After the United States entered World War I in 1917, Minnesota women, like Americans across the nation, were called to contribute to the war effort. Though some went to Europe and served as nurses, drivers, and aid workers on the battlefields, many more participated on the home front. They took on new jobs, conserved
If there’s one thing Bravo’s Real Housewives franchise is known for, it’s the ability to platform lowbrow discourse. Consider Luann de Lesseps and Dorinda Medley’s fight over the designer Jovani; Teresa Giudice’s feud with her sister-in-law, Melissa Gorga, about sprinkle cookies; the Sonja Morgan Tipsy Girl versus Bethenny Frankel Skinnygirl battle! Epic. Cast members (and the show’s editors) have turned the ability to make the most mundane fights into extraordinary, multi-episode-long events, all for loyal viewers to devour week after week. But it’s the latest fracas that has permeated the
Housewives ether and ignited a larger, albeit no less tacky, cultural conversation. And it’s all because of this: , the thumbs-up emoji, that this debate s lived rent free in our minds for weeks.