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    Media News

    National food site Eater executes major layoff including Dallas editor

    Teresa Gubbins
    Aug 8, 2025 | 9:10 am
    Eater hot list

    Eater hot list

    Eater

    A digital outlet executed a layoff that's likely to be felt by restaurants across Texas and the U.S.: Eater, the national media brand that covers food and dining, laid off 15 employees on August 7, including Texas editor Courtney Smith.

    According to the employees' Vox Media Union, the layoff was part of a major restructuring of the 20-year-old brand.

    Some of those let go were part of Eater's cities network, which provides local coverage of 23 cities across the U.S. including bureaus in Dallas, Houston, and Austin.

    One staffer speculated off the record that the layoffs would erode city-specific coverage, a continuation of the paring-back on local stories that's been ongoing at Eater since 2021. "Basically, all of Eater cities are toast," the staffer said.

    However, Vox Communications VP Lauren Starke said in an email that "Eater is committed to operating all current Eater sites. In order to reorient the business around our long-term strategy, we had to make the difficult decision to eliminate roles yesterday."

    Others let go included longtimers Ashok Selvam, regional editor for the Midwest, who'd been with Eater since 2014; and Amy McCarthy, a reporter based in Dallas who'd been with the company for a decade, first as editor of Eater Dallas and Houston, then as a national reporter covering dining and pop culture.

    In Texas, Eater recently appointed a Texas regional editor, H. Drew Blackburn, on a temporary basis. In an email, Blackburn said he was still employed, but wasn't sure what the future held.

    Publication of stories on the city sites halted at about 11:45 am on August 7, although two stories were added on the New York and San Francisco sites later in the day.

    The possible demise of city-specific coverage gives restaurants one less platform and further erodes the role of traditional online media in restaurant reporting, placing an increasing emphasis on unchecked social media sites such as Instagram and TikTok.

    Eater was founded in 2005, then acquired by Vox Media in 2013. They started as an aggregating site, summarizing restaurant and dining news by linking to other sites' stories, sometimes breaking news itself. In recent years, their emphasis moved towards lists centered on their trademark maps, but with occasional photo-driven features such as the recent "5 dishes at Norman's Japanese Grill," a new restaurant in Dallas.

    Dallas, Austin, and Houston all boast a variety of dining coverage, but Eater's status as a national organization made them desirable for regional restaurants angling for a national profile.

    The layoffs took place one day after Eater announced a celebration of its 20-year anniversary "at the center of the food world" by throwing their "biggest event ever": Eater Off Menu, an "immersive, food-focused bash" taking place in New York on September 20.

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    Movie Review

    Korean film No Other Choice uses dark comedy to tell deeper story

    Alex Bentley
    Jan 9, 2026 | 11:40 am
    Lee Byung-hun in No Other Choice
    Photo courtesy of Neon
    Lee Byung-hun in No Other Choice.

    When Parasite won the Oscar for Best Picture in 2020, it signaled a shift in how international feature films were viewed not only by Academy voters, but also American filmgoers, who made it the fifth-highest grossing non-English language film of all time. Extra attention has been paid to other international films in the intervening years, including the new South Korean film, No Other Choice.

    Starring Lee Byung-hun of Squid Game fame, the dark comedy chronicles the increasingly desperate actions of Man-su, a middle manager at a paper factory who is laid off due to automation. After months of trying to find a job at another paper company, he finally finds a good prospect only to learn that several other men may be better candidates. Man-su decides that the only solution is to eliminate the competition.

    The only problem is Man-su is a bit of a coward; an early plan at standing up to his company in the face of the lay-offs meets an anticlimactic end. His wishy-washy ways seem to permeate his life, from putting off treatment on a painful tooth to not communicating with his more willful wife to actually going through with his vengeful ideas. He bumbles his way through every aspect of his life, virtually daring anyone to call him out on his poor decision-making.

    Written and directed by Park Chan-wook, and co-written by Lee Kyoung-mi, Don McKellar, and Jahye Lee, the film initially seems to be another approach toward telling the class division story that’s at the center of Parasite and Squid Game. And it is that to a degree, as those in charge of the paper companies and the hiring committees are either indifferent or unsympathetic to the plight of those who have been forced out of work.

    But the more we see of Man-su, the more it becomes clear that his is a story all its own, one where a man claims there is “no other choice” when in fact there are plenty of other options. The men in the film in general don’t come across well, with many of them reacting to stress by turning into whiners who believe the world is out to get them. Some situations turn violent as the film goes along, events that most of the time could have been avoided if the people involved actually took the time to think things through.

    The film features a somewhat confusing story made even more puzzling if you don’t speak Korean. On first viewing, it’s initially unclear why Man-su is doing what he’s doing, or why he’s going after certain people in particular. The plot becomes more understandable as the film progresses, but Chan-wook includes several side plots that muddle things further even as they broaden certain characters. There are also a couple of visual text jokes that can easily be missed if you don’t know where to look.

    Byung-hun is great as a man who can’t seem to get out of his own way. The role is almost in direct contrast to the one he played on Squid Game, making it easy to see how well he can adapt to different stories. Son Ye-jin as Man-su’s wife Miri and Lee Sung-min as Bummo, one of Man-su’s intended victims, are also highly engaging.

    Like any film not in English, No Other Choice requires viewers to pay strict attention to the screen to get full enjoyment of the actors and their dialogue. While it doesn’t hit as hard as a comedy because of this factor, it’s still a greatly entertaining film whose underlying message makes it become a little deeper.

    ---

    No Other Choice is now playing in theaters.

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