignation watch” due to concern legislation won’t go far enough – The Mail on Sunday
  • Stopping the boats is “essential” insist Tory MPs – Sunday Express
  • Labour pledge to raise salary bar for skilled worker visa – Sunday Times
  • Nearly 20 per cent of staff in England’s care homes are made up of foreign nationals – The Sun on Sunday
  • Voters want Government to get to grips with legal and illegal immigration. Here’s how I would do it – Bob Seely MP, The Sun on Sunday
  • Record immigration is good for the NHS but very bad for the Tory party’s health – Robert Colvile, Sunday Times
  • Until politicians grasp problems of cheap labour and foreign students, UK’s immigration system will never get fixed – Leader, The Sun on Sunday

>Today: ToryDiary: Is Brexit Britain set to be the West’s liberal outlier on migration and Ukraine?

Sunak declares that tax cuts are “just the beginning”

“Rishi Sunak has vowed that the tax cuts announced last week are ‘the start of a journey’, with more to follow before the General Election if economic conditions allow. In an exclusive interview with The Mail on Sunday, the PM said that Chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s 2p cut in National Insurance was the start of moves to ‘shift gears’ on fiscal policy. He told the MoS: ‘I always said I wanted to cut people’s taxes, but first we had to get inflation under control and stabilise the economy.’..Mr Sunak’s words came as Tory insiders told the Daily Mail the Government’s ‘stealth tax’ raid on incomes could end earlier than planned.” – Mail on Sunday

  • Hunt’s budget cuts spark fears of ‘existential threat’ to English councils – The Observer
  • The chancellor’s tax giveaway will simply load even more painful spending cuts on to an inflation-devastated public sector – Leader, The Observer
  • “Dirty dozen” stealth taxes will hit Britons by £800 per household, Labour says – Sunday Telegraph
  • Hunt’s stealth taxes prove he is no conviction chancellor – Liam Halligan, Sunday Telegraph

Labour denies abandoning £28 billion “Green Prosperity Plan”

“Labour has denied claims it could further water down its flagship green prosperity plan. A senior source had suggested to the BBC that the level of investment previously promised – of £28bn a year – might never be reached. But a party spokesman said, if elected, Labour would “ramp up investment in jobs and energy independence” to a “total of £28bn a year as planned” in the second half of their Parliamentary term.” – BBC

  • Britain is broken, but Labour still won’t say how it plans to fix it – Janet Daley, Sunday Telegraph

Gove and Matt Hancock quizzed over Mone’s PPE firm

“Matt Hancock and Michael Gove have been interviewed by the National Crime Agency (NCA) as part of its investigation into a PPE company linked to Baroness Mone. The former health secretary and current secretary of state for levelling up, housing and communities are among a number of witnesses to whom the NCA has spoken in recent months as part of its long-running inquiry into PPE Medpro, a supplier of facemasks and medical gowns. Others questioned by the agency include Lord Bethell, a former health minister, and Lord Agnew, who served as a minister in the Cabinet Office.” – Sunday Times

Shipman: Sunak unlikely to hold an early election

“In Loto (the leader of the opposition’s office), officials seem convinced the Tories will cut and run in May. The problem with the theory is that it seems to be shared by almost no one who might make the decision to go to the country. James Forsyth, Sunak’s political secretary, and Richard Holden, the new party chairman, are said by colleagues to see the appeal. And Will Tanner, the deputy chief of staff, has begun talking to centre-right think tanks about working up policies for a manifesto. But sources in Downing Street say the timing would not be recommended to Sunak by Liam Booth-Smith, the No 10 chief of staff, and Isaac Levido, the Tory campaign director. Neither is understood to be enthusiastic about the prospect of an early poll. A third source close to Sunak said, emphatically: “There is no chance of an early election.” A Tory aide who has discussed the issued with Levido said: “Anyone who thinks May is a good idea needs their head testing.” – Tim Shipman, Sunday Times

