Logan Scherer

TV without borders TV without borders

A guide to classic American shows born overseas.
  • Slipped through the cracks

    The stories we missed this week: More women opting for double mastectomies, working women thwarted by insecurity and the top 10 literary virgins.
  • Slipped through the cracks

    The stories we missed: Women turn off breast-feeding, bikini waxes a hit with tweens and VH1's most famous pickup artist gets sued.
  • Keep touching yourself, America

    The FoxSexpert rips the lid off masturbation -- it's good for you!
  • Slipped through the cracks

    Stories we didn't get to cover: Women more concerned about the economy than men, sex for food, and why are males the gender most likely to adopt?
  • Slipped through the cracks

    Stories we missed: Military sexual assaults may be underreported by half; babies' gender no longer secret in South Korea; and lo, it must be camp season.
  • Judging a book by its (pink) cover

    Why are publishers slapping chick-lit-style covers on books written by women, whether they fit the genre or not?
  • Slipped through the cracks

    Stories we missed this week: McCain's anti-feminism, only girls being born in northern Greenland, and game heroines in metal thongs.
  • Carp diem!

    Fish pedicures come to America, leaving flesh-hungry carp full and your feet clean.
  • Slipped through the cracks

    The stories we didn't get to cover: An all-female football league, 365 days of Cosmo, women in the church and a kerfuffle over potty parity.
  • Facebook's gender trouble

    A recent change may please grammarians, but not transgender users.
  • Granny and the real doll

    Older Japanese women with a hankering for grandchildren get their own adorable, stuffed companions.
  • Ladies get a small bite of the Big Apple

    Forget what you see on TV. New York women are much worse off economically than they were two decades ago.
  • Men snip, but don't tell

    Male plastic surgery is on the rise, even as the overall market takes a dip.
  • Hygiene and the city

    German author Charlotte Roche stirs controversy with a raunchy, feminist novel about female grooming.

From Salon's blogs