IT’S THE END OF THE U.F.C. AS WE KNOW IT

Last month, one of the sport’s most prominent journalists, Ariel Helwani, was ejected from a U.F.C. event after reporting a story before the company could announce it; White told T.M.Z. that Helwani would never again receive a media credential “as long as I’m here.” (After sports-media outlets erupted in outrage, the company reinstated Helwani.) This approach to media relations seemed reminiscent of a certain Presidential candidate, and perhaps that candidate took note: on Monday, the Donald Trump campaign announced that it had hired Steven Cheung, who happens to be a former publicist for the U.F.C.

.. As White once put it, “It’s none of your fuckin’ business how much these guys are making.”

Trump lawyers fight video release in Trump University

It emerged Wednesday that Trump is seeking $10 million in damages against former senior campaign adviser Sam Nunberg for allegedly leaking confidential information in violation of a non-disclosure agreement. Lawyers for Nunberg asked a state judge in New York on Wednesday to shut down the arbitration proceeding where Trump is demanding the money. Nunberg alleged Trump wants to silence him as part of an effort to “cover up media coverage of an apparent affair” between two other top Trump campaign aides.

.. While videos of the depositions are not public, transcripts of the sessions are. They show the real estate mogul bristling as he is peppered with queries from one of the class-action lawyers pressing the suits.

“Same answer to your harassment questions,” Trump snapped as attorney Jason Forge read a long list of Trump University instructors and Trump said he did not know them.

.. Forge noted that Trump defended his past praise for the politicians, saying he was a businessman trying to maintain a good relationship with them.

“Just like Mr. Trump, [the attendees] had an expectation of needing help from the people they were evaluating,” the class action attorney said.

.. Petrocelli insisted that the videos by their nature would cause problems the transcripts had not and he argued that the court shouldn’t really be deciding what information is needed because Trump is a presidential candidate.

“This lawsuit, your honor, is not a vehicle to litigate the presidential campaign,” the attorney said.

.. A handful of TV cameramen staked out the courthouse. They gave chase to the plaintiffs’ lawyers as they left, missing the famed trial lawyer Petrocelli and his colleague as they slipped out moments later.

Who Are All These Trump Supporters?

The speeches themselves are nearly all empty assertion. Assertion and bragging. Assertion, bragging, and defensiveness. He is always boasting about the size of this crowd or that crowd, refuting some slight from someone who has treated him “very unfairly,” underscoring his sincerity via adjectival pile-on (he’s “going to appoint beautiful, incredible, unbelievable Supreme Court Justices”). He lies, bullies, menaces, dishes it out but can’t seem to take it, exhibits such a muddy understanding of certain American principles (the press is free, torture illegal, criticism and libel two different things) that he might be a seventeenth-century Austrian prince time-transported here to mess with us.

.. Apply Occam’s razor: if someone brags this much, bending every ray of light back to himself, what’s the simplest explanation?

.. He wings it because winging it serves his purpose. He is not trying to persuade, detail, or prove: he is trying to thrill, agitate, be liked, be loved, here and now. He is trying to make energy.

.. Sandra Borchers, tells me that out there all was calm (she was “actually having dialogues” with Trump supporters, “back-and-forth conversations, at about this talking level”) until Trump started speaking. Then things got “violent and aggressive.”

.. This conflict rapidly devolves into a bitter veteran-off: two old guys, who’ve presumably seen some things in their time, barking hatefully at each other. I know (or feel I know) that, on another day, these two guys might have grabbed a beer together, jump-started each other’s cars, whatever—but they’re not doing that today.

.. If you are, as I am, a sentimental middle-aged person who cherishes certain Coplandian notions about the essential goodness of the nation, seeing this kind of thing in person—adults shouting wrathfully at one another with no intention of persuasion, invested only in escalating spite—will inject a palpable sadness

.. In the old days, a liberal and a conservative (a “dove” and a “hawk,” say) got their data from one of three nightly news programs, a local paper, and a handful of national magazines, and were thus starting with the same basic facts (even if those facts were questionable, limited, or erroneous). Now each of us constructs a custom informational universe, wittingly (we choose to go to the sources that uphold our existing beliefs and thus flatter us) or unwittingly (our app algorithms do the driving for us).

.. She then makes the (to me, irrational and irritating) claim that more people are on welfare under Obama than ever were under Bush.

.. a person might, for example, like Trump’s ideas about trade, or his immigration policies, or the fact that Trump is, as one supporter told me, “a successful businessman,” who has “actually done something,” unlike Obama, who has “never done anything his entire life.”

