Your morning update from Salon.
Crash Course subscribers can join the conversation. Click the speech bubble icon to leave a comment. Tap the heart to leave a like.

Sign o’ the times …
For many of his 57 years on Earth, Prince was treated like a living god. An untouchable genius of songcraft and sex who straddled the frequently divergent worlds of massive chart success and universal critical acclaim.
He was in our world but not of it, sent down to carry revelations of new ways to be funky, freaky and free. He was a diminutive guitar deity who could only have descended in America, but calling him something so plain and mortal as “American” still feels close to sacrilege.
Despite his metaphorically Olympian stature, the pop star’s death was astoundingly and shamefully normal for a United States citizen. Prince died 10 years ago today, at the age of 57, from an accidental overdose on opioids.
Since 2020, at least 50,000 Americans have died from opioid overdoses every single year. Prescriptions for opioids spiked in the late ‘90s and early ‘00s. While the amount of opioids prescribed by U.S. doctors began to decline in 2010, a report from around the time of Prince’s death found that Americans were receiving three times as many opioid prescriptions than they had at the turn of the century.
The Purple One’s descent into opioid addiction was also remarkably average. The long version could only have happened to Prince — he fell from an on-stage bathtub from which he planned to sing “Purple Rain” — but what came after was routine. A doctor prescribed him pain pills that are incredibly addictive, a cure that does nothing to address the underlying cause of chronic pain.
"Most insurance … won't pay for anything but a pill,” University of Cincinnati professor Judith Feinberg told the BBC in 2017. “The best thing is physical therapy, but no one will pay for that. So doctors get very ready to pull out the prescription pad.”
When police entered Prince’s home after his death, they found scattered pill bottles prescribed under various names. It was determined that Prince died from an overdose of counterfeit Vicodin that was laced with fentanyl. Prince’s bodyguard had picked up the singer’s prescription medicine to deal with the effects of opioid withdrawal mere hours before his passing.
Prince’s death was a tragedy on several levels. The titanic size of the loss is the most obvious. No one else could have done what Prince did for as long as Prince did it, and the untimely departure of His Royal Badness left behind no heirs.
Ten years later, it’s hard not to be a little angry at how avoidable it all was. If Prince had been born or lived in any other country, his doctor’s first recourse might not have been a highly addictive painkiller. If he hadn’t been forced to rely on a system that prioritized quick fixes over long-term care, he might still be here.
The ultimate tragedy of Prince’s death is how common the beats of this story are. Millions of Americans get old, get hurt and get hooked. The need for more and more painkillers drives an illicit market full of cheap, deadly substitutes. Prince had a one-of-a-kind life that could only have happened when and where it happened. The same was true, sadly, of his all-too-ordinary death.
What do you think? Sound off in the comments.
Make me smarter …

Trump’s looming downballot disaster
Trump's unpopularity is putting Republican dominance in state legislatures at risk. Read more.
Don’t miss …
Support the progressive journalism you trust. Become a Salon member today!
Are you a Salon Premium member?
Join us for members-only Salon Live with White House correspondent Brian Karem and Editor in Chief Joseph Neese on May 13. Register here.
Before you go …

The label wars for Trump miss the point. Look at the wreckage
What really matters is the destruction the president leaves behind. Read more.
ALSO FROM SALON
Crash Expert: “This Looks Like 1929” → 71,048 Diversifying Here
Mark Spitznagel, who made $1B in a single day during the 2015 flash crash, warned markets are mimicking 1929. Seems extreme but we did just see the worst quarter for the S&P since 2022.
So it’s not so surprising that Vanguard and Goldman Sachs forecasted 5% and 3% annual S&P returns respectively for 2024-2034.
Almost no one knows this, but postwar and contemporary art appreciated 10.2% annually with near-zero correlation to equities from 1995–2025 overall.*
And sure… billionaires like Bezos can make headlines at auction, but what about the rest of us?
Masterworks makes it possible to invest in legendary artworks by Banksy, Basquiat, Picasso, and more – without spending millions.
28 exits. Net annualized returns like 14.6%, 17.6%, and 17.8% on works held over 1 year+. $1.3 billion invested. 500+ offerings.*
Shares in new offerings can sell quickly but…
*According to Masterworks data. Past performance is not indicative of future returns. Investing involves risk. Important Reg A disclosures: masterworks.com/cd.






