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You’d have to be pretty dumb to dismiss the influence musicians from Beyoncé to Ariana Grande to Chappell Roan have had on pop culture. (I mean, Queen Bey is basically her own transit system when it comes to concerts!) But arguably the brightest star in the constellation of celebrity influence is Taylor Alison Swift, who made headlines last week for her endorsement of Kamala Harris. Celebrity endorsements of Kamala have come fast and furious since Harris officially launched her campaign in July, but Swift is (so far) the musician whose fan base seems to have translated most directly into political action. “Since our inception on July 21, Swifties for Kamala has raised over $213,000 for Harris’ campaign and directed over $13,000 from our merchandise partnership with Social Goods to voter registration efforts,” said Irene Kim, cofounder and executive director of the Swifties for Kamala movement. In many ways, this is no surprise; just look at the financial impact of her tours which some see as boosting entire economic sectors.

There's something strange about the tone of Rejection, where absurdity and vulgarity mingle with a fearless excavation of deadpan seriousness. Some people might find this depressing or
exhausting to read; I find it exhilarating. How often do we get to honestly confront the worse failings of our time and laugh or gasp with genuine wonder when we do? The solipsistic echo chambers that Rejection's characters inhabit can be debilitating, but the presence of a writer as serious and funny as Tony Tulathimutte is a pretty good antidote.

But I was also struck even embarrassed by reading female characters who mocked and trivialized the idea that loneliness should be a sympathetic problem for a man. This was more or less my instinctive reaction to such ideas not long ago that male privilege was so absolute that it somehow eliminated any common problems with being human. I mentioned this to Tony. “People see an opportunity to kill someone, to put this person in his place, and to do their political thing,” Tulathimutte said. “But connecting political ideas and political action to influence is always a bad idea.”
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