Littlewood: Milei offers a positive alternative

“Milei so exciting and different is that he has gone far beyond merely acting as a repository of fury and disenchantment. He actually has an intellectually coherent programme. He references economists such as Milton Friedman and Ludwig von Mises in mainstream media interviews. He waxes lyrical about “internalising externalities” – and people listen. He eschews the easy road of simply blaming his opponents for incompetence and mismanagement, rather he explains how the present systems are unmanageable whoever is in charge.” – Mark Littlewood, Sunday Telegraph

Hodges: The scientists didn’t understand the Covid science either

“Remember the great Omicron scare? The country was almost plunged into a lockdown at the end of 2021 because of modelling of this new variant that was analysed by the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies, which gives advice to the Government. A series of graphs were produced predicting the likely impact. One showed a worst-case scenario of 6,000 deaths a day, and a best case of 600. In the end, deaths reached a high of 262. Another estimated likely hospitalisations. The highest line peaked at 10,000, the lowest 3,000. The true number ended up at 1,700.” – Dan Hodges, Mail on Sunday

  • Stretched NHS even less ready to cope with a new pandemic, scientists warn – The Observer
  • No bounce for the Tories after tax-cutting budget, poll shows – The Observer

Other political news

  • Civil servants held meeting on Why I Don’t Talk to White People About Race book – Sunday Telegraph
  • Tory concern grows over potential sale of Telegraph titles to Abu Dhabi – The Observer
  • Bone’s plan for girlfriend to replace him, or stand  as an independent – Sunday Times
  • Political Christmas gifts – The Sun on Sunday
  • Duffield being “investigated” by the Labour Party after she “liked” a tweet by comedy writer Graham Linehan – Sunday Times
  • Man is being held in custody after allegedly sending abusive messages about Israel to Justin Tomlinson MP – The Sun on Sunday
  • Haley is edging ahead of DeSantis – Sunday Times
  • Hospitals record newborn babies’ ‘gender identity’ rather than their sex – Mail on Sunday
  • A plea for XL Bully dogs to be spared a ban will be debated in Parliament tomorrow – Sunday Express
  • Starmer open to return of Parthenon marbles – The Observer
  • Calls on Sunak to copy New Zealand and scrap ‘unconservative’ smoking ban – Sunday Express
  • Oxford’s road ‘havoc’ prompts new grassroots political party – Sunday Telegraph
  • Salmond launches legal action against Scottish government – BBC

News in brief

  • The EU has only itself to blame for Geert Wilders – Gavin Mortimer, The Spectator
  • More than just a motto. Schools with a philosophy are better for pupils – CapX
  • An about-turn on tobacco – Christopher Snowdon, The Critic
  • The divide between Labour and the Conservatives has been sharpened – Andrew Marr, New Statesman
  • CCHQ taking charge of Susan Hall’s Mayoral campaign – Guido Fawkes

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Is Brexit Britain set to be the West’s liberal outlier on migration and Ukraine? | Conservative Home

Compare and contrast.

This week, Britain’s voters discovered that unprecedented levels of migration had grown their population by the equivalent of another Birmingham in just two years. They responded by giving our centre-left opposition its largest poll lead in a year, and by forcing the only viable leader of any putative anti-immigration party to gorge on a four-penis pizza on national television.

Meanwhile, across the North Sea, the Dutch – friendly, attractive, liberal types hitherto known only for their fondness for windmills, prostitution, and dope – gave a quarter of their vote to Geert Vilders, a man whom columnists are contractually obliged to label a ‘firebrand’. Although he may want to sound more conciliatory than when he called Islam “the ideology of a retarded culture”, this is a seismic moment.

Whether he enters government or not, Wilders holds the whip hand for any future right-wing government. As with the Sweden Democrats in Stockholm or Giorgia Meloni in Italy, the centre-right is now reliant on their radical rivals. As Tories debate whether to grant Nigel Farage party membership, our European cousins are getting into bed with parties that make him look like Michael Heseltine.

