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We Tested Air-Purifying Headphones. Wow.

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esquire.com

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esquire@newsletter.esquire.com

Sent On

Thu, Jun 8, 2023 06:33 PM

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Dyson does it right in my eyes. I’ve personally tested every device the brand has ever released

Dyson does it right in my eyes. I’ve personally tested every device the brand has ever released, and I stand behind its commitment to giving us living cleaner and healthier lifestyles. But when it released Dyson Zone—headphones with air purification—earlier this year, I thought, what the f*ck? Do we really need this? This week, as the worst air quality in the world hit NYC, I changed my tune. Air pollution due to the spread of wildfires is unfortunately our new reality. Maybe Dyson was right to think that this type of wearable tech really is our future. [View in Browser]( [Esquire]( [SHOP]( EXCLUSIVE [SUBSCRIBE]( [How Do Dyson's Air Purifying Headphones Hold Up Against Canadian Wildfire Smoke?]( [How Do Dyson's Air Purifying Headphones Hold Up Against Canadian Wildfire Smoke?]( Dyson does it right in my eyes. I’ve personally tested every device the brand has ever released, and I stand behind its commitment to giving us living cleaner and healthier lifestyles. But when it released Dyson Zone—headphones with air purification—earlier this year, I thought, what the f*ck? Do we really need this? This week, as the worst air quality in the world hit NYC, I changed my tune. Air pollution due to the spread of wildfires is unfortunately our new reality. Maybe Dyson was right to think that this type of wearable tech really is our future. [Read More](   [69 Great Gifts for Men You Can Unearth on Amazon]( [69 Great Gifts for Men You Can Unearth on Amazon]( From you to him, via next-day Prime shipping. [Read More]( [These White Sneakers Let You Look Expensive Without Breaking the Bank]( [These White Sneakers Let You Look Expensive Without Breaking the Bank]( Inside are the very best ones on the market—oh, and they're all under $100. [Read More](     [American Politics Would Have Been Infinitely Better Without Pat Robertson]( [American Politics Would Have Been Infinitely Better Without Pat Robertson]( The best I can say about Pat Robertson, the Christopolitical television star and onetime presidential candidate who, on Thursday, went off to glory (and to what probably will be one of the livelier final judgments that the heavenly peanut gallery has seen in a while), is that he eventually faded into irrelevance and that he was easily surpassed for pure craziness and reckless damage by succeeding generations of clerical errors who took up politics as a career. That's the best I can say about him. The worst I can say about him is that American politics would have been infinitely better off had Pat chosen a career in waste management. [Read More](   [Arnold Schwarzenegger and James Cameron’s On-Set Beef Almost Ruined ‘Terminator’]( [Arnold Schwarzenegger and James Cameron’s On-Set Beef Almost Ruined ‘Terminator’]( "I'll come back" doesn't quite have a ring to it, does it? [Read More]( [Tom Holland Opened Up About Why He's Taking a Break From Acting]( [Tom Holland Opened Up About Why He's Taking a Break From Acting]( The Crowded Room will mark the actor's last project for the foreseeable future. [Read More](     [What '80s Actions Films Did to Our Brains]( [What '80s Actions Films Did to Our Brains]( When I was twelve years old, I played Platoon with a younger kid from my neighborhood. That’s right: the brutal and tragic 1986 anti-war film directed by Oliver Stone, based on his own harrowing experiences in Vietnam—one summer afternoon, this grisly depiction of a disturbing and immortal war served as inspiration for my game of pretend. Clearly I missed the (not at all subtle) message. Or, rather, the message was irrelevant; what mattered was that it was believable. Platoon is gritty and dirty and utterly convincing—too gritty and dirty and convincing for a twelve-year-old, but alas. When we played the game—which constituted nothing more than running around a park with toy guns, diving into ditches, hiding behind trees, and communicating via nonsensical gesticulating—it wasn’t that the movie made me want to kill. It merely gave credibility to my imagination, grounding it in something that I now had reference for. [Read More](   [ESQ 1933 Jewelry]( Follow Us [Unsubscribe]( | [Privacy Notice/Notice at Collection]( esquire.com ©2023 Hearst Magazine Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Hearst Magazines, 300 West 57th Street, New York, NY 10019

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