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Yurt Life
Sleeping in the wilds of a Bed-Stuy backyard gets analog-camera guru Kyle Depew into nature. (It saves on rent, too.)
180 minutes with… Bobbi Salvör Menuez
Serving up cucumber ball gags at the model-actor-artist-cook’s conceptual dinner series.
Where's the Party?: Allison P. Davis
Adventures in Liquid Shopping Did you know you can get plastered at Nordstrom?
THIS IS AMERICA
Eleven years after the election of the first black president, and three years into Trump’s reactionary rise to power, it is no longer possible to ignore the pervasive threat of domestic terrorism.
What Should Your Kids Be Watching?
The streaming wars are coming for children, which means more minefields—and more excellent television.
The National Interest: Jonathan Chait
Donald Trump’s War on Journalism His attack on Amazon may be his most egregious abuse of power yet.
Movies / Everybody's Fine
In A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood, Mister Rogers saves a journalist’s soul (and maybe yours).
Doing Diplo
The DJ-mogul-cowboy-dad is all grown up and ready to party.
The Joy Of Enemies
My Wife’s Enemies Are Now My Enemies, Too. The pleasures of a certain kind of in-law.
The World Of Designer Rick Owens
A career-spanning conversation with Rick Owens, the godfather of goth glam.
Donald Trump's Other Lawyer
Vastly more powerful than Rudy Giuliani, Attorney General William Barr is exercising the full force of the Justice Department to defend a president in crisis.
Power: Gabriel Debenedetti
Is Candidate Bloomberg Actually Good for Biden? What changes for donors with a (second) billionaire in the race.
Life With Françoise Gilot
The 98-year-old artist, who had two children with Pablo Picasso and later went on to marry Jonas Salk, still paints every day in her Upper West Side apartment.
Who Were the 2010s?
As the decade began, there were reasons to be optimistic: America had elected its first black president, and the world hadn’t cascaded into total financial collapse. Obamacare, for all its flaws, was passed, and then came the Iran deal and the Paris climate accords. Sure, there were danger signs: the anger of the tea party, the slow hollowing out of legacy news media, a troubling sense that somehow the bankers got away with it. But then maybe the immediacy of social media gave some hope, at least if you listened to the chatter of the bright young kids in the Bay Area trying to build a new kind of unmediated citizenship. Maybe everyday celebrity, post-gatekeeper, would change the world for the better. Some of that happened. But we also ended up with the alt-right and Donald Trump, inequality, impeachment, and debilitating fomo. How did we get here? Throughout the past weeks, we had long talks over multiple sessions with six people who helped shape the decade—and were shaped by it—to hear what they’ve learned.
Laura Dern Doesn't Need Our Approval
But we gave her an honorary degree anyway.
Margaret Atwood – The Handmaid's Tale arrived
The Handmaid’s Tale arrived.
Kim Kardashian West
Reality TV altered reality.
Following The President's Orders
Gordon Sondland is an equal-opportunity flunky.
Ta-Nehisi Coates
Race defined the decade.
Kevin Systrom
Instagram became the world’s filter.
Jonah Peretti
BuzzFeed made the world a meme.
DeRay Mckesson
Black Lives Matter started a revolution—and a counterrevolution.
The cultural pages – Critics
Are You There, God? It's Me, Kanye.Jesus Is King swerves between consecration and commodification
Ocean of Longing
French-Senegalese filmmaker Mati Diop’s Cannes sensation Atlantics is a migrant-ghost story for our time.
Knives Out Will Kill You
Cracking the mystery of why Rian Johnson followed up Star Wars with a whodunit.
Still Here
Gerald DeCock has lived in his defiantly bohemian studio at the Chelsea Hotel for 25 years.
The National Interest: Jonathan Chait
The White House's Godfather Fantasy If the Trumps are the Corleones, that makes us the marks.
The Zombie Campaign
JOE BIDEN IS THE LEAST FORMIDABLE FRONT-RUNNER EVER. WILL IT MATTER?
Don't Call Her Quirky
In The Crown, Helena Bonham Carter plays Princess Margaret in her tabloid-hounded middle age. Some of it seems familiar.
What's Left of Condé Nast
It held on to its glossy illusions longer than most magazine companies. But now, two years after Si Newhouse died (and Graydon Carter left), Anna Wintour and a new CEO from San Francisco, Roger Lynch, are mapping out a future they can afford.