Europe is changing. Marine Le Pen is odds on to be France’s next President; the AfD are set to be Germany’s opposition. The Freedom Party – think the Liberal Democrats, but for former SS officers – are set to be Austria’s largest for the first time. Victor Orban sits pretty in Hungary. Even in Spain or Poland, where the centre-left has won, it has done so amid right-wing advances and controversy.

I cavail to no reader in my faith in English exceptionalism. But in currently having Keir Starmer on course for Downing Street, Brexit Britain really is setting itself apart from our European friends and neighbours. It wasn’t supposed to be like this. Wasn’t Brexit a fit of nostalgic pique, a retreat into isolationist nationalism, with a whiff of the old Reichstag Fire lurking in the background?

Instead, delivering Brexit torpedoed any nascent populist turn in British politics. It killed both UKIP and the Brexit Party’s raison d’etre. As successful as it might have been in earning ex-MEPs slots on TalkTV, the small boats issue has failed to galvanise a new right-wing challenger. First-Past-The-Post once again proves its worth in preventing new parties from entering Parliament.

Liberals of Europe thus turn their lonely eyes to Keir Starmer. By killing off the major challengers to the two established parties, Brexit made Britain’s politics the continent’s most normal. As Aris Roussinos has pointed out, Europe is lifting the cordon sanitaire on the radical right imposed by the Second World War. Never having needed one, the voters of Britain continue swinging from centre-right to centre-left regardless.

Of course, it is not only on this side of the Atlantic where elections are currently generating attention. As Peter Franklin has highlighted, next year, for the first time in 60 years, Britain and the United States might be having elections simultaneously. But whereas 1964 brought the centre-left pairing of Harold Wilson and Lyndon Johnson to power, 2024’s frontrunners are not so aligned.

A timeline where a newly-elected Starmer has to make cute with a Donald Trump restored to the White House is objectively funny. His putative Foreign Secretary protested Trump’s previous UK visits; his Chancellor-in-waiting has made abundantly clear her preference for Joe Biden. But if Starmer has any faith in the cringeworthy fantasy of a ‘Special Relationship’, he must make it work.

Yet Labour’s leader may well find himself in a position we can dub a “Reverse Harold Wilson”. Keeping in with the Americans has been the central plank of Britain’s Cold War foreign policy, but the sage of Huddersfield did manage to keep us out of the Vietnam imbroglio. By contrast, Starmer has pledged to continue support for Ukraine. But Trump wants to cut it off.

Volodymyr Zelensky is yesterday’s news. Overshadowed by the Israel-Gaza conflict and undermined by his persistent failure to live up to his promises on the battlefield, he finds himself reliant on a United States whose voters are increasingly unwilling to pay for his nation’s security. His calls for EU membership fall on deaf ears amongst so-called allies worried about the staggering cost.

Germany, France, Poland, and the rest are imminently set to cut off support. But one imagines, after another year of expensive stalemate, the Chancelleries of Europe will not be entirely inattentive to any Trump’s foaming about value for money. Since Starmer is in lockstep with the Government’s support for Ukraine, this would put Britain in an even more awkward position.

Picture the scenes. As country after country in Europe turns to nationalist governments, ignoring Brussels in reimposing border fences and negotiating repatriation schemes, Starmer scraps any form of deterrent policy and hands effective control of our asylum policy over to the EU. As Western leaders urge Zelensky to cut a deal, Starmer finds himself isolated in calling for Ukraine to fight on with whatever he can find in the MoD’s lost property cupboard. 

The cynic in me suggests Starmer’s liberal posturing won’t survive long in office. Managing migration will be one of Europe’s great 21st-century challenges, even if the Home Office may want to wish Africa away. Retaining any influence in Washington will always be more valuable than taking selfies in Kyiv. Starmer is more likely to spend a night in Trump Tower than go out on a limb for Zelensky.

