Fonts of wisdom
I may be no fan of Marco Rubio, but I do appreciate someone who has strong opinions when it comes to typefaces.
I'm rather fond of Calibri and spent some time reverting all my work defaults back to it when Microsoft imposed their utterly horrific Aptos typeface as standard on their products.
One new typeface introduced this year that I think works quite well in banner headlines is Seaford.
Which fonts/typefaces deserve to be banished to one of the circles of Hell and which ought to be elevated to the heights of Paradise?
I'm rather fond of Calibri and spent some time reverting all my work defaults back to it when Microsoft imposed their utterly horrific Aptos typeface as standard on their products.
One new typeface introduced this year that I think works quite well in banner headlines is Seaford.
Which fonts/typefaces deserve to be banished to one of the circles of Hell and which ought to be elevated to the heights of Paradise?

Comments
Any font that makes a small l (as in "look!") and capital I (the perpendicular pronoun) look exactly the same should be banished.
I actually don’t like the one Boogie recommends for dyslexic people as I find it distracting as a presenter. My own disability can’t cope with distraction!
Interesting - is there a photo online anywhere? Was the architect well known?
My usual go-to is Book Antiqua.
AFF
You should know him, @Stercus Tauri , it's William Kelly (1861 -1944) who was responsible for Kelly's cats I'm not very clear whether is a complete font including every letter, or whether he just devised forms for letters as he used them.
He also designed the lettering on the Hector Boece memorial to have a C16th feel, but I think that was just him playing with the words on the memorial.
The needs of typeface for the odd sign or two is very different from the needs for something you're going to be reading long form.
I think that's a wonderful sign, though I'd have trouble with a whole book used in it.
I can't find the name of the typeface right now, but there's a modern printing of the works of PG Wodehouse in the Everyman Library collection that has a lovely presentation. Wouldn't be good for email, but just right for a whimsical novel.
That's funny because I've also heard that it is especially easy to read for Autistic people.
I also quite like the SIL ones, Gentium for Serif and Andyka for Sans.
I don't like Arial. One of my former employers tried to get everyone to use it. Dull and bland. It was very widespread at one time. I have assumed that was because it came at top of a typical alphabetical list of options. Helvetica is also a bit dull IMHO.