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BEST of CULTURE
THE ART THAT ENTERTAINED, MOVED, & INSPIRED US IN 2023
THE NATION BUILDERS
ISRAELIS AND PALESTINIANS WHO STEPPED UP AFTER THЕ ОСТ. 7 АТТACK
ATHLETE OF THE YEAR: LIONEL MESSI
MESSI WON THE BALLON D'OR AS THE WORLD'S BEST PLAYER FOR THE EIGHTH TIME IN OCTOBER
CEO OF THE YEAR: SAM ALTMAN
'IT IS, FOR MANY PEOPLE, THE YEAR THAT THEY STARTED TAKING AI SERIOUSLY.'
2023: THE YEAR IN CLIMATE
For the young plaintiffs in a landmark environmental case, victory was \"a great first step\"
2023: THE YEAR IN POLITICS
The GOP front runner kept his eyes on the Oval Office, even as the court cases mounted| The White House struggled with public opinion even in its moments of success
6 questions - Narges Mohammadi
Narges Mohammadi The Nobel Peace Prize winner tells Angelina Jolie about life in an Iranian prison, the roots of the protest movement, and what gives her hope
A hit man who's strong to the finish
If you've been watching movies for a while, David Fincher's The Killer-which arrives Nov. 10 on Netflix-might be your 100th movie about a contract killer, or even your 500th. It's a genre that springs eternal, yet modern directors often think they need to make these stories elaborate and convoluted to keep an audience engaged, when maybe the opposite is true.
Fargo's fifth season is a darkly hilarious return to form
MINNESOTA HOMEMAKER Dot Lyon (Juno Temple) has a nice, quiet life. Her husband (David Rysdahl) worships her...
Reality TV stops being polite
The Challenge speaks to a trend toward cruelty
THE MOVIE WIVES ARE SPEAKING
The wives of famous men, often relegated to the sidelines, reclaim space in a crop of new films
REBEL WITH A CAUSE
Tadashi Yanai grew Uniqlo into a global force. Now he's out to fix his country By Charlie Campbell
TIME 100 CLIMATE
The most influential leaders driving business climate action in their own words
Man In the Middle
WHAT HAPPENS WHEN ABU DHABI'S CHIEF OIL EXEC IS TASKED WITH PHASING DOWN FOSSIL FUELS?
My kid deserved what we couldn't afford
SEVEN YEARS OUT FROM NEEDING to use food stamps, and it's interesting what still triggers that feeling of humiliation that consumed my life back then. Yet I always feel it when I use a self-checkout station at the grocery store.
HOBBES THE OPTIMIST
When Thomas Hobbes described life in a state of nature as \"solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short,\" he penned one of the most celebrated sentences in the English language. The 17th-century philosopher asserted that without \"a common power to keep them all in awe,\" human beings fall into a state of nature-a condition of anarchical warfare and lawless predation.
The delicate balance facing William Lai, Taiwan's presidential front runner
MORE THAN ONCE WHEN WILLIAM LAI WAS A small boy, a passing typhoon tore the roof of his home clean away. It's a recollection that brings a wry smile to Taiwan's Vice President, who grew up in the small coal-mining hamlet of Wanli perched on the island's far north.
5 ways to get better at saying no
THERE'S A COMMON Malfunction that occurs when well-intentioned people open their mouths to say no: the word yes tumbles out instead.
Sam Bankman-Fried - Disgraced crypto mogul
IT TOOK ONE YEAR FOR SAM BANKMAN-Fried to transform from beloved billionaire entrepreneur to convicted felon.
Israel's former PM: a two-state solution is the only solution
WITH A WAR RAGING BETWEEN ISRAEL AND HAMAS, it's hard to imagine a new dawn of peace. The violence threatens to paralyze the moral and political imaginations of Israelis and Palestinians alike, deepening the impression that accommodation will remain forever out of reach. But to hear one of Israel's elder statesmen tell it, now is precisely the moment to resurrect the goal of a peace process.
How war in the Middle East got the British Home Secretary fired
SUELLA BRAVERMAN, THE CONTROversial Home Secretary in British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's Cabinet, was fired after making divisive comments about pro-Palestinian protesters. She will be replaced by James Cleverly, who had been Foreign Secretary, and former Prime Minister David Cameron will replace him.
NIKKI HALEY'S MOMENT
The former South Carolina governor finds momentum in a GOP primary that remains Trump’s to lose
5 ways to cultivate hope when you don't have any
There's a sense, once a whisper, that's growing louder every day. Glaciers are melting, children are being slaughtered, hatred runs rampant. Sometimes it feels like the world's approaching a nadir. Or like you are.
Creating record of history
What was your mom's childhood like? How did your aunt meet your uncle? Recording conversations with loved ones is a way to preserve a family's history and collect stories to pass down to future generations.
Managing your text chain
Important family conversations used to happen around the dinner table. Now they're often relegated to our phones. Here are rules for dealing with your family text thread.
U.S. law firms face the future
Is the U.S. in a lawyer labor shortage? A new study from Statista and TIME shows that the majority of surveyed lawyers are finding it difficult to find and hire competent recruits.
Caster Semenya The South African gold medalist on her new memoir, the indignities of gender verification, and her future as an Olympic runner
Why write The Race to Be Myself now? You want to tell a story when you're in a good state of mind, when you're at peace. I thought it's about time I support those who need me. It's a reminder to those out there who feel rejected that they belong. The most important thing that you can do for yourself is just to accept yourself for who you are.
Only murders at the billionaire's retreat
A MURDER AT THE END OF THE World is a tricky title. It might refer to a murder in a remote location or a murder amid the literal end times. In the case of FX's smart, stylish new drama, it's a true double entendre. The plot works on multiple levels too. Set up as a classic cozy mystery, the detective story grounds an investigation of technology and enterprise in the age of climate apocalypse. Are the world's wealthiest innovators saving humanity or hastening our demise?
Nathan Fielder's Hitchcockian head trip
IN THE THIRD EPISODE OF SHOWTIME'S strange, riveting, and often hilarious new series The Curse, the married co-hosts of an in-development reality show watch a focus group respond to the pilot. \"I like the lady,\" says one woman. \"I do wish that he had a sense of humor or a personality.\" \"There's zero sexual tension,\" another participant complains. The final verdict: \"There was just something off about him. Like I said, either be hot or funny. He wasn't either to me.\"
HOW BARBRA MADE IT TO BROADWAY
In an excerpt from her new memoir, Barbra Streisand recalls the audition that led to her debut