Even so, the Labour leader cannot be expected to observe his potential geopolitical inheritance with anything more than dismay. Maybe he’ll get lucky. Biden may yet triumph over his opponent’s youth and inexperience. Europe’s social democrats may rally, the continent’s current rightwards turn proving less a return to the 1930s, and more the equivalent of a frustrated teenage emo phase.

Yet this seems unlikely. The arc of history is long, but it bends towards the politics of our Atlantic cousins and European friends becoming ever crazier. Today’s America looks more in tune with Curtis Yarvin’s dark ramblings than Martin Luther King’s inspiring dream. Today’s Europe looks like one with which Farage would be more comfortable than Starmer. Second referendum, anyone?

It’s not an impossible prospect. If a Labour government buckled under pressure over migration, a recession, or war in the Far East, the right-wing critique of our current settlement will only grow in strength. If it can break through, British politics may yet look more European, but just not in the way that Starmer might hope. 

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#Brexit #Britain #set #Wests #liberal #outlier #migration #Ukraine #Conservative #Home

‘Absolute Brain Worms’: Social Media Influencer Asks Us To Imagine Being Israeli Kept ‘Safe’ In Gaza

We really have no words for this absolute deranged way of thinking.

‘Social media influencer’ Shadid Bolsen thinks the Israeli hostages — who were taken to Gaza by Hamas — are being generously ‘kept alive’ by Hamas and under attack from Israel (who are, of course, the bad guys).

No, seriously:

The entire tweet reads:

and experienced all of  that for the first time ever as an Israeli; and experienced Hamas fighters doing everything they can to protect you from IDF attacks for 6 weeks.  Your government has been doing everything to kill you, and Hamas has kept you safe while their own people are dying.

What are the chances that ANY of these hostages will ever be allowed to speak publicly?

The hostages wouldn’t be in Gaza if Hamas didn’t take them there.

Seems a vital bit of information Bolsen left out, no?

Exactly.

Delusional is being kind.

Recommended

That’s definitely it. Won’t someone think of Hamas’ reputation?

Sick and twisted, for sure.

Yes. Yes, he is.

No, they are not.

Never, ever forget.

He has no moral compass.

Absolute brain worms.

He had this thought. Then he tweeted it and defended it.

Yep. He wins the prize.

All the mockery.

Which is why we’re here.

Yes it is.

He doesn’t answer that question.

Because he’s incapable of rational, logical thought.

We’re so ungrateful, apparently.

It’s certainly up there.

Really grasping at straws here, isn’t he?

It takes some nerve.

Yes they are.

We do. It’s beyond ridiculous.

It’s a take, that’s for sure.

We’re sure they’ll be so mad the IDF freed them while destroying Hamas.

We’re going to go with this, because there isn’t a doubt in our mind this is 100% accurate. Bolsen can gaslight all he wants, but the world knows the truth of the hostages and who the bad guys are here.

***

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#Absolute #Brain #Worms #Social #Media #Influencer #Asks #Imagine #Israeli #Safe #Gaza

The polls keep getting worse for Biden

And while polls suggest most of the movement comes from voters abandoning Biden — who might become undecided but not swing to supporting Trump — the Republican has also started to gain steam. Trump’s vote share in the national polling average is higher now than at any point in the past year.

The state-level data are just as striking: In addition to those New York Times/Siena polls, within the last week and a half, other surveys have shown Trump ahead by 8 points in Arizona and 5 points up in Michigan.

Biden’s recent slide — and his political predicament some 11 months before Election Day — represent a confluence of slippage with reliable Democratic constituencies like young voters, the outbreak of war in the Middle East and the rise of independent and third-party candidates who could siphon votes from both Biden and Trump.

Biden is losing young voters — but it’s unclear how many.

This week’s NBC News poll had a stunning result: Trump led Biden among voters younger than 35, 46 percent to 42 percent.

