What's Good Wednesdays

What’s Good Wednesdays™, March 18, 2026

See or Read: “The Fever,” a one-man gut punch written and performed by Wallace Shawn. You’ll instantly recognize him from his memorable roles in “The Princess Bride” and “Young Sheldon,” but Shawn is also an accomplished playwright. Written decades ago, but eerily relevant today, “The Fever” follows a well-meaning traveler whose privileged worldview unravels in a far less comfortable corner of the globe. The performance is part monologue, part moral reckoning, and fully the kind of theater that sticks with you long after you’ve left your seat. It’s on stage now in New York, but you can alsoread the script and imagine for yourself the vivid and unsettling reality he describes. – Tony

Read:The Kite Runner.” Khaled Hosseini’s epic 2003 novel follows a boy called Amir as he tries to navigate the horrors of the Afghan-Soviet war that began in 1979. Stories like these remind us of the human tragedies that citizens face when their country is at war. While it would be erroneous to make any clear-cut comparison between the Soviet-Afghan war and the current conflict in neighboring Iran, we should be acutely aware of the devastation that some Iranians face while the Islamic Republic goes to battle with the US and Israel. This book may provide some clues. – Zac

See: Paintings by UK-based artist Jess Allen. If you need a small dopamine hit during the day, I highly recommend taking a few minutes to marvel at Allen’s colorful (and now online) exhibition, “We Want to Believe in Impossible Things” that showed in London last year. – Natalie J.

More For You

Noam Bettan from Israel with the song "Michelle" are on stage at the 70th Eurovision Song Contest (ESC) during rehearsals for the first semi-final on May 12, 2026, in the Stadthalle.
Jens Büttner/dpa via Reuters Connect

Even Eurovision cannot escape geopolitics, South Africa’s constitutional court opens door to Ramaphosa impeachment vote, Zelensky’s former right-hand man accused in corruption probe

French President Emmanuel Macron and Kenya's President William Ruto shake hands during the "Africa Forward Summit 2026" at the Taifa Hall of the University of Nairobi, in Nairobi, Kenya, on May 11, 2026.
REUTERS/Monicah Mwangi

French President Emmanuel Macron is trying to redefine France’s relationship with the continent, making it based on economic partnerships rather than a shared colonial history.