Social Studies,” a documentary series by Lauren Greenfield, follows a group of young people, and screen-records their phones, ...
My eyes reluctantly moved on to the next set of photos: the same hand and foot ... Plus: Trump and the F-word; the problem ...
This was hardly a new complaint, however: people had been making fun of middle managers for decades. Tunbjörk’s photos in “Office ... Wins the Election? A series of legal challenges ...
Rachel Monroe is a contributing writer at The New Yorker, where she covers Texas and the Southwest. She is the author of “Savage Appetites: True Stories of Women, Crime, and Obsession.” ...
The Dodgers World Series victory had it all: canny pitching, late-game heroics, and a reminder that the sport sets a civic ...
The 2024 New Yorker Festival took place October 25th through 27th. For the twenty-fifth year, leading artists, actors, ...
Structured as a series of answers to questions from readers, this book, by a noted graphic novelist, is part advice manual for aspiring cartoonists, part memoir. Tomine, who taught himself to draw as ...
Few, if any, dance performances of the nineties provoked more controversy than “Still/Here,” a multimedia work from 1994 by the choreographer Bill T. Jones, which is now getti ...
As the free-for-all architectural symbols of pandemic-era New York are torn down by city decree, a photographic chronicler of the sidewalk structures says goodbye.
Disclaimer” begins with Catherine, a celebrated TV documentarian in London, receiving a self-published novel in the mail. Strangely enough, she reads it; stranger still, she recognizes herself in it, ...
The former President has been fighting to win back his wealthiest donors, while actively courting new ones—what do they expect to get in return?
“The Ongoing Revolution of Portuguese Cinema,” a month-long series now getting under way ... like the boy who queried the Emperor’s new clothes, can have a decisive effect.