Even though that was well within the high margin of error for such a small subgroup, other polls also show a close race with what has been a reliable Democratic constituency. Biden had only single-digit leads among voters 18-34 in polls this month from Morning Consult (Biden +2), Fox News (Biden +7) and Quinnipiac University (Biden +9). (Trump led Biden in all four polls among all voters.)

Only a few polls show Biden with a lead among young voters that approaches his 2020 margins, but they are the exception, not the rule.

That’s prompted a debate over whether Trump is really making the deep inroads with younger voters the polling suggests — or if those numbers are an artifact of some kind of polling bias. One popular theory speculates that liberal younger voters who are unenthusiastic about Biden and his party — over his administration’s support for Israel in its war with Hamas, for example — aren’t participating in polls right now, even if many of them will vote for him next November.

But Biden, the oldest president in history, has never polled well with younger voters. And telephone polls — of the four mentioned above, all but Morning Consult were conducted over the phone — are a difficult way to reach younger voters.

Biden’s approval ratings are headed downward, while Trump’s vote share is spiking.

Biden’s sagging margins against Trump are one thing. But there are two other trendlines under the hood of these polls that spell trouble for the incumbent.

First, his approval rating — already historically low for a president at this point in his first term — has been ticking down. Biden’s approval rating dipped down to 38 percent in FiveThirtyEight’s average earlier this month, the lowest since July 2022. Similarly, when Biden hit 40 percent in RealClearPolitics’ average this month, it was his lowest reading since August 2022.

Meanwhile, Trump’s numbers are rising. Dating back a little more than a year, RealClearPolitics’ average has had Trump hovering between 42 percent and 46 percent in a head-to-head matchup with Biden. Not only did Trump break 46 percent for the first time earlier this month, this week he inched above 47 percent, about equal to his vote share in the 2020 election.

Most of the polls that show Trump with a majority of the vote don’t include undecided voters — a questionable methodological decision this far out from Election Day, especially in a hypothetical race between two candidates so disliked by the electorate. But even polls that do report undecided voters show Trump ticking up, like the Fox News survey, which had Trump with a slight lead over Biden, 50 percent to 46 percent.

It’s not just the Middle East — Biden’s been slipping in the polls for months.

It’s common to try attributing any change in a president’s poll numbers to recent news events, such as Israel’s war with Hamas. But for Biden, the reality is a little more complicated.

FiveThirtyEight’s average shows a fairly steady decline in Biden’s approval rating dating back to May. RealClearPolitics’ goes back to April.

Meanwhile, Trump’s average favorable rating has actually been steadily increasing over the past two months, rising from 39 percent on Sept. 1 to 42 percent as of Wednesday afternoon, according to FiveThirtyEight.

Swing states are moving with the rest of the country: away from Biden.

The bad news for Biden isn’t confined to the national polls. And that’s despite a three-month-long advertising campaign to boost the president’s numbers.

Since mid-August, Biden and the Democratic National Committee have spent about $12 million on swing state TV ads, according to the tracking firm AdImpact. For most of the fall, Biden spent about $1 million a week, though that’s been roughly cut in half for the past few weeks.

It isn’t helping. In addition to the New York Times/Siena polls showing Trump leading Biden in Arizona, Georgia, Nevada and Pennsylvania, Trump led Biden in six of seven swing states surveyed by Morning Consult and Bloomberg News.

There were also some eye-popping results in other Biden-won states from 2020. Trump was ahead by 8 points last week in a Noble Predictive Insights poll in Arizona and by 5 points in an EPIC-MRA poll in Michigan.

Third-party candidates are still having an uncertain impact.

One of the most striking things about the daunting poll numbers for Biden is that they come in head-to-head matchups with Trump — and don’t include the third-party candidates who could draw even more votes from the president.

Many pollsters don’t yet include matchups with independent candidates like Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Cornel West or Green Party candidate Jill Stein, so there’s little evidence right now to measure their impact. Trump’s lead over Biden in RealClearPolitics’ averages is smaller when Kennedy is added but slightly larger when West and Stein are also included. Those mixed signals mean it’s too early to say exactly how independent and third-party candidates will change the electoral math for Biden and Trump.

