Good morning, Quartz readers! As the world battles Covid-19, many countries are starting to reopen to tourists. Itâs especially tempting to relax restrictions in the Northern Hemisphere, where stretched-out summer days seem like a reward after mont
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Good morning, Quartz readers!
As the world battles Covid-19, many countries are starting to [reopen to tourists](. Itâs especially tempting to relax restrictions in the Northern Hemisphere, where stretched-out summer days seem like a reward after months of diligent social distancing in the spring.
Except that in the United States, the first week of summer has coincided with two of the highest daily case counts the country has ever seen. Yesterday, president Donald Trumpâs coronavirus task force was inspired to meet for the first time in eight weeks.
Some are calling this [the second wave]( of the virus in the US. Not all agree; technically, they say, the first wave of cases hasnât yet subsided. But something in the last week has shifted. What seems certain is that the USâand perhaps the world, watching on as the country continues to lead the globe in new casesâis experiencing a second wave of [grief](.
Americans have been here before: Theyâve watched, frustrated, as the failure to adequately contain the virus separated them from their loved ones and hobbies. Theyâve cleared their calendars as activities they looked forward to were postponed or cancelled over safety concerns. Based on the ominous activity this week, it feels like the country is about to go through it all again.
Like the first period of Covid-19 grief, this one is amplified by uncertainty. In lieu of any uniform state-by-state guidance, individuals have to decide for themselves what is safe for them and their communities. But there is some ground for Americans to stand on: They know what this is, and theyâve gotten through this before. âWe find control in acceptance,â David Kessler, one of the worldâs experts on grief, [told the Harvard Business Review in March](.
This advice applies beyond the pandemic, of course, but is critical for those going through the second wave of grief now: You can remember to wash their hands. You can wear masks. You can call their loved ones to check in, and you can practice patience and compassion with one another. You can [find moments of joy]( to keep yourself resilient.
Some of the world will be able to move on from Covid-19 and enjoy the summer months as planned. Others will have to adjust their expectations. No matter what happens over the next few months, itâs a good time to remember that nothingânot even the pandemicâis permanent. âKatherine Ellen Foley
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FIVE THINGS ON QUARTZ WE ESPECIALLY LIKED
Jumping into the stock market. Regular people are trading stocks like never before. [John Detrixheâs terrific article]( on the rise of the retail trader clearly explains why that might be. Easy-to-use investing apps, low trading fees, cheap stocks, and a pandemic that left people with a lot of time on their hands was the perfect combination for a bonanza of new day traders. âDan Kopf, data editor
Intuitive design can perpetuate racial bias. Iâve often taken it for granted that the best websites and apps are seamless and easy to use. But [Anne Quitoâs eye-opening story]( points out that in order to counteract the implicit biases that shape a lot of human behavior, we need design that prompts us to stop and think. Her story on how the Black Lives Matter movement is creating a sea change in UX design ensures that I wonât look at an interface the same way again. âSarah Todd, senior reporter, Quartz At Work
Is Trump helping or hurting?: The Donald Trump administration has suspended a bunch of work visas for this year, a move that some lawmakers say will free up over half a million jobs for Americans. But, [as Ananya Bhattacharya points out]( more than 80% of experts from Yale, MIT, Princeton, Berkeley, Harvard, and Stanford universities doubt that claim. In fact, the move could make the US undesirable for talented international students who are [already looking at Canada as an alternative](. (⦠Quartz member exclusive) âItika Sharma Punit, Quartz India co-editor
Consider the lobsters. The US state of Maine used to sell lobsters by the millions of pounds to China. In 2018, the Maine lobster industry invested in itself heavily to prepare for even more demand, but then the ancient crustacean got caught up in the trade war between the US and China, [write David Yanofsky and Tim McDonnell](. Now with the Covid-19 pandemic, lobster demand has plummeted as customers shy away from cruise ships and fancy resorts. Trump is trying to rescue the industry by including it in a bill to bail out US agriculture, but itâs unclear if the market for these sea spiders will ever come back to its full glory. âKatherine Ellen Foley, health and science reporter
Itâs the thought that counts. Patagonia, REI, and The North Face made headlines recently when they announced they would be pulling their advertising dollars from Facebook in protest of the platformâs action (or lack thereof) around hate speech. [Marc Bain lays out]( how the financial impact of such a boycott is more like a paper cut than a critical blow to Facebook, as even during an economic crisis, ads on Instagram are still in extremely high demand. The coalition insists itâs more about getting Mark Zuckerbergâs attention, and only time will tell if heâs listening. âSusan Howson, news editor
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One chart from Quartz we especially liked
Half of US primetime dramas are cop dramas. [Entertainment reporter Adam Epstein crunched the numbers]( and showed that the reason it feels like every other show on TV is about cops because, well, they are. Of 69 scripted television dramas that aired on the big four US broadcast networks in the last 18 months, 35 were about law enforcement. An entertainment diet that casts cops as heroes is not unrelated to the USâs delayed reckoning on police brutality: One 2015 study found that viewers of such shows were more likely to believe police misconduct and unnecessary use of force were not problems. âJenni Avins, senior lifestyle reporter
Fun fact
Cemeteries are an excellent site for urban phenologyâthe practice of keeping detailed records of the natural world around youâthanks to their abundant greenspace. Both [Mount Auburn in Boston]( and [Green-Wood in Brooklyn]( have volunteer-based observational programs. Phenology has been useful for centuries, but perhaps never more crucial (or grounding) than at this moment. [Turn your eyes towards the Quartz Weekly Obsession]( then go back to watching flowers grow.
