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2024/04/21

The Morning: E-commerce and empty promises

Plus, Congress, the Middle East and Black rodeo culture.
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The Morning

April 21, 2024

Good morning. Today Annemarie Conte, a writer at Wirecutter, explains how to avoid the low-quality products clogging internet shops. — David Leonhardt

A woman strolls walk across a road, holding a pink Stanley water bottle in her hand.
In Manhattan.  Calla Kessler for The New York Times

The schlock economy

Author Headshot

By Annemarie Conte

She is a deputy editor at Wirecutter.

People are bombarded online each day with ads for newfangled products that promise dramatic life improvements. Modish tumblers. Sleek pans. Miraculous cleaning solutions. Overblown air purifiers. Just click this link and — voilĂ ! Productivity. Happiness. Nirvana.

Don't buy it.

Wirecutter, The Times's product recommendation service, tests many of the wares that clog Americans' social media feeds. And while our testers do like some, these products are often built on empty promises. In today's newsletter, I'll explain how e-commerce, a $6 trillion global industry, became choked with junk.

Paid to sell

Online shopping can expose people to a greasy influencer economy. Influencers often join affiliate-revenue networks, such as Amazon's. When an influencer's follower clicks a link and buys something, the influencer makes money. That's why people on your social media feed are crowing about their 10 favorite Amazon finds or talking about how an expensive gizmo has changed their life.

Many influencers have another incentive: Brands pay them to hawk stuff. Some people with large followings make deals for tens of thousands of dollars per post. Then, when enough people like or share a post, TikTok, Instagram and YouTube algorithms push it to more people. The result is a blizzard of gadgets.

Consider these spin scrubbers, pitched online as the solution to all of your cleaning woes. "In videos, these devices churn up rings of soap suds, implying they are lifting away all the filth beneath them," writes Ellen Airhart, Wirecutter's cleaning expert.

In reality, they're the worst cleaning tools we've ever tested. Ellen spent six hours trying to scour a soap-scum-covered shower and a toothpaste-crusted sink with two spin scrubbers popular on TikTok. They splattered water everywhere and often cost upward of $50. Instead, Ellen recommends a humble $1 sponge.

Products making the rounds on social media are often manufactured by small companies and come with unhelpful guidance or lousy warranties. This is true of the Pipersong Meditation Chair, hailed as the solution for restless sitters, thanks to its rotating footstool.

Well, I tested it. And as I was pretzeling myself into the thing, which lacks solid back support or armrests, I knew most people wouldn't find it to be worth the $400-plus price tag.

Even viral products from reliable brands can be mediocre. Stanley tumblers are in vogue. And yet, they spill. A lot. The leaks haven't stopped 10 million units from being sold since 2020. Hordes of people stampeded Target to nab one in a recent trending color.

Avoid getting duped

Two images. On the left: A tanker being filled at a The Pink Stuff manufacturing facility. On the right: Tubs of The Pink Stuff on a production line.
Sam Bush for The New York Times

As an editor at Wirecutter, I take my job of testing and recommending products seriously. I never want anyone to spend their hard-earned money on garbage. Here's how to avoid being hoodwinked:

  • Search the product's name on Instagram, TikTok, YouTube or Reddit. Are the influencers all saying the same thing? And does what they're saying sound like marketing copy?
  • Look for the hashtags #ad, #sponsored or #partner on the post to see if the recommender is being compensated by the brand. If the influencer doesn't disclose that arrangement, the Federal Trade Commission could issue a fine.
  • Check influencers' bios or LinkedIn profiles for credentials. Does they show a background in this area? Have the creators shown their testing methods? Do they even have testing methods?
  • Read one-star Amazon reviews to see if any consistent flaws jump out.
  • See if a trusted person or publication also recommends this product.

Not all influencers are scurrilous peddlers. Some creators use their expertise to vet products and give reliable advice. But it's important to spot the difference.

There are so many wonderful, truly helpful and well-made buy-it-for-life products, such as the sturdy Lodge cast-iron pan and Darn Tough hiking socks, which come with a lifetime warranty. Don't waste your time and money on overhyped trends.

More about Wirecutter: Our journalists have no financial relationship with the companies that make or sell the products that they review. They instead use an exhaustive testing process to choose the products they recommend. After that, Wirecutter's commerce team may negotiate fees with the affiliate-revenue networks.

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THE LATEST NEWS

Congress

Speaker Mike Johnson speaking with reporters.
Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican. Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times
  • The House voted to approve $95 billion in aid for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan. Speaker Mike Johnson, faced with opposition from the right wing of his party, marshaled support from mainstream Republicans and Democrats.
  • As part of the package, the chamber also advanced a bill that would force TikTok's Chinese owners to sell the app or ban it in the U.S.
  • The Senate is expected to pass the legislation as early as Tuesday. See how the House voted.
  • Johnson had largely opposed aid to Ukraine as a rank-and-file member. He has attributed his turnaround in part to intelligence briefings.
  • The vote was met with relief in Ukraine. Experts say it could take weeks before U.S. assistance has a direct effect on the war.

More on Politics

People sit outside a tent in a park.
In Grants Pass, Ore. Mason Trinca for The New York Times

Middle East

A vehicle works on damaged buildings as people stand on and near rubble.
In Rafah, in southern Gaza. Mohammed Salem/Reuters
  • Israeli airstrikes on the southern Gazan city of Rafah killed several civilians and hit two family homes, according to Palestinian state media. The Israeli military did not immediately comment on the strikes.
  • Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank went on a general strike after Israeli soldiers killed at least 10 people during a raid on a refugee camp there. The military called it a counterterrorism operation.
  • Israel's retaliatory strike on Iran on Friday appeared calculated to send a message that it could bypass and paralyze Iran's defense systems, Western and Iranian officials said.