But it’s clear Biden’s deficit is not a result of third-party candidates running — or those potentially looming, like retiring Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.). And they could make it harder for Biden to recover, especially if the independent candidates gobble up significant shares of support among groups like young voters.



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Gordon Ramsay’s Seventh Restaurant Opening at Flamingo Las Vegas

Celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay is doubling down on his Las Vegas footprint with the launch of his Gordon Ramsay Burger location, now open at the legendary Flamingo Hotel and Casino. This marks Ramsay’s seventh Sin City eatery overall and fifth burger outlet as part of an exclusive partnership with Caesars Entertainment. The exciting new 8,000-square-foot restaurant space will serve Ramsay’s creative twists on classic American burgers, fries, and milkshakes in a lively and contemporary setting designed for groups. Conveniently located along the famed Las Vegas Strip, Gordon Ramsay Burger offers hotel guests, locals, and passersby a delicious pitstop amongst the non-stop action.

Hell’s Kitchen Star Leverages Vegas Crowds

Strategically situated within steps of the Flamingo’s casino floor, clubs, shops, and pools, the new Gordon Ramsay Burger seized a prime piece of real estate to attract hungry crowds circulating day and night.

The new Flamingo location demonstrates Chef Ramsay and Caesars’ commitment to raising Vegas’ culinary game with diverse, high-quality dining from leading personalities. Ramsay is keenly aware of Las Vegas’s reputation as an international hub filled with tourists and partiers looking for memorable experiences between casinos and entertainment. 

With his fiery personality and global fame through hit shows like Hell’s Kitchen, MasterChef, and more, Ramsay translates popularity into lucrative eateries folks specifically seek out. His branded concepts invite visitors to taste his hit dishes inspired by the TV kitchens.

Vegas Diners Hungry for Brand Name Value

In a city filled with over-the-top offerings, big-name chef-driven restaurants help premium resorts like Caesars’ Hotels stand out from the crowd. The celebrity chef provides guests with recognisable value beyond budget buffets by licensing his moniker to casual dining like Gordon Ramsay Burger. Las Vegas tourists often specifically seek Ramsay’s familiar concepts for the quality and excitement attached to his brand.

The Success of Existing Partnership Projects

Ramsay’s lucrative relationship with Caesars Entertainment continues yielding fruitful new dining projects like this sophomore burger location. His hits with the hospitality giant include Gordon Ramsay Hell’s Kitchen at Caesars Palace, Gordon Ramsay Pub & Grill at Caesars Palace, Gordon Ramsay Steak at Paris Las Vegas, multiple Gordon Ramsay Burger joints, and more. 

The chef chooses Caesar’s properties to host his experiential eateries for their premier real estate and ability to convert their built-in traffic. With Las Vegas continually breaking tourism records pre-pandemic, attracting over 32 million visitors in 2022, the bustling city proves fertile ground for expansion. More celebrity chef restaurants translate to added revenue for resorts by covering diners’ complete vacations.

Lavish New Eatery Design Maximises Energy

The extensive Gordon Ramsay Burger restaurant occupying the former Flamingo Beer Bar space has been radically transformed into a sleek and welcoming destination for indulging in loaded burgers.

The award-winning designers at DEZMOTIF Studios focused on creating an exciting ambience with multiple zones tailor-made for different dining parties. Key highlights include:

  • Vibrant colours and textures with album cover-inspired wall art nodding to Ramsay’s British music passions.
  • Flaming displays, metalwork, and accents convey the fiery personality behind the eatery.
  • Custom graffiti-style art and commissioned illustrations of Chef Ramsay integrated throughout, including across 25-foot tall LED pillars lining the outdoor terrace.
  • Outdoor cabin lounge seating and communal picnic tables overlooking the bustling Strip.
  • Takeout counter for grabbing burgers on the run.

