Alex has written for Vanity Fair, Barrons, Bloomberg and Condé…
From The New York Review of Books, here’s Michael Pollan’s new article The Food Movement, Rising:
It would be a mistake to conclude that the food movement’s agenda can be reduced to a set of laws, policies, and regulations, important as these may be. What is attracting so many people to the movement today (and young people in particular) is a much less conventional kind of politics, one that is about something more than food. The food movement is also about community, identity, pleasure, and, most notably, about carving out a new social and economic space removed from the influence of big corporations on the one side and government on the other. As the Diggers used to say during their San Francisco be-ins during the 1960s, food can serve as “an edible dynamic”—a means to a political end that is only nominally about food itself.
Alex has written for Vanity Fair, Barrons, Bloomberg and Condé Nast Traveler.