CATEGORIES
Sharon D Clarke
IMAGINE YOU'RE ABOUT TO MAKE YOUR BROADWAY DEBUT IN A HIGHLY anticipated, groundbreaking musical, only to have it all put on hold because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Sacred Ground
“A cemetery so beautiful, it invites one to die,” said the caretaker of Tulcán, Ecuador's cemetery, before he was buried beneath the toucan topiaries he had sculpted. While ostensibly for the dead, burial rituals can also tell rich stories of a culture's living. From epitaph roasts in Romania, to cliff-hanging coffins in the Philippines, to a graveyard movie theater in Hollywood, here are some of the burial sites that are as fascinating as their tenants.
Navigating Your Career in an Upside-Down World
Work life in turmoil? Here are some ways to rethink-and remake-your career
Ivermectin: ‘Bogus' or ‘Miracle Drug?'
Separating science from politics is tough—especially when the public and politicians are looking over scientists’ shoulders
AMERICA'S MOST TRUSTED BRANDS 2022
Newsweek and BrandSpark® find the Services and E-commerce companies consumers trust most
Duran Duran – Forty Years Later
Duran Duran are back with their fifteen studio album Future Past
The Trouble with Online “Sharenting”
Social media featuring intimate family moments is popular and lucrative. It also comes with serious risks for kids
Talking Points
NEWSMAKERS
Staying Relevant
The pandemic is quickly making some skills obsolete, but there are strategies for coping, a new survey shows
In Focus
THE NEWS IN PICTURES
Obscure Tastes to Whet Your Travel Appetite
From the pages of the upcoming Gastro Obscura: A Food Adventurer’s Guide (Workman, October), find wonder and be inspired by foods and eating traditions from around the world. From an orange matchmaking festival in Malaysia to a bachelor’s stew prepared in a bathhouse in Morocco to the jiggly Jell-O salads of the Midwest, here are some of authors Cecily Wong and Dylan Thuras’ favorite culinary experiences from the collection.
America Can't Ignore Afghanistan
Exclusive: Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan says the Taliban can be a partner for peace, not a terrorist threat - if the U.S. stays engaged.
Playing Catchup on COVID
Scientists are testing new antiviral drugs, but they won’t be ready in time for the current wave of cases
Second Chances
According to one banker, the cure for the labor shortage is to hire people with criminal records
FLASHPOINT
Pakistan sees a victorious Taliban in Afghanistan to the west and a partner in China to the East. But the U.S. is at odds with both, pushing leader Imran Khan into a delicate balancing act.
Trippy Treatments
Psilocybin, the active ingredient in “magic mushrooms,” is undergoing clinical trials. It could be the biggest advance in treating depression since Prozac.
Was ‘Chaos-istan' Inevitable?
How Biden's influence during the Obama administration had long-lasting effects
Tipping the Work-Life Balance in Your Favor
A paycheck shouldn’t be the only reward for hard work
First Look at ‘FUTURES'
IF THERE WAS EVER A TIME TO reimagine what lies ahead, it’s today as we envision our post-pandemic world.
How Was Your Visit Today?
High marks on online ratings can benefit urgent care and E.R. doctors, but don't let their concern about those scores influence the care you receive. Here's how
What Have We Learned?
We will never forget 9/11. But a more interesting question at the 20th anniversary is, what should we remember—or more...
Fighting Terrorism from Afar
Can Joe Biden’s ‘over-the-horizon’ strategy in Afghanistan keep America safe? Defense experts are skeptical
Lost in the Shouting
In the school board battles across the country over race, the voices of Black parents talking about what their kids actually experience are often drowned out
Biden's Benghazi Moment
How the deadly Kabul AIRPORT ATTACK and bungled Afghanistan pullout could HAUNT HIS PRESIDENCY–and cost him the midterms.
Are Vaccine Mandates Justifiable?
Some call them reasonable public health measures, while others say they are an un-American invasion of privacy
How to Be a Work Rebel
Got a contrarian streak in you? Harvard’s Francesca Gino shares the right way to be an unconventional leader
The Archives
REWIND
Back to Work in a COVID World
These three strategies will make returning to work easier for you and your employees
Can Anyone Make China Play By The Rules?
The global economy depends on Tokyo and Washington coordinating their defense against cyber and trade threats, says Prime Minister Suga
Do You Have What It Takes to Run Your Own Business?
Here's how to figure out if you've got the right stuff to succeed