.. It seemed self-evident to them that a businessman could and should lead the country. “You run your family like a business, don’t you?” I was asked more than once, although, of course, I don’t, and none of us do.

.. The Trump supporter comes out of the conservative tradition but is not a traditional conservative. He is less patient: something is bothering him and he wants it stopped now, by any means necessary. He seems less influenced by Goldwater and Reagan than by Fox News and reality TV, his understanding of history recent and selective; he is less religiously grounded and more willing, in his acceptance of Trump’s racist and misogynist excesses, to (let’s say) forgo the niceties.

.. he often dishonorably eases into the world by attaching some form of the phrase “many people have said this” (The world is flat; many people have said this. People are saying that birds can play the cello: we need to look into that)—his supporters seem constitutionally reluctant to object

.. The ability to shrug off the mean crack, the sexist joke, the gratuitous jab at the weak is, in some quarters, seen as a form of strength, of “being flexible,” of “not taking shit serious.”

.. This willingness to gloss over crudeness becomes, then, an encoded sign of competence, strength, and reliability.

.. Above all, Trump supporters are “not politically correct,” which, as far as I can tell, means that they have a particular aversion to that psychological moment when, having thought something, you decide that it is not a good thought, and might pointlessly hurt someone’s feelings, and therefore decline to say it.

.. I observed, in Trump supporters’ storytelling, a tendency to conflate things that, to a non-Trump supporter, might seem unrelated. For example, in 2014, Mary Ann Mendoza’s son, Brandon, an openly gay policeman in Mesa, who volunteered at the local Boys and Girls Club, was killed in a car accident caused by an intoxicated, undocumented Mexican man ..

.. What unites these stories is what I came to think of as usurpation anxiety syndrome—the feeling that one is, or is about to be, scooped, overrun, or taken advantage of by some Other with questionable intentions.

.. It is not just (as I’m getting a bit tired of hearing) that they’ve been left behind economically. (Many haven’t, and au contraire.)

.. They have a case of Grievance Mind, and Trump is their head kvetcher.

.. This is why, before we say exactly what is on our minds, we run it past ourselves, to see if it makes sense, is true, is fair, has a flavor of kindness, and won’t hurt someone or make someone’s difficult life more difficult. Because there are, among us, in every political camp, limited, angry, violent, and/or damaged people, waiting for any excuse to throw off the tethers of restraint and get after it.

.. A group of anti-Trump college students in Eau Claire concocted the perfect Zen protest: singing and dancing en masse to Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody.” If there’s anything common across the left-right divide, it’s the desire not to come off as tight-assed or anti-rock and roll, and what could the passing Trump supporters do but dance and sing along, a few holdouts scowling at the unfairness of the method?

.. A college-age kid in a “Captain America” shirt demonstrates that there is a certain portion of one’s elbow flesh that will never hurt, no matter how hard one pinches it.

.. People get afraid, she tells me, and nobody wants to feel afraid. But if you get angry, you feel empowered.

.. I’ve never before imagined America as fragile, as an experiment that could, within my very lifetime, fail.

But I imagine it that way now.

Deciphering Facebook’s Software Philosophy

“If you could look through thousands of stories every day and choose the 10 that were most important to you, which would they be? The answer should be your News Feed.”

.. Underlying this question is the conviction that the News Feed shouldn’t just entertain users, but that it should entertain them against replacement. That is, it should provide significantly more meaning and entertainment than an average piece of entertainment. (In the U.S., that means it should be more fun than, say, watching an episode of NCIS.)

.. Meaningfulness is stock, not flow.

.. Facebook will now promote posts from users’ friends and family above all other kinds of content.

.. this change seems related to a Facebook-wide decline in “original sharing.” That is, regular people are posting fewer and fewer statuses and photos—a potentially catastrophic issue for the social network. It’s plausible that showing more of those “original” posts would trigger more original posting.

.. That’s why if it’s from your friends, it’s in your feed, period — you just have to scroll down.

.. It’s not making any promise that what one person finds informative will be accurate (nor do I think it could). It’s only promising that it will supply … content that … informs.

.. What does “authentic” mean?

.. Harvard’s Jonathan Zittrain, think Facebook should be asked to go one step further: It should let anyone run their own News Feed-like ranking algorithm on Facebook. In other words, Facebook would provide the raw material (the generic mass of posts from friends and pages), and users could bring their own algorithmic editor.