More International News

An underwater shot of a swimmer.
A race in China's Zhejiang Province. Manan Vatsyayana/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  • Top Chinese swimmers tested positive for a banned drug months before the 2021 Tokyo Olympics. They were allowed to compete after Chinese officials secretly cleared them of doping, a Times investigation found.
  • After years of conflict in Myanmar, rebels have scored victories over the military junta, potentially turning the tide of the war.
  • Rahul Gandhi, the scion of an Indian political dynasty, is trying to unseat Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his party. He traveled across the country to appeal to voters.

Other Big Stories

THE SUNDAY DEBATE

Does the anti-abortion movement still have a cohesive strategy?

No. When Trump said he wouldn't support a federal ban, it was "the most pro-choice position of any Republican presidential nominee in two generations, and all the largest pro-life groups continue to bend the knee," Times Opinion's David French writes.

Yes. Anti-abortion supporters need to maintain a moderate position and prioritize winning elections now before turning their attention to a nationwide abortion ban. "This is a marathon, not a sprint," Mark Davis writes for The Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

FROM OPINION

Daniel Levy has a simplified guide to the complicated dynamics among the biggest players in the Middle East.

Here are columns by Ross Douthat on how the wars in Ukraine and Gaza have resurfaced old American divisions and Lydia Polgreen on Columbia University's pro-Palestinian protests.

A subscription to match the variety of your interests.

News. Games. Recipes. Product reviews. Sports reporting. A New York Times All Access subscription covers all of it and more. Subscribe today.

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MORNING READS

Villanova University/Paré, Karpovich, Chuss (PI)

Cosmic forces: The Impressionistic swirl of color above shows the churning magnetic fields of the Milky Way.

A side of Cheez-Its: In the household of a self-proclaimed fat activist, there are no "good" or "bad" foods.

Vows: He had her at the baby moose.

Lives Lived: Ellen Ash Peters was the first woman on the faculty of Yale Law School and the first female justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court. She died at 94.

TALK | FROM THE MAGAZINE

Mamadi Doumbouya

I'll be part of a new Q. and A. franchise, The Interview, that debuts next week. In the lead-up, I've been sharing some of my favorite past conversations. This one, the first I ever did for the old Talk column, is with Meg Ryan, the great romantic comedy star. I spoke to her in 2019, at a time when she had been out of the public eye for a while.

Were you happy with the work available to you as you got older? Would you have felt more compelled to keep exploring acting if those opportunities were good?

I'm sure the same opportunities did not present themselves in my 40s that did in my 30s and 20s. I get offers to do things now, but they're not things I want to do. I have so much admiration for actors who have incredible imagination for life or have life experience that they can then bring to the audience. I don't think I was one of those people.

Was backing off from show business part of coming to terms with a fundamental ambivalence about your career that had always been there?

Nora [Ephron] used to tell me, "Just because you have fame problems doesn't mean you don't have a problem." I like the famous I am now: I walk into other people's paparazzi photos, but I can also get a restaurant reservation.

What have you learned about how power works for women in Hollywood?

I don't think I took advantage of the power that I had. Somewhere in the middle of my time in Hollywood, I did have a production company and produced movies, but it felt exhausting. I kept thinking: What is this thing about having it all? Why do we want that? Don't we just want to be happy in our independent pursuits?

Read more of the interview here.

THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE

Illustration by Christoph Niemann.

Click the cover image above to read this week's issue.

BOOKS

The photo features two young men in jeans and plaid shirts riding horses in a rodeo ring, all of their bodies blurred by motion.
In Oklahoma. Ivan Mcclellan

An American pastime: A new book of photos celebrates Black rodeo culture.

Our editors' picks: "Table for Two: Fictions," six short stories set in New York around the new millennium, and eight other books.

Times best sellers: "Toxic Prey," the 34th book in John Sandford's "Prey" series, is new on the hardcover fiction list.

THE MORNING RECOMMENDS …

Try these passover recipes.

Clean your baking sheet.

Scan documents on the go.

THE WEEK AHEAD

What to Watch For

  • The London Marathon is today.
  • Earth Day is tomorrow.
  • Passover begins tomorrow evening.
  • The Supreme Court will hear arguments on Wednesday over Idaho's abortion ban.
  • The Supreme Court will hear arguments on Thursday over whether Trump has presidential immunity over his conduct surrounding the Capitol attack on Jan. 6, 2021.
  • The N.F.L. draft begins on Thursday.

Meal Plan

Johnny Miller for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Rebecca Jurkevich.

In this week's Five Weeknight Dishes newsletter, Emily Weinstein suggests easy pasta dishes that you can make on the fly with whatever is in the house. Mix spaghetti with tuna, capers and scallions; add olives and walnuts to some penne; or pair rigatoni bacon, greens and a fried egg.

NOW TIME TO PLAY

Here is today's Spelling Bee. Yesterday's pangrams were Lilliputian and nuptial.

Can you put eight historical events — including the Magna Carta, the Sistine Chapel and the first canary in a coal mine — in chronological order? Take this week's Flashback quiz.

And here are today's Mini Crossword, Wordle, Sudoku, Connections and Strands.

Thanks for spending part of your weekend with The Times.

Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox. Reach our team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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Editor: David Leonhardt

Deputy Editor: Adam B. Kushner

News Editor: Tom Wright-Piersanti

Associate Editor: Lauren Jackson

News Staff: Desiree Ibekwe, Sean Kawasaki-Culligan, Brent Lewis, German Lopez, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Ashley Wu

News Assistant: Lyna Bentahar

Saturday Writer: Melissa Kirsch

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