CATEGORIES
Kategorier
SUSTAINABILITY ACHIEVEMENT OF THE YEAR
AT ITS HEADQUARTERS IN SANT'AGATA Bolognese, Italy, Lamborghini has implemented a multi-pronged strategy to work more cleanly and support environmental research. The company's \"Direzione Cor Tauri\" plan is driven by the largest investment in Lamborghini history, €1.5 billion over four years
THE WORLD'S GREATEST AUTO DISRUPTORS
GOING FULL SPEED AHEAD ON INNOVATION WHILE OVERCOMING THE LINGERING EFFECTS OF THE PANDEMIC
'Final' climate report
Unsettling unknowns
The history of Presidents who (almost) got indicted
DONALD TRUMP COULD MAKE HISTORY ONCE again—this time as the first former U.S. President ever to be criminally indicted. If it happens, it’s apt to be by the Manhattan grand jury probing his alleged hush-money payment to former porn star Stormy Daniels before the 2016 election. Daniels, real name Stephanie Clifford, says she and Trump had an affair; Trump denies this.
The case for betting on Tom Wambsgans' Succession
MIDWAY THROUGH THE THIRD SEASON of Succession, Tom Wambsgans tells his underling and cousin by marriage, Greg Hirsch, a colorful anecdote from an empire in decline. “Sporus was a young slave boy—he was Nero’s favorite,” Tom (Matthew Macfadyen) explains.
Working through grief after losing my father
AFTER MY FATHER DIES, I BECOME, FOR A time, someone I do not recognize. Entire weeks are all but lost to me, scooped out of my once airtight memory. Our rental term ends two months after the funeral, and when we move into another house, I hardly remember packing or unpacking.
THE POINT OF COLLEGE
Soon after the 2008-9 financial crash tanked the economy, Americans' unflagging faith in higher education started to falter. By 2011, more than half of college graduates were unor underemployed. The economy rebounded and the conversation faded, only to be revived again by the epic fallout from the pandemic. This time, the college degree's comeuppance has been more profound.
THE DARING OF GEHRY
Revisiting the museum that started it all, the 94-year-old architect reflects on his methods, his influence, and his ambitious new projects
Crimes and Punishment
AS THE WAR DRAGS ON AND EVIDENCE OF RUSSIAN ATROCITIES MOUNTS, UKRAINE SEEKS JUSTICE
Ali Wong and Steven Yeun face off in a BEEF for the ages
IMPLICIT IN EVERY VIRAL ROAD-RAGE video is the same question: What is wrong with these people? BEEF, a wild black comedy from first-time creator Lee Sung Jin, delves deep into the sources and fallout of two L.A. motorists’ fury.
An artist creates, amid distraction and because of it
MAKING ANYTHING OF VALUE—A work of art, a poem, a solid piece of furniture—demands a deep descent into the self, to the point that it’s easy to neglect the needs of others in your orbit.
Should I take a pill to prevent Long COVID?
RECENT PRELIMINARY RESEARCH HAS found that certain medications may reduce the chance of developing Long COVID if taken shortly after catching COVID-19.
Health Matters
CLIMATE EXPERTS HAVE LONG warned about the many ways a warming planet can negatively affect human health. Now that global temperatures are predicted to increase by 1.5°C by the 2030s, that risk is becoming increasingly real.
Proposition: Cats Are More Libertarian Than Dogs
Cats, like libertarians, think for themselves.
PARTING SHOT Lily Tomlin
IF LIVING WELL IS THE BEST REVENGE, THEN LILY TOMLIN IS GETTING all the revenge, especially in her new film Moving On (March 17). She and Jane Fonda team up once again to get retribution-the murderous kind against a widower who wronged them.
The Return of TWICE
The K-pop queens are back with a new album and tour
RISKY BUSINESS
AS SPORTS BETTING EXPLODES IN THE U.S., EXPERTS WORRY A BOOM IN PROBLEM GAMBLING WILL FOLLOW. SOME ARGUE IT'S ALREADY HERE
Where Did COVID-19 Come From?
With no proof of origin in a lab or an animal, experts have taken sides and dug themselves in
A Growing Threat to Nursing Home Safety
A Newsweek investigation reveals nearly a third of the nation’s 15,000 facilities are overdue for inspection, putting the lives and care of residents at risk
The Changing Face of Entrepreneurship
WOMEN, PARTICULARLY WOMEN of COLOR, are LAUNCHING COMPANIES in GREATER NUMBERS than EVER BEFORE. But FUNDING REMAINS a BIG PROBLEM
THE REAL BANK CRISIS
The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and the Biden Administration's unprecedented response, guaranteeing deposits and backstopping regional banks, has catalyzed an important and necessary national conversation over what went wrong, and what can be done to prevent future crises. But SVB's fall has also set off a frenzy of mythmaking, ranging from ideological clichés to hyperbole.
The Mail Man
INITIALLY CAST AS A TRUMPIAN VILLAIN, LOUIS DEJOY IS DELIVERING FOR THE POSTAL SERVICE, AND DEMOCRATS
In pursuit of the elusive climate drama
IN THE NEAR FUTURE IMAGINED BY THE Apple TV+ sci-fi drama Extrapolations, humans have discovered how to communicate with humpback whales.
Reading the (recording) room
ON FEB. 19, MANHATTAN'S BEACON THEATER was at capacity for a live taping of The Read, the beloved pop-culture podcast hosted by comedians Kid Fury and Crissle West.
THE WORLD'S Greatest PLACES
The travel industry is back in full swing in 2023, but not without notable shifts in how and where we wander. Steeper costs and increased interest in sustainability and authenticity are reshaping the landscape. Explore these 15 and 35 more of the most exciting spots at time.com/worldsgreatestplaces
CLOCK WISE
After three years of pandemic, our relationship with time has changed- maybe for the better
Luxury watches search for a different kind of green
AS WATCHMAKERS FROM AROUND THE WORLD GATHER in late March in Geneva for one of the industry's biggest events the Watches and Wonders fair-Switzerlandbased Oris will announce a luxury diver's watch with a swirly blue and green dial.
An amateur researcher follows a hunch, and the rest is history
RICHARD III AS A FICTIONAL CHARacter has a lot to answer for: Shakespeare painted him as a deformed, power-mad schemer.
BIDEN'S BIG OIL TRUCE
Opening a wilderness to drilling, the President recasts relations with an industry he'd vowed to phase out
Christian revival's unique opportunity
SOMETHING HAPPENED AT ASBURY UNIVERSITY. MANY Christians called the weeks-long worship service at the small Wilmore, Ky., school, which attracted tens of thousands and disrupted campus life, a revival.