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Any Given Judgment Day
Al Pacino is the disgraced college football coach in Paterno.
The Great Work Returns
Angels in America crashes back into the room.
On The Waterfront
Globally accented seafood meets picturesque coastal setting at Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s latest.
All Eyes On Deck
How Below Deck, a reality show pitched as Downton Abbey on a luxury Caribbean rent-a-yacht, became Bravo’s new flagship.
Department Of The Interior
Revived on Broadway with Ethan Hawke and Paul Dano, True West simmers without boiling over.
Do The Democrats Have To Tap Their Inner Robespierre In 2020?
Targeting the ultrarich is actually pretty unifying.
I Have A Feeling We're Not In New York Anymore
HUDSON YARDS is a billionaire’s fantasy city, where nothing is ever dirty and everything works, where you can live your PERFECT LIFE and never have to leave— provided you can pay for it.
The Only Man Who Could Build Oz
How STEPHEN ROSS outmaneuvered, outspent, out-leveraged, and out-sweet-talked his way into the LARGEST REAL- ESTATE-DEVELOPMENT DEAL in America.
Black Lives Lawyer
Trayvon Martin, Mike Brown, Tamir Rice—Ben Crump is trying to turn a protest movement into a legal crusade.
It's Shiv's Turn
Sarah Snook has made Succession’s hard-nosed heiress somehow sympathetic. It must be the side-eye.
Maybe It's Lyme
What happens when illnness becomes an identity?Among the symptoms that chronic-Lyme patients describe, “brain fog” is the one everyone talks about: trouble thinking and focusing, forgetfulness, confusion. There’s fatigue, the kind of exhaustion that might make it feel too arduous to get out of bed. Then there’s pain—headaches, joint pain, muscle pain, pain that won’t go away. Or maybe the pain does go away—it comes and goes. Or maybe there’s nausea. Or your eyes hurt. Or you’ve got panic attacks, or bladder issues
Last Woman Standing
Belittled for decades by executives at Viacom and CBS, mocked by journalists and insulted by her own father Shari, Redstone now sits atop a $30 billion media empire
Putin's 2020 Playbook
Our electoral vulnerabilities are so extreme, the next hack could easily be worse.
41 Minutes With … Tom Steyer
The billionaire can’t believe you’re ready to give up on impeachment.
The Mckinsey Way To Save An Island
Why is a bankrupt Puerto Rico spending more than a billion dollars on expert advice?
What Follows It Follows?
David Robert Mitchell on his ambitious, divisive, long-awaited new movie, Under the Silver Lake.
The Annette Bening Method
On Broadway in a new production of All My Sons, she’ll overprepare—and then wing it.
How About Pete?
Pete Buttigieg is a gay Harvard alum, an Oxford grad, and fluent in Gramsci, Joyce, and Norwegian. And he’s the Democrats’ folksiest heartland hope. Really!
What's That Sound?
In Ashley Fure’s compositions, it could be the hum of a giant steel aircraft cable.
For Decades, Country Singers Outsourced Their Songwriting To Professionals. Did Taylor Swift Murder Music Row?
COUNTRY MUSIC HALL OF FAMER Harlan Howard once described country songwriting as “three chords and the truth.”
The Art Of The Slurp
The Chinese-food scene has never been better, and the elegant Hunan Slurp in the East Village is the latest reason why.
Jeremy Corbyn, 1970s Revanchist, Is Suddenly The Face Of The New New Left
THE POLITICS OF Britain and the U.S. can have a strange, synchronized rhythm to them.
John David Washington
Pretending to be tourists with the BlacKkKlansman star.
10 Years After The Crash, We Are Still Living In The World It Brutally Remade
Sometimes you don’t know how deep the hole is until you try to fill it. In 2009, staring down what looked to anyone with a calculator like the biggest financial crisis since 1929, the federal government poured $830 billion into the economy—a spending stimulus bigger, by some measures, than the entire New Deal—and the country barely noticed. It registered the crisis, though. The generation that came of age in the Great Depression was indelibly shaped by that experience of deprivation, even though what followed was what Henry Luce famously called, in 1941, “the American Century.” He meant the 20th, and, to judge from our present politics, at least—“Make America Great Again” on one side of the aisle; on the other, the suspicion that the president is a political suicide bomber, destroying the pillars of government—he probably wouldn’t have made the same declaration about the 21st. A decade now after the beginning of what has come to be called the Great Recession, and almost as long since economic growth began to tick upward and unemployment downward, the cultural and psychological imprint left by the financial crisis looks as profound as the ones left by the calamity that struck our grandparents. All the more when you look beyond the narrow economic data: at a new radical politics on both left and right; at a strident, ideological pop culture obsessed with various apocalypses; at an internet powered by envy, strife, and endless entrepreneurial hustle; at opiates and suicides and low birthrates; and at the resentment, racial and gendered and otherwise, by those who felt especially left behind. Over the following pages, we cast a look back, and tried to take a seismic reading of the financial earthquake and its aftershocks, including those that still jolt us today.
Lost Weegee Crime Photos Revealed!
UNSEEN FOR 82 YEARS HISTORIANS, JOURNALISTS ASTOUNDED !HIDING IN A JUNK STORE BOX
His Odd Present
With his fifth studio album, IGOR, Tyler, the Creator shows us where he’s been headed all along.
The Stolen Kids Of Sarah Lawrence
When Larry Ray visited his daughter at college, her roommates were happy to let him spend the night. Nine years later, they are still struggling to get out from under his grip.
39 Minutes With … H1ghSky1
The most popular video game on the planet anoints its youngest star yet.
Sea Wall In The Summertime
Jake Gyllenhaal and Tom Sturridge in dialogue about taking their conjoined monologues to Broadway.
Ivanka To City: Drop Dead
After the White House, she probably CAN’T GO BACK to the city that made her. So she has cannily devised another EXIT STRATEGY.