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Mark Stricherz

Putin’s Grim Childhood Foretells Disaster Ahead

Why did Russian leader Vladimir Putin order his country to invade Ukraine? The answer is more complicated than the standard view that he remains embittered by the collapse of the Soviet Union. You can find it in a series of interviews he gave after becoming Russia’s president.  Read more

The NFL Legend Who Showed You Shouldn’t Be Obsessed with Winning

What distinguishes “The Score Takes Care of Itself” from other leadership business books is the author cops to failing to live up to the principle occasionally. In his last two years as the 49ers head coach, by his own admission, Mr. Walsh did not let the score take care of itself. He attempted to control it.  Read more

For Writer’s Block, Take Two Treatments

The root of writer’s block is organizational rather than romantic. Some writers imagine themselves as uniquely tortured souls, like Prometheus chained to a rock while an eagle devoured his liver every day. The reality is, they are poor administrators. They lack a reliable technique to produce good first drafts.  Read more

The Revolutionary Possibilities of Virtue

A couple of years ago, I got wise to an old truth: private virtue had public effects. This insight turned conventional wisdom upside down. Good character was more than an admirable quality. It could help bring justice to the abused and voiceless. Read more

Did Ronan Farrow Miss Out on Taking Down NBC News?

Mr. Farrow shone a light into a dark corner of a household American institution, NBC News, which, by all accounts, had a deplorable workplace culture where young women were targeted sexually. His fortitude is to his eternal credit. If only he had shown more fairness toward his former employer, the light might still be on it.  Read more

To this Blog’s Sunlit Uplands

In the spirit of this Advent season, True Writer Blog has a newly enlarged purpose. The site will continue to explore journalism, but it will branch out to good popular art, particularly books, as well as television and movies. How is “pop” art made? What makes it good, bad, or meh?  Read more