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Seed Money
How One Billionaire WITH A Savior Complex And a Voracious Sexual Appetite Got Conned By His Best Friend, Who Saw Him As The Perfect Mark.
Nikyatu Jusu's Fables
The director of Nanny, this year's most acclaimed film at Sundance, blends West African folklore and horror.
From Furniture Factory to Artist's Studio in the Bronx
Móyòsórè "Moyo" Martins loves to paint at midnight.
How to Live In a Catastrophe
In search of a way to think clearly about the planetary crisis.
Atlanta Played By Its Own Rules
Stephen Glover on testing the boundaries of television as his (and his brother’s) show signs off.
Imagine This
What happens when kids unleash the full power of their imaginations on a massive pile of Lego® bricks
Mathias Döpfner – Achtung, Baby
Axel Springer's Mathias Döpfner wants to be an old-school press baron for the digital age, part Murdoch but also part Musk. And still very German.
The Curse of Kentwood
One year ago, Britney Spears was freed from a notorious conservatorship. What possessed her father to seize near-total control of her life?
The Velveteen Rabbit Was Always More Than a Children's Book
Written for a daughter who was growing up too fast, Margery Williams Bianco's hundred-year-old story is a memorial to what we all lose in exchange for adulthood.
The Real Estate: Kim Velsey
The Dinosaurs of Park Avenue Apartments in grand uptown co-ops are sitting on the market for years. Why?
Sandeep Salter
At the shop with the nightgown doyenne of Brooklyn Heights.
The Group Portrait: Fighting Fires and Men
The FDNY's first woman commissioner puts its gender gap in relief.
The System: Zak Cheney-Rice
The Rebirth of Kanye West Meet the new face of Black conservatism.
Saturday Night at Slutty Vegan
Brooklyn's best party is a line for veggie burgers.
What Keeps Her Up at Night
Taylor Swift after dark.
If You Build It...
A play about Robert Moses? Only in New York-and London.
The Future of Black Politics is at Stake in Georgia
The legacy of the civil-rights movement may hinge on Raphael Warnock’s reelection campaign.
Plywood Gourmet
The Pandemic Gave 12,000 Restaurants a Once-In-a-Lifetime Chance to Crab Land. They're Not About to Give It Back.
Suddenly Sorta Spielberg
Gabriel LaBelle beat out 2,000 actors toplay a version of the famed director as a teen by embracing the meta-ness.
You Can Sit on (Some) of the Art at the Horts' House
Everything is always changing in Michael and Susan Hort’s live-in museum in Tribeca.
What Was Brangelina?
The couple were always known for their image-making savvy. Now, as their divorce reenters the press cycle, we're reminded of who's better at it.
1776's Sara Porkalob Has Some Notes
\"Are you artistically fulfilled by 1776?\" \"No, I'm not.\"
Shanti Gooljar
Behind the wheel with the go-to driving instructor of the Gossip Girl set.
The Group Portrait: Pain Relievers
A new stand-up show offers Chinese feminists a space to joke about their troubles.
The System: Eric Levitz
Return of the Hostage Takers Joe Biden's last chance to stop the GOP's economic sabotage.
Weve Been Thinking About Holograms All Wrong
Forget reanimating dead musicians. This technology is for living performers who can't stand their bandmates.
The Convalescence Campaign
John Fetterman is trying to flip Pennsylvania's open Senate seat while fending off a celebrity doctor and recovering from a stroke that almost killed him.
How to Make a Semi-fascist Party Who Knew It Could Be This Easy?
In mid-September, I attended the National Conservatism Conference in Miami, where Republican politicians, right-wing thought leaders, and various party apparatchiks had gathered to articulate their vision of the conservative movement's future.
123 MINUTES WITH ... Joyce Szuflita
The school-admissions consultant who assuages the fears of Brooklyn's most anxious parents.
The Group Portrait: The Backstage Spirits of Phantom
The people behind 35 years' music of the night.