I mix my beagles’ dry food dinner with cottage cheese, so I make regular visits to my local corner grocery store to pick up a few containers. I was surprised recently when there was a note on the refrigerator shelf announcing that the cottage cheese was being rationed: One container per customer. When, on behalf of my beagles, I inquired about the new limit, the woman behind the counter explained, “It has something to do with TikTok. Teenagers have been coming in and buying our entire stock.” F. Scott Fitzgerald might have to rethink the notion that there are no second acts in American lives. Cottage cheese, once considered a diet food that had peaked in the 70s, only to be kicked to the curd by yogurt, has ridden a social media and protein wave back to prominence. Cottage cheese is no longer a cottage industry. “A growing obsession with protein among American consumers has given the white curds a new life. A few years ago, online fans began posting about ‘protein-maxxing’ with cottage cheese, adding it to ice cream, smoothies, flatbreads, bagels and pasta dishes. TikTok creators became cottage cheese converts, enticed by the product’s roughly 14 grams of protein per serving.” It’s rare that the New York Times and my beagles wake up asking themselves the same question, but in the 2026 news cycle, anything is possible. NYT (Gift Article): Where Has All the Cottage Cheese Gone? 2Our Days of InfamyOver the weekend, I visited the WWII Museum in New Orleans. The examples of leadership, unity, strategy, and deep alliance building you see in that museum stand in such sharp contrast to this American moment, dominated by what I described last week as the Trump Doctrine, which combines amorality and incompetence to empower enemies and betray allies, as it dilutes American power in a Dunning-Kruger stew of bluster, arrogance, and stupidity. It’s hard to imagine FDR feuding with an ally over a lie he told about a photo request or interrupting negotiations led by an already in-over-his-head vice president with threats to start bombing again. “If it works out, I’m going to take the credit,” Mr. Trump said of the peace deal last week. “If it doesn’t work out, I’m blaming JD.” Not exactly the day of infamy speech there. As Vance Leads Iran Negotiations, Trump Creates Disruptions in His Path. 3Reflecting the TimesThe seriousness of the Iran disaster and the damage it (along with much else) has done to America’s global standing is somehow sharing headlines with the president passing the buck for his Reflecting Pool clown show onto imaginary vandals. “’They put, somebody said, fertilizer in the water,’ Mr. Trump said. ‘If you put fertilizer in the water, you get algae. But somebody said they might have put fertilizer. They did something to create the algae.’” Trump on the Shabby Condition of the Reflecting Pool: Not My Fault. It’s worth noting that even Narcissus himself didn’t f-ck up the reflecting pool. 4Moving the Goal“If you’re remotely soccer-aware, you’d already heard of the majesty of a Leo Messi-led Argentina, the artistry of a Kylian Mbappé-led France, the relentlessness of an Erling Haaland-led Norway. But until you see those nations, and those stars, in action, you can’t really comprehend how amazing they truly are. America is now getting the full Messi-Mbappé-Haaland experience, and it’s every bit as astounding as we’ve been told. How lucky are we to get to see generational glory play out right in front of us?” The Big 3 are somehow delivering more than anybody could have imagined. 5Extra, ExtraFake Dues: “In his videos, George Makihara appears to have a lucrative side hustle making bets on Polymarket. In January, the college student posted a video that showed him winning $100,000 on a wager that President Trump would publicly say the word ‘McDonald’s’ that month. The bet was one of 145 that Makihara appeared to place on Polymarket’s website between January and mid-May, based on his videos—bets adding up to almost $410,000. But none of those bets were real.” WSJ (Gift Article): They Looked Like They Were Getting Rich on Polymarket—but None of It Was Real. Pay attention to who the prediction markets are targeting: “Makihara, who declined to comment, is one of dozens of mostly college-age creators Polymarket paid to film themselves making fake trades and sometimes scoring fake wins.” |