
Vogue US
A New Way Forward
In an era of ever-more visibility and exposure for both fashion and those who wear it, Givenchy's Sarah Burton has built her reputation on exquisite, hands-on invention and an intimate discretion.
10+ min |
August 2025

Vogue US
BALMS AWAY
New products deliver enhanced lip service.
2 min |
August 2025

Vogue US
A Life Less Ordinary
Anne Hathaway is known for her sunny, ever-positive disposition. But when a role as a tormented pop star demanded she explore her darker side, she didn't hold back. She talks to Maya Singer about learning to fail, giving up control, and coming out remade. Photographed by Annie Leibovitz.
10+ min |
August 2025

Vogue US
Coming to America
Italian-born Veronica Leoni ushers in a new era at Calvin Klein—one that’s both her own and a love letter to the label's legendary founder.
9 min |
August 2025

Vogue US
HOUSE PARTY
Married couple Joe Bradley and Valentina Akerman are reinventing what the art gallery can be. By Dodie Kazanjian.
7 min |
August 2025

Vogue US
Ahead of the Curve
Landscape architect Sara Zewde has built her practice not by crafting a distinctive style, but by cultivating a singular responsiveness to the needs of the community and the land. By Chloe Schama.
8 min |
August 2025

Vogue US
Inside Out
Can interior design be as personal as therapy? The chameleonic, loyalty-inspiring work of Charles & Co. suggests an answer.
10+ min |
August 2025

Vogue US
Start of the Story
In an exclusive excerpt from Arundhati Roy's new memoir, the author writes about her early upbringing for the first time.
9 min |
August 2025

Vogue US
LEARNING ITALIAN
After a career in New York, Paris, and London, Louise Trotter arrives at Bottega Veneta speaking a new language. By Chiara Barzini.
5 min |
August 2025

Vogue US
WOMEN AT WORK
Endlessly inventive and inspired, a small cadre of female designers is still running the show in New York, Paris, and Milan-with their ideas of what women want to wear right now more finely attuned than ever.
2 min |
August 2025

New York magazine
The City Politic: David Freedlander
Someone Has to Fold Inside the well-funded, likely doomed plan to stop Mamdani.
5 min |
July 14 - 27, 2025

New York magazine
The Cynical Origins of the Anti-Vaxx Movement
Parents were searching for help for their autistic children. A doctor and his son saw an opportunity. Their partnership would undermine public health forever.
10+ min |
July 14 - 27, 2025

The New Yorker
THE NEXT WAR
Is the U.S. ready for the future of combat?
10+ min |
July 21, 2025

New York magazine
Good and Goofy
Writer-director James Gunn's take on the superhero movie is delightful.
4 min |
July 14 - 27, 2025

The New Yorker
THE COUNTERFEITERS
What I inherited from my criminal great-grandparents.
10+ min |
July 21, 2025

The New Yorker
SERVE AND FOLLY
The annual British yearning for a homegrown Wimbledon champion.
10+ min |
July 21, 2025

New York magazine
Is All This Salt Killing Us?
Doctors have long warned about the risks of excessive sodium. But in an era of Maximum Flavor, chefs say we crave it more than ever.
9 min |
July 14 - 27, 2025

The New Yorker
FORTRESS OF SYNERGY
\"Superman.\"
6 min |
July 21, 2025

The New Yorker
ESCAPE ROUTE
Geoff Dyer tracks the comic confusions of a working-class British upbringing.
10+ min |
July 21, 2025

New York magazine
Nick Cannon Can't Help Himself
The entertainer is best known these days as a one-man sperm factory. He's interested in challenging that image only slightly.
10+ min |
July 14 - 27, 2025

New York magazine
Corn on the Tube
The new season of The Bear is cringe-inducingly sincere—but it works.
4 min |
July 14 - 27, 2025

New York magazine
CANADA IS NOT FOR SALE
There's nothing like a common enemy to make a country come together.
10+ min |
July 14 - 27, 2025

The New Yorker
Paige Williams on Marquis James's Preview of the Scopes Monkey Trial
One of the first New Yorker writers hired by Harold Ross, the founding editor, was Marquis James. The men were good friends whose wives were also good friends; the couples vacationed together. James's début feature ran in the second issue, in February, 1925. I could have written this piece about that piece, a Profile of Alice Roosevelt Longworth, a child of Theodore Roosevelt, based on the following passage alone: “She knows men, measures and motives; has an understanding grasp of their changes. That's all there is to what is grandiosely known as ‘public affairs.”
2 min |
July 21, 2025

Scoop USA Newspaper
Negotiations continue in Philadelphia as thousands of city workers strike over wages, work conditions
Negotiations continued Wednesday on the second day of a strike by nearly 10,000 city workers in Philadelphia--while a judge ordered some emergency service dispatchers and essential water department employees back to work.
3 min |
ScoopDigital, Vol. 6, No. 21

Scoop USA Newspaper
Comedy and crime fighting join forces for police learning leadership skills
Three dozen police captains pair off in a Chicago conference room to play a game: They must start a sentence with the last word their partner used.
4 min |
ScoopDigital, Vol. 6, No. 21

Scoop USA Newspaper
The Teenage Commandments
Our children are so lost and have been lost for a very long time. It breaks my heart to think about it and even more to talk about it. Some years ago, God inspired a teenager to write what is called: \"The Teenage Commandments.\" I'm sharing them with you in hopes that you will share them with your children by way of a family discussion. Communication with our children is one of the keys that will help them make the right life decisions. So here we go:
1 min |
ScoopUSA Media, Volume 65 - Number 30

New York magazine
The Power Trip: KNIVES OUT ON K STREET
MAGA lobbyists are chasing the old firms out of Washington and updating the art of influence peddling.
10+ min |
July 14 - 27, 2025

New York magazine
Won't You Be Our Neighbor?
Amy Sedaris's guest apartment, a floor above her own, has a \"full-tilt gingham\" bedroom and a fireplace fitted with a dollhouse.
3 min |
July 14 - 27, 2025

Scoop USA Newspaper
House passes disastrous bill that will skyrocket pollution and the cost of living
The U.S. House of Representatives passed their so-called “One Big Beautiful Bill,” the most disastrous environmental legislation the country has seen in modern history. The regressive policies it has made law will reverse years of progress in fighting the climate crisis and make the planet less livable by dealing a devastating blow to clean energy.
1 min |
ScoopUSA Media, Volume 65 - Number 29

The New Yorker
LOSING LONELINESS
In the age of A.I., you never have to feel lonely again. That's not necessarily a good thing.
10+ min |