DOUGLAS QUENQUA

writer and editor

The Latest War on Tobacco

About 10 years ago I took a trip to Turkey and developed a thing for hookahs. Something about the sweet, fruity, smoke, the burning coals, the ritual of the thing–it’s all very seductive. I wound up buying my own hookah in a spice market for about $70, along with a few months’ supply of shisha and charcoal, and lit up fairly regularly with friends over the following year. I told them it was relatively harmless because the smoke was cooled and filtered by the water. Yeah, I had no idea what I was talking about.

Apparently, neither do a lot of other people. Hookahs have become wildly popular among college and even high school students in recent years, due in part to loopholes in indoor smoking bans that have allowed hookah bars–which cater to kids under 21–to thrive. And the smoke these pipes produce is actually pretty dangerous, to say nothing of the carbon monoxide from the coal. Now, legislators, health advocates and school administrators are trying to fight back against what they call the latest front in the ever-shifting war on tobacco. My article on Page 1 of Tuesday’s NYTimes, Putting a Crimp in the Hookah.

Filed under: Douglas Quenqua, New York Times, ,

The Next Rogaine?

Not a bald man, courtesy of Latisse

There are two kinds of bald men: those who accept their fate with dignity and those who fight it kicking and screaming all the way. (You’ll never guess which kind I am.)  For the latter kind, every news story or Internet rumor about a breakthrough in hair growth represents a ray of hope. So you can imagine the excitement that Latisse, the eyelash-enhancing medicine, sparked when it came out in 2008. Turns out the stuff does work if you put it on your head, to a point, and the drug’s manufacturer, Allergan, is on the case. My story in Thursday’s Style section: Latisse, Not Just for Eyelashes Anymore.

Filed under: Douglas Quenqua, New York Times, ,

The Clever Ruse

Dan Greenhaus is a bright, sober-minded economist. He’s also a tremendous Phish fan. So who can blame the guy for occasionally constantly making hidden references to the band during his media appearances on CNBC and Fox Business Network? It’s improvisational, it’s funny, and it’s harmlessly subversive, a lot like the band itself.  (Alas, no vacuum.) So it didn’t take long for Dan to win himself a little following among the Phish heads, particularly once he started posting alerts about his upcoming appearances on Phish message boards. Which is where people like me found out about it. My story from today’s Times, A Phish Fan’s Secret Smile.

Filed under: Douglas Quenqua, New York Times, , ,

ABOUT DOUGLAS QUENQUA

I'm a freelance writer and editor living in Brooklyn, N.Y. My work appears primarily in the New York Times, but also Wired, The New York Observer, Redbook, the New York Post, Columbia Magazine and others. I write about culture, science, media, lifestyle and dogs. When I remember, I post the good stuff here. It's pronounced Kwen'-kwa. Contact: doug.quenqua@gmail.com

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