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64 Minutes With Installation Artist Christo
The installation artist returns to the scene of his Miami “crime.”
Listening To Estrogen
Hormones have always been a third rail in women’s mental health. They may also be a skeleton key.
Would Patrolling With The Border Patrol Change Your mind About The Border?
Some Border Patrol agents think that if liberal Americans saw what they saw, they’d change their mind about the border.
Folio: Yoko Ono Revisits Her Past
And the weather in her head.
Sandra Oh Gets Her Due!
After decades in supporting parts, Emmy nominee Sandra Oh plays the hero in Killing Eve.
Inside Blaze Foley
Ethan Hawke’s Blaze reconsiders an unsung country songwriter.
The Industry Imagining The Future Of W Magazine
Stefano Ronchi, editor of W magazine, has had just about enough, albeit in an unmussed, well- mannered, and not terribly bothered sort of way. It was the afternoon of August 9, the day after the magazine’s owner, the once mythically flush publishing firm of Condé Nast, had called a companywide meeting to run through various ways to save itself (most of which has already been leaked) after losing $120 million last year. Back-office functions were to be merged, seven of the company’s 23 floors at 1 World Trade Center would be sublet, and three magazines—Golf Digest, Brides and W—were going to be sold.
Tessa Thompson Knows People Can't Stop Thinking About Her … And Tweeting And Gifting And Talking About Her Love Of Goats, And Those Vagina Pants
IT’S UNCLEAR, STILL, who is to blame for the situation that occurred at Frank’s Cocktail Lounge in Fort Greene, Brooklyn. It could easily be the weather. The night air is the sort of steam-room moist-hot that allows for only one of two states of being: lethargic or horny. Even inside, with A/C on, our thighs stick to the bar’s cracked red vinyl seats. Or it could be the music.
Revenge Of Jamie Lee Curtis
In the new Halloween, shes the one hunting Michael Myers. Welcome to the age of big-box offce post-trauma horror.
Plowing Through
The Republican process was the agenda.
Critics
David Edelstein on First Man and A Star Is Born Matt Zoller Seitz on The Romanoffs Jerry Saltz on Eugne Delacroix at the Met.
Beyond Banchan
Atomix redeems the often-stale notion of the chef s-counter tasting menuwith Korean flavors and seasonal flair.
The Next Michael Urie
The star of Broadways Torch Song was worried about being typecast in gay rolesbefore he realized there were so many different kinds.
202 Minutes With … Rob Delaney
The comedian becomes an envoy from the land of bereavement.
Pay Attention
Marys Seacole and the political weight of caregiving.
Ta-Nehisi Coates Is An Optimist Now
A conversation about race and 2020.
Rocco Returns
The TV “personality” is back in the kitchen at the Meatpacking District’s Standard Grill.
The Swamp: Olivia Nuzzi
Trump’s Rolodex His phone friends may be more important than his staff. What’s that about?
What Stacey Abrams Should Do Next?
The Georgian who is usually sure about everything finds herself conflicted about her future.
The Man Who Was Almost Killed By Don Quixote
Terry Gilliam on the movie that took him three decades to make.
126 Minutes With …Ani Difranco
The musician pays a visit to New York, and the ’90s.
Chait On The Biden Boomerang
Life of the Party What Joe Biden is teaching Democrats about Democrats.
Randall Park's Small-Town L.A.
The star of Fresh Off the Boat has made an occasionally mortifying coming-of-age film,Always Be My Maybe, inspired by his own life.
How Many Bones Would You Break To Get Laid?
“Incels”—lonely, angry, misogynist men— are going under the knife to reshape their faces, and their dating prospects.
Why New York Can't Have Nice Things
It costs three times more to build a subway station in New York than in Paris. We’d be living in a whole different kind of city if we could change that.
With Great Care
A woman self-sacrifices in Diane.
Oklahoma Was Never Really O.K.
A new production exposes the darkness that’s always been at the heart of the musical—and the American experiment.
The National Interest: Blunt Instruments Of Power
Another astonishing victory redefines what the presidency is.
Susan Choi's Trust Exercise Is Spring's Most-Talked-About Novel
How rage and the Access Hollywood tape inspired this spring’s most inventive and polarizing novel.
Everyone Believed Larry Nassar
I - Larissa Boyce was 10 when her coach, John Geddert,forced her legs into a split so hard she cried. He pulled her right leg up toward his torso, sending shooting pains through her groin and hamstrings, and he kept pulling. “Racking,” as it’s called, was common practice at the gym, but it was evidently too much for Larissa’s mother, whomarched onto the mats and told Geddert to take his handsoff her daughter. From then on, Larissa would train under Kathie Klages, a relatively low-key coach with unruly red hair and glasses at Michigan State University’s Spartan youth gymnastics team. Klages, like Geddert, considered herself a dear friend of an athletic trainernamed Larry Nassar and sent her gymnasts to him. ¶ When, six years later, Larissa felt ready to talk about the fact that Larry had penetrated her with his hand without warning, she approachedKlages. Larissa remembers her office as a small room with a desk, a window, and green carpet. “ ‘I have known Larry for years and years,’ ” Larissa recalls Klages saying. “ ‘He would never do anything inappropriate.’ ”