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The Best Sweaters for Under $150

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esquire.com

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esquire@newsletter.esquire.com

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Tue, Sep 22, 2020 06:00 PM

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And save some cash while you're at it. If you have trouble reading this message, . There's no doubt

And save some cash while you're at it. If you have trouble reading this message, [view it in a browser](. [15 Sweaters for Less Than $150, So You Can Achieve Peak Coziness]( There's no doubt in our minds that this fall is shaping up to be the weirdest one in a while, but if it's a comforting dose of normalcy you're looking for it's a comforting dose of normalcy you're going to get. (We aim to please here at Esquire HQ!) Because no matter what this fall looks like, we also have very little doubt that a sweater—the layerable equivalent of an actual human being's gentle, loving embrace—will serve you well. And guess what? You don't have to (read: definitely shouldn't) spend a lot to scoop one. So to help you get over the inevitable end-of-summer malaise, we rounded up 15 of the best sweater options available now—all for below $150, so you won't regret buying even if you never end up rocking 'em anywhere but around the house.[Read More]( [Dr. Fauci Says These Are 3 of the Riskiest Places to Go During COVID]( Some businesses might be operating as normal throughout the United States, but that doesn't mean they should, according to Anthony Fauci, M.D., immunologist and director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. In fact, during an appearance on MSNBC, he said that three types of businesses may be most likely to spread the novel coronavirus. Last week, Dr. Fauci told Chris Hayes that three kinds of businesses helped Arizona, New York, and Texas slow the spread of COVID-19. "In fact, the CDC just came out—if you go on their website—with a figure that's really telling. It shows the odds of risk of different types of situations that give you a higher risk of transmissibility," he said. Here’s what else he said.[Read More]( [Clarks' Iconic Desert Boot Gets a New Makeover]( [Created by Esquire for Clarks]( Water-resistant suede? We're into it.[Read More]( [Trump Just Declared the Coronavirus—Which Has Killed 200,000 Americans—Affects 'Virtually Nobody']( The United States has the worst record on Covid-19 of any major nation: 200,000 deaths, or a little less than 21 percent of the world's total spread across four percent of the world population. This, in the richest, most powerful country in the history of the world. An Exceptional Nation, indeed. The cause is not hard to identify: the president is incompetent, because he does not read and he does not give a shit—at least about whether you, an American citizen, live or die. A staffer who was in meetings of his Task Force just two months ago came out publicly last week and said he has "a flat out disregard for human life." As if eager to drive the point home, the president took the stage in Ohio Monday night and said the virus affects "virtually nobody."[Read More]( [It's Time to Acknowledge Miller's Crossing As the Best Coen Brothers Movie]( If you love cinema, then it’s safe to assume that you also love the Coen brothers. Like the far chattier Quentin Tarantino, who would burst onto the rapidly evolving American auteur scene a few years after the Coens’ break-out hit Raising Arizona, the Minnesota siblings spent their teen years as movie-mad sponges. They seemed to absorb every last drop of film history (both high and low) like two halves of the same thirsty and encyclopedic hive mind. During their four-decade partnership behind the camera, Joel and Ethan have tweaked and toyed with screwball comedies, neo-noirs, musicals, Horatio Alger stories, social satires, old-school Westerns, and new-school Westerns. It’s almost as if they live in mortal fear of being labeled or pigeonholed. Some of these genre experiments have worked better than others (RIP, The Ladykillers), but when it comes to which of their films stands as their greatest achievement, everyone seems to have a strong opinion. Here’s Chris Nashawaty’s: it’s Miller’s Crossing, hands down. And here’s why.[Read More]( [The 10 Types of Jackets to Know (and Wear) This Fall]( Well, folks, the time has finally come to embrace fall weather with gusto. The dog days of summer are nearing their end and there's a distinct crispness to the air that means autumn is definitely around the corner. You know what that crispness means? Jackets, baby. Lots and lots of jackets. Which means it's also time to start thinking about what's missing from your rotation. In the coming weeks, we'll continue to break down every piece of outerwear you should consider copping this season in juicy detail. But there's a lot of real solid options out there right now, so we did the legwork for you–yet again!–and tracked down the 10 styles to keep top of mind this autumn, along with one of each type we particularly dig.[Read More]( [Read More on Esquire.com]( Follow Us [Unsubscribe]( [Privacy Notice]( esquire.com ©2020 Hearst Communications Inc. All Rights Reserved. Hearst Email Privacy, 300 W 57th St., Fl. 19 (sta 1-1), New York, NY 10019

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