Especially if the data is numeric, negation can be used to sort in descending order. This is especially useful if you need to pass a sorting key anyway. For example, if the data was as follows:
data = ['9', '10', '3', '4.5']
sorted(data, reverse=True) # doesn't sort correctly
sorted(data, key=lambda x: -float(x)) # sorts correctly
# ^ negate here
# that said, passing a key along with reverse=True also work
sorted(data, key=float, reverse=True) # ['10', '9', '4.5', '3']
For an example with datetime, that would look like as follows:
from datetime import datetime
ts = ["04/20/2010 10:07:30", "12/01/2009 10:07:52", "01/13/2020 10:08:22", "12/01/2009 12:07:52"]
ts.sort(key=lambda x: -datetime.strptime(x, '%m/%d/%Y %H:%M:%S').timestamp())
# ^^^^ convert to a number here
ts
# ['01/13/2020 10:08:22', '04/20/2010 10:07:30', '12/01/2009 12:07:52', '12/01/2009 10:07:52']