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Half human, half robot
I was born missing my left arm. And while there really isn’t anything I can’t do, it felt like an obvious inadequacy in a world saturated with an obsessive desire for perfection.
Writing for Friends was no joke
EVER SINCE I RETIRED FROM TELEVISION WRITING AT the ripe age of 38, people have asked me, \"Why would you quit such a cool career?\" It's impossible to answer this question over cocktail-party conversation. Where would I even begin? There were the grueling hours, the egotistical bosses, the dysfunction-there's everything the Writers Guild of America is currently fighting against with their ongoing strike, and the issues have only gotten more complex since I left in 2008.
The man who was everything, and then some
IN A NATION TORN APART BY, OF ALL THINGS, the perception that drag performers will corrupt our children, the time is right for a documentary about the glitter king himself, Little Richard, a performer who broke all kinds of boundaries at a time when doing so could be life-threatening.
THE NEW ROMANTICS
A decade after Fifty Shades, pop-culture romance has become alarmingly wholesome
BAJA IN THE BALANCE
The campaign to preserve a region, and a local fishing industry
THE HEALING SEA
In a quest to preserve the zones that let oceans thrive, ecologist Enric Sala heads for the South Pacific
CHANGING CLOTHES
Inside Stella McCartney's quest to transform the fashion industry from within
DÉJÀ VU
IT'S GETTING LATE EARLY IN THE GOP PRIMARY, AS THE FRONT RUNNER'S RIVALS STRUGGLE WITH THE CAMPAIGN'S CENTRAL QUESTION: HOW DO YOU STOP TRUMP?
The day hip-hop changed forever
AS A PERSON WHO LOVES HISTORY, I'M one of those people who can spot a historical moment as it's happening-both as a participant and as an outside viewer.
Climate Is Everything
One of the enduring legacies of this summer's heat waves is a disease that few people have heard of. First documented in El Salvador's sugarcane workers 21 years ago, chronic kidney disease of nontraditional origin (CKDnt) occurs among manual laborers working in high-heat conditions.
THE PARENT TRAP
American teens are having a hard time. High school students reporting chronic feelings of sadness and hopelessness rose from 1 in 5 to 1 in 3 from 2008 to 2019, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). By the pandemic fall of 2021, the feelings were reported by 42% of high school students and almost 60% of girls. The thing is, a lot of parents are in really bad shape too.
The Secretary on education
THE TWO YEARS THAT MIGUEL Cardona has been in the nation's top education job haven't exactly been serene: In June, the Supreme Court rejected President Joe Biden's student-loan-forgiveness plan and, in another ruling, essentially overturned affirmative action.
The creative ways teachers are using AI
PETER PACCONE, A SOCIAL-STUDIES TEACHER IN SAN Marino, Calif., has a new teacher's aid helping him in the classroom this year.
Special counsel
In Biden probe
Paul Reubens
Forever in character
Why did early puberty spike during the pandemic?
ITALY NOTICED FIRST. IT WAS THE FIRST COUNTRY TO lock down during the COVID-19 pandemic, and later in 2020, researchers at Florence's Anna Meyer Children's University Hospital were the first to point out a puzzling trend: more young girls than ever before had been showing up at the hospital with clear signs of early-onset puberty.
Why Trump's Georgia case may matter most
THE SIGNS IN GEORGIA WERE THERE FOR MONTHS. BACK in February, the forewoman of a special grand jury hinted that her advisory panel had recommended criminal charges against \"not a short list\" of familiar names in connection to an effort to overturn the results of Georgia's 2020 presidential election.
AFTER THE FLAMES
In the Maui wildfires, a summer of climate warnings reached a hellish crescendo
Fran Drescher – 6 Questions
Fran Drescher The president of the actors' union on joining the writers' strike, the impact of streaming and AI, and the Nanny memes burning up the net
The Struggles of John Fetterman
An unconventional senator opens up about his battle with depression
AI By the People, For the People
The workers making AI possible rarely see its rewards. One indian startup is trying to do things differently
THERE'S NO RIGHT OR WRONG IN MOVIE LOVE
IF YOU’RE LIKE MOST PEOPLE, YOU PROBably freeze when someone asks you what you think is the best movie of all time. What if you give a confident answer, only to wake up in the middle of the night, certain you should have said something else?
THE boiling POINT
EXTREME HEAT IS ENDANGERING AMERICA'S WORKERS AND ITS ECONOMY
Health Matters
There's no shortage of recommendations about how to become happier. But how effective are they?
NUCLEAR DÉJÀ VU
J. Robert Oppenheimer's shadow has stretched well into the 21st century. We are still living in the nuclear age he helped create in 1945-and still confronted with the same moral and political dilemmas he wrestled with about weapons of mass destruction. Now, Christopher Nolan's new film Oppenheimer offers a chance to reinvigorate public debate about the nuclear threat.
The best-selling YA author Elizabeth Acevedo has written her first novel for adults, and it's full of magic
THE KERNEL OF THE STORY THAT WOULD become Family Lore, Elizabeth Acevedo’s first novel for adults, came to her in college, after a visit with one of her aunts in the Bronx.
ISRAEL'S WAR WITH ITSELF
The roots of the country's fight over democracy, and where it could go next
Life in Plastic
In Barbie, Greta Gerwig and Margot Robbie try to find art in commerce
American Original
Megan Rapinoe redefined women's sports. Now she's aiming for a three-peat in her final World Cup
8 Questions: Keir Starmer
The U.K. opposition leader on placing nation over party, embracing business, and Labour's plans to end 13 years of Tory rule