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KOSHER SALT IS ACTUALLY JUST BIG SALT
How did it become so popular?

THE ERA OF MIGHT MAKES RIGHT
In the MAGA vision of the national interest, America will be more like Russia, China, and Iran.

Growing Up Murdoch
Inside the family fight that will determine the future of conservative media

TINASHE IN BLOOM
The singer has always bet on herself, an independent artist and a viral hitmaker who writes her own songs and dances to her own beat. Now, after a year of record fame, she's contemplating what comes next.

THE ARTIST'S WAY
From New Mexico landscapes to a remote Norwegian island, these retreats offer the perfect place to focus on your creativity.

BEST IN CLASS
Forget dominating an entire fashion industry. These brands are satisfied with perfecting a single category.

HODA KOTB HAD HER DREAM JOB THEN DECIDED TO WALK AWAY
The former TODAY show co-anchor discusses how turning 60 changed her perspective of what's possible personally and professionally. And why you need a “mini plan” before you quit anything.

THE HAIRBRUSH RENAISSANCE IS HERE
Never mind the cheap drugstore options you have stashed in a drawer. The latest wave of beautifully crafted brushes are a return to a bygone era of beauty.

THE MELANCHOLIC SOUND OF SUCCESS
After publishing a best-selling memoir and receiving two Grammy nominations for her album Jubilee, Michelle Zauner (also known as Japanese Breakfast) still felt sad—so she decided to write about it.

AGING IN THE SPOTLIGHT
The female filmmakers behind some of the year's biggest movies are changing the way we see—and talk about—women over the age of 40.

THE FUNNY GIRL
Keyla Monterroso Mejia had always thought of herself as a Hollywood outsider. But with a handful of big-deal projects that debut this year, she's realizing the joke may be on her.

SALMA RUNS THE SHOW
Don't call it a renaissance. Or some mid-career, midlife metamorphosis. The actress is doing what she's always done: dominate.

ABOUT FACE
From very fancy lasers to bone-shaving surgery, there's no shortage of options when it comes to tweaking our jawlines. But as treatments become easier to obtain, should we be taking a harder look at the side effects?

CALL TO ACTION
With extreme weather events happening more and more frequently, it can be hard to know how to best support those affected. Here, seven people who've experienced a climate disaster share what they wish others knew.

WHAT WOULD YOU PAY TO SMELL LIKE ONE IN EIGHT BILLION?
One bottle can run tens of thousands of dollars and take months to make. But for luxury fragrance connoisseurs, bespoke scents are well worth the money.

THE BOOK OF RUTH
How an American radical reinvented back-yard gardening.

LEAVE WITH DESSERT
Graydon Carter’s great magazine age.

JUST BETWEEN US
The pleasures and pitfalls of gossip.

THE FRENZY Joyce Carol Oates
Early afternoon, driving south on the Garden State Parkway with the girl beside him.

After 50 years in education, Snow retiring from school board
After 12 years on the Blue Hill school board, chair Jan Snow will retire when her term expires in April.

Students to showcase independent study projects
On Wednesday, March 19, from 5 to 7 p.m., George Stevens Academy will host its annual Independent Study and Internship Program (ISIP) Student Exhibition.

DIAA March artist a longtime multifaceted creator
The Deer Isle Artists Association announces that David McBeth is the March Artist in Residence.

GSA and local boutique partner for prom 'shopping' experience
Donated attire will be free to local students

Hard-earned skills are key to this family's blue economy success
Dan Hitchcock's first foray into the Blue Economy wasn't intended to be permanent. Instead, Hitchcock's summertime job, working on the Isle au Haut mailboat, was a way for the self-described ski bum, who grew up in western Maine, to earn enough money to get back to Colorado where he planned to live.

Mariners lacrosse teams combine to go 4-0 in huge week
The Maine Maritime Academy women’s lacrosse team logged a perfect week with a pair of impressive non-conference wins.

Students to showcase independent study projects
The event, which will take place in the GSA gym, will showcase the program experiences of approximately 120 11th and 12th grade students. The event is open to the public, according to a press release, and community members are invited to see the exhibits and hear directly from the students about their projects.

Naomi Fry on Jay McInerney's "Chloe's Scene"
As a teen-ager, long before I lived in New York, I felt the city urging me toward it. N.Y.C., with its art and money, its drugs and fashion, its misery and elation—how tough, how grimy, how scary, how glamorous! For me, one of its most potent siren calls was “Chloe’s Scene,” a piece written for this magazine, in 1994, by the novelist Jay McInerney, about the then nineteen-year-old sometime actress, sometime model, and all-around It Girl Chloë Sevigny.

INTERIORS
The tyranny of taste in Vincenzo Latronico’s “Perfection.”

ONWARD AND UPWARD WITH THE ARTS BETTING ON THE FUTURE
Lucy Dacus after boygenius.

INHERIT THE PLAY
The return of “A Streetcar Named Desire” and “Ghosts.”