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THE ERIC ADAMS SMASH - AND - GRAB
It's a brazenly transactional era of government here in New York City.| FRANK CARONE is its master practitioner.
JEFF ZUCKER'S FLEET STREET MISADVENTURE
The former CNN and NBC boss wants a new media empire. Is that even possible in 2024?
MECHANISMS of CONTROL
Andrew Huberman has attracted millions of acolytes by preaching self-discipline and healthy lifestyle habits. But those closest to him suggest there is a darker side to his appeal.
Streetscape: Mark Jacobson
Charging Ahead Baruch Herzfeld wants to end the rash of e-bike battery fires.
Neighborhood News: The 'SNL' Guys' Ferry Isn't Adrift
Colin Jost and Pete Davidson's architect has a real plan.
The National Interest: Jonathan Chait
The Paramilitary Candidate | Trump has made justice for insurrectionists the center of his campaign.
Adelle Waldman Takes the Early Shift
In 2013, she published a novel that literary Brooklyn couldn’t stop talking about. It took a $12.25-an-hour job at a retail store to write the next one.
BIG FEELINGS
Its made her the most influential parenting expert since Dr. Spock.
THE SQUATTERS OF BEVERLY HILLS
AFTER A FUGITIVE DOCTOR ABANDONED HIS MANSION, AN ENTERPRISING GROUP OF PARTY THROWERS MANAGED TO SLIDE IN THROUGH THE FRONT DOOR, UPENDING THE COMFORTABLE LIVES OF THEIR NEW, ULTRAWEALTHY NEIGHBORS.
THE RIGHT ΤΟ CHANGE SEX
Trans kids are under attack. It’s time we found the courage to defend them.
Dynasties: Tanya Gold Fall of the House of Windsor The crisis behind the tabloid sensation surrounding Princess Catherine.
TO OUTSIDERS, the British royal family can seem like a curio.
192 MINUTES WITH ...Reesa Teesa
The \"Who TF Did I Marry\" TikToker, whose tale of a lying husband went megaviral, says she won't be fooled again.
Neighborhood News: Soldiers in the Subway
The governor sends in the troops.
The System: Zak Cheney-Rice
But His Crimes... Are voters forgetting the extraordinary accusations against Trump?
The Crying Game: Weeping on Cue is the Toughest Skill an Actor Can Learn. Could I Do It, Too?
Crying has been one of the most popular activities of the past four to eight years; the ability to do it on command has been considered the apex of acting ability for much longer. Consider the 2017 Decider investigation that revealed 96 percent of Best Actress winners over the past 50 years openly wept during their performances (compared with 60 percent of Best Actor winners, thanks to boring yet pervasive sociological dynamics that have long poisoned the human experience).
Performance Review: Allison P. Davis
Endless Love: J.Lo returns to her rom-com roots. Is she tired of repeating herself?
121 Minutes With ...Christopher Wool
The blue-chip punk-rock artist rented an empty floor of an office building to put on a show just the way he wanted to.
A New Renaissance
The Met's tremendous exhibition of Black art redefines modernism.
A Secret History
In Tommy Orange's second novel, a family inherits more than it knows.
All Trap, No Glimmer
Dakota Johnson can't convince us-or herself that this Spider-tale is worth spinning.
The Playwright vs. the Theater
Three months ago, Victor I. Cazares decided to stop taking their HIV medication until the New York Theatre Workshop calls for a cease-fire in Gaza.
Just a Couple of Ibsen Lovers
Early in their relationship, Amy Herzog and Sam Gold decided never to work together. But neither could resist this adaptation.
Made for Her
Jessica Lange's haunting role in Mother Play, like so much of her work, is one only she could perform.
TRENDLET: Oeufs Mayo Are All Over the Place
\"It's eggs on eggs...\"
RESTAURANT REVIEW: Just Plain Good
With little buzz and no influencers in sight, Alma Negra is a perfect neighborhood restaurant.
DESIGN HUNTING: A HOUSE IN BED-STUY (for When She Is Home)
Fashion editor Gabriella Karefa-Johnson settles down-for now.
LOST
ANILU CHADWICK RECOGNIZES SOME of the children’s names right away. Chadwick, a lawyer for Kids in Need of Defense, has spent the past five years poring over lists of families separated under the Trump administration’s “zero tolerance” policy whose cases have yet to be resolved. Some of the children’s names stand out because she crossed paths with them back in 2018, when she represented them at their immigration hearings after they were torn from their parents’ side at the southern border. Those names always remind her of what she witnessed that year. The eerie silence of the children’s shelters. The kids so young that they couldn’t even explain who they were or where they came from. The hearing she had to pause in order to soothe a client with a nursery rhyme. Then there are the names that have simply grown familiar through repetition: the children whose cases appeared on the lists years ago and remain open.
In Line at St.Brigid
THE CITY'S CAMPAIGN TO PUSH MIGRANTS OUT HAS TURNED THEIR LIVES INTO AN INTERMINABLE LOOP.
Neighborhood News: The Ingels West Side
The architect's other projects may be stalled and delayed, but BIG buildings now bracket the High Line.
The National Interest: Jonathan Chait
Russian Dolls Trump has finally remade Republicans into Putin's playthings.