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Wiigging out in 1960s Palm Beach
VIETNAM. STONEWALL. CHARLES Manson. Woodstock.
How do you solve a Problem like the human race?
NETFLIX'S 3 BODY PROBLEM MIGHT BE THE BIGGEST TV series to hit Earth this year.
THE BLACK COUNTRY LEGACY
Beyoncé becomes the spiritual heir to a lineage long ago erased by the mainstream
A NEW AGE OF NAVAL WARFARE
With the sinking of the Sergei Kotov in early March, a whopping one-third of Russia's Black Sea fleet has been disabled. The maritime theater of the war in Ukraine remains the most significant since the Falklands. But it is also part of a larger story about naval power—which has come back as a central feature of struggles from the Black Sea to the Red Sea, South China Sea, and Taiwan Strait.
Zyn triggers fears of a new teen nicotine craze
NOT SO LONG AGO, JUUL WAS SEEN AS THE NEW MARLboro.
Spring won't bring Gaza relief
THE WAR IN GAZA IS ENTERING ITS sixth month and its third season. More than 30,000 people have been killed there since the Israeli offensive answering Hamas' Oct. 7 massacre, and some 1.9 million displaced people have endured homelessness in punishing winter weather, marked by heavy rain and low temperatures.
IT'S TRUMP'S PARTY
The MAGA movement's takeover of the GOP is now complete
Intimacy and Magnitude
Filmmaker Christopher Nolan on why Oppenheimer's impact goes far beyond its 13 Oscar nominations
The D.C. Brief
WHEN ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-Cortez erupted on the national stage back in 2018, a lot of establishment Washington braced for the arrival of a Tea Party-style troublemaker from the left. Six years later, that assessment wasn't so much wrong as under-cooked. While the former bartender remains a key ally to the left, AOC's main job in 2024 may be President Joe Biden's most valuable pinch hitter.
Ramy Youssef
Ramy Youssef - The comedian on his new special More Feelings, connecting with the Palestinian cause, and finding laughter in vulnerability
A dual reckoning
ONCE I BECAME A CELEBRITY, MIAMI WAS MY BIGGEST market. Flying in from New York City, I could perform in two clubs in one night. Back then, those gigs paid $10,000, or maybe $12,000. It was good, easy money, and they treated me like the star I had become. I flew first-class, stayed in the best hotels, ate at elegant restaurants.
A stunning Shogun for the 21st century
IT TAKES HUBRIS TO MESS WITH ONE OF THE DEFINING TV events of the 20th century. The original Shogun, a miniseries based on James Clavell's best-selling 1975 doorstop, was a massive hit when it aired on NBC in 1980.
The beauty of blooming late
ON MY SECOND DAY IN L.A., BACK IN 1984, MY car caught on fire and I lost everything. I could have turned around and bought a bus ticket home to St. Louis. Instead, I chose to stay and press on. Forty years later, I'm not only still in Los Angeles, but I've found myself at the Emmys as part of the cast of a nominated TV show.
FORGING AN ASIAN EPIC
A new adaptation of Avatar: The Last Air-bender is a love letter to Asian and Indigenous cultures
DECLASSIFIED - THE SECRET SHARERS
MASS SURVEILLANCE AND SOCIAL MEDIA ARE CHANGING THE SPY GAME. INSIDE AMERICA'S SEARCH FOR A SMARTER WAY TO USE INTELLIGENCE
Women of the Year
12 extraordinary leaders building a more equal future
The New Antisemitism
HOW AN ANCIENT HATRED HAS REINVENTED ITSELF IN THE MODERN WORLD
What we owe 2020-somethings
IN JANUARY 2020, LUIS WAS 21 AND BEGINNING THE second semester of his junior year at a public university in New York City. He lived with family in Queens, and everyone pitched in to make ends meet.
Myanmar's war with itself
Neither strong enough to win nor damaged enough to lose
UKRAINE CAN'T WIN THE WAR
The long-awaited counteroffensive last year failed. Russia has recaptured Avdiivka, its biggest war gain in nine months. President Volodymyr Zelensky has been forced to quietly acknowledge the new military reality. The Biden Administration's strategy is now to sustain Ukrainian defense until after the U.S. presidential elections, in the hope of wearing down Russian forces in a long war of attrition.
5 low-stress ways to start decluttering
NONE OF THE TIDYING clichés ever really clicked with KC Davis, a therapist in Houston and mom to two young kids. \"I've always been a messy person,\" she says. \"I've never been able to 'clean as I go'.\" Davis knew there were plenty of people just like her: those who wanted a serene space but lacked the time and energy to get started. After finding bite-size strategies that worked for her, Davis wrote How to Keep House While Drowning: A Gentle Approach to Cleaning and Organizing.
As ice melts, polar bears scrounge for food
Some bears lost up to 3.75 lb. a day
Alexei Navalny
Founding father of the future Russia
Why are we more exhausted than ever?
PEOPLE ARE TIRED. LIKE, REALLY TIRED. AS EVIDENCED by recent trends such as \"Quiet Quitting,\" \"Coffee Badging,\" \"Bare Minimum Mondays,\" and most of all, \"The Great Resignation\" - when over 47 million Americans voluntarily resigned from their positions-people are feeling a strain on more than just their work calendars; they're feeling it on their spirits.
TRUMP'S MANY TRIALS
The first of Trump's criminal trials could be the \"goofiest of all cases\" against him
Lulu Wang The director of The Farewell on her new streaming series Expats, the power of empathy, and the lesson in a search for a salad with cranberries
Your breakout film, The Farewell, about a dying matriarch, asked questions about the difference between American and Chinese values when it comes to things like family and community. What were you trying to explore?
The uncancelable Larry David
IN THE 12TH AND FINAL SEASON OF CURB YOUR Enthusiasm, Larry David-a character based on and played by creator Larry David-pressures a busy hotel housekeeper to fish his glasses out of the toilet. He whines about having to pay a big \"condolence tip\" to a waiter whose mom just died. He muses to his buddy Leon Black (J.B. Smoove), who is Black, \"I wonder if a Black man going to Africa is like a Jew going to Israel.\" He calls Apple's Siri the C word. And that's all in the first episode.
The multiverse of Sarah J. Maas
IT'S 9:30 ON A FREEZING MONDAY NIGHT IN JANUARY and there's a line stretching down the block outside of Manhattan's Book Club Bar. The occasion: a midnight release party for fantasy author Sarah J. Maas' House of Flame and Shadow, the third entry in her Crescent City series. The twist there's always a twist where Maas is concerned-is that Maas is on her way to surprise the throng of almost exclusively female fans willing to wait in the cold to get their hands on her book the minute it becomes available.
WHAT MR BEAST WANTS
Jimmy Donaldson, the world's most successful YouTuber, is playing the long game
Menopause Gets Its Moment
WITH NEW ATTENTION FROM BUSINESS AND MEDICINE, A LIFE STAGE COMES OUT OF THE WINGS