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FOR MEMBERS: Letâs talk TV
Hands up if your TV queue has reached an unparalleled level of importance. Apple TV+ has been around for eight months, and hasnât wowed viewers with a show that could become part of the zeitgeist. By contrast, Disney+ launched the same month with The Mandalorianâa show that not only drove sign-ups to the platform, but potentially convinced users to stay there, providing hope for more content of a similar quality.
Appleâs new series, The Foundation, is based on Isaac Asimovâs 1951 book series of the same name, and if the trailer feels like it has a Game of Thrones vibe, thatâs very much intentional. [Will the show finally make Apple a regular guest in our living rooms]( (â¦)
⦠Winter is coming, and youâll want to make sure you have enough to read. Before it gets here, [try out a Quartz membership for a week, on us](
FIVE THINGS FROM ELSEWHERE THAT MADE US SMARTER
Speaking of Apple⦠Apple takes 30% of all App Store sales and in-app purchases. This was once a great deal, as retailers often kept 50% or more from physical software sales. But in 2020, the fee is under fire. This article is brave enough to stick up for the worldâs most valuable company, arguing that developers are buying their users in the same way that, say, advertisers buy an audience from Spotify. [Randy Pickerâs counterpoint in ProMarket]( is an intriguing defense of Appleâs cut. âMax Lockie, deputy news editor
The US is the least popular kid in school. In this insightful piece from The Atlantic, [London-based reporter Tom McTague]( interviewed European diplomats, government officials, politicians, and academics about how they view Americaâs global standing in an age of Donald Trump, George Floyd, and coronavirus. What emerged, he writes, is a picture âin which Americaâs closest allies are looking on with a kind of stunned incomprehensionâ¦largely bound together with angst and a shared senseâ¦that America and the West are approaching something of a fin de siècle.â âAnnabelle Timsit, geopolitics reporter
Kashmir is still burning. Itâs nearly a year since the Indian government revoked Kashmirâs status as an autonomous region, shutting down communications and intensifying its forceful occupation. For Harperâs, [Sonia Faleiro reports]( on the tragic situation on the ground, tracing back the historical and ideological roots of the conflict in Kashmir, and how the state became the emblem of the Hindu nationalist repression of Indian Muslims. âAnnalisa Merelli, geopolitics reporter
Staring the past in the face. As Confederate statues topple around the US, white Americans are being forced, many for the first time, to confront the nationâs founding contradiction: a promise of freedom alongside a commitment to the enslavement and torture of African Americans. âAll that can save you now is your confrontation with your own history⦠which is not your past, but your present,â said author James {NAME} in 1968. Writing for The New Yorker,[Eddie S. Glaude Jr. looks at how the author of The Fire Next Time]( to expose the American paradox so the country could achieve its original promise, replacing old statues with new values. âMichael J. Coren, senior climate reporter
Whose objectivity? Black journalists have had it up to here. They have to navigate fewer opportunities and lower pay than their white colleagues, as well as daily disrespect in Americaâs newsrooms. [In this thought-provoking essay in The New York Times]( Pulitzer-winning reporter Wesley Lowery argues for a new, inclusive standard of journalistic objectivity in place of âselective truths [that] have been calibrated to avoid offending the sensibilities of white readers.â âHasit Shah, deputy editor, global finance and economics
Need a soundtrack for your weekend?
ð Weâve been busy on Spotify again. This time, [itâs a perfect playlist]( of music made by and for the queer community to celebrate Pride Month.
Our best wishes for a relaxing but thought-filled weekend. Please send any news, comments, gripping trailers, and playlist addition suggestions to hi@qz.com. Get the most out of Quartz by[downloading our app]( and[becoming a member](. Todayâs Weekend Brief was brought to you by Katherine Ellen Foley, Katie Palmer, and Susan Howson.
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