With visual excitement populating every inch, design forms a crucial part of the lively guest experience that sets Ramsay Restaurants apart from everyday quick service fare. In terms of culinary innovation, it all comes down to the food.

Loaded Burgers, Fries, and Shakes Channels Classic Cravings

When it comes to satisfying all-American comfort food with a fun British twist, Gordon Ramsay Burger hits the right notes by taking guests’ favourite meaty meals over the top. The chef’s signature creations loading up juicy beef patties celebrate how burgers, fries, and shakes can be so much more than just fast food when carefully crafted with fine ingredients. Menu highlights at the new locale include sizzling takes on classics like:

  • The brunch-style Farmhouse Burger packs a fried egg and bacon between English muffin ‘buns.’
  • Truffle Parmesan Fries amp up toastiness with Italian cheese and aromatic oil.
  • Milkshakes sporting unexpected flavours, like the Sticky Toffee Shake with English dates.

Alongside familiar options done right, like crispy Hellfire Chicken Wings, patrons can rely on meticulous preparation to meet the television personality’s infamous quality standards. Yet balanced menus keep pricing accessible compared to a pricey steak dinner. This helps heavy tourist traffic flow while letting patrons add on cocktails or other items across their Vegas itinerary.

Flamingo Las Vegas Stands Out as Premier Strip Destination

At the heart of the legendary Las Vegas Strip, Flamingo Las Vegas has crafted its distinctive niche as an indulgent desert paradise amongst the glitz and chaos. Behind the hotel’s iconic flamingo pink exterior and glittering neon lie over 3,500 recently renovated guest rooms and suites specially designed for memorable escapes.

For leisure, 15 lush tropical acres transport travellers to a Balinese sanctuary bursting with meandering lagoons, waterfalls, and wildlife. Adults can live it up at the GO Pool’s sleek club environment or say “I do” at one of the sprawling garden wedding venues.

Flamingo also pulls out all the stops on entertainment with an all-star lineup of resident performers. RuPaul’s Drag Race Live! Las Vegas joins the comedy and illusion of Piff the Magic Dragon, raunchy variety revue X Burlesque, and beloved crooner Wayne Newton.

Casino at Flamingo Las Vegas

Flamingo’s 93,000-square-foot casino provides round-the-clock gaming action at tables, slots, and, surprisingly, even one of the best casino and sports betting centres – Caesars Race & Sportsbook. 

And if you want to try something else, you can visit an online casino on the go with the mobile phone casino no deposit bonus. This bonus is available to all the players who are willing to access their favourite games wherever they are. And the most pleasant part is that this bonus doesn’t require a deposit!

And regarding the upcoming hot spots, you can expect Lisa Vanderpump’s Parisian lounge and eatery, celebrity chef outlets, and more, and Flamingo continues luring guests to its unique fantasyland.

Strategic Business Expansion on the Strip and Beyond

Gordon Ramsay continues to grow his North American dining empire, which now encompasses 27 restaurants with further expansion planned. His concepts localised for American tastes showcase Ramsay’s broad skill set, spanning casual to fine dining. 

The TV star categorises Las Vegas as an “extraordinary platform” for premiering new restaurant ideas within Caesars’ family of properties. Additional locations like Gordon Ramsay Burger at Flamingo let Ramsay test menus and service models further afield from Los Angeles and Las Vegas.

Atlantic City, Baltimore, Kansas City, and Lake Tahoe also boast Ramsay eateries. By late 2024, Ramsay intends to hit 100 global locations between high and low price points. 

Next Chapter for Gordon Ramsay

For his next Las Vegas chapter, hungry visitors flocking to the iconic Flamingo now have another delicious reason to stay on site. Gordon Ramsay Burger offers quick yet quality comfort food, easing the transition from gaming tables to the Strip at value-driven pricing. Now, guests are incentivised to sample Ramsay’s craft between stage spectaculars, slot machines, and pool parties as the celebrity chef continues raising Sin City’s culinary game.

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