Posts for members

optional screen reader


What to make of 2024

A turbulent year has shed fresh light on some important truths

Latest Posts for members

The Triumph of the Post-Thanksgiving Sandwich

After the big meal, alone with your refrigerator, let the real celebration begin.

Is the age of celebrity political endorsements dead?

Kamala Harris had the most influential celebrities in her corner. Taylor Swift. Bruce Springsteen. Oprah. Julia Roberts. George Clooney.

Trump’s transition is far more organized than 2016

A former Trump administration official said transition officials are mindful of the lessons from the 2016 transition.

Meet the billionaires leading Trump’s transition team

Time to get Howard Lutnick and Linda McMahon in your phone contacts.

How the WNBA Became the Most Fun, Complicated, and Exciting League in Sports

Caitlin Clark! A’ja Wilson! Angel Reese! This year, women’s hoops emerged as a dominant pop-cultural force. But the road to sports-league supremacy has been long and winding. This is the inside story of how the W finally broke through.

Yulia Navalnaya: ‘I want Putin to be in a Russian prison’

The fearless widow of Alexei Navalny, the anticorruption activist poisoned and murdered by the Kremlin, tells Decca Aitkenhead about their perilous family life and why she is continuing her husband’s fight to save their country.

The Top-Earning Summer Concert Tours Of 2024

Taylor Swift reigned for the second consecutive year, besting Coldplay, Zach Bryan and Bruce Springsteen. Inside a record-breaking year for the music business in which the 10 most successful acts reaped a collective $3 billion on the road.

Why Sudan’s catastrophic war is the world’s problem

It could kill millions—and spread chaos across Africa and the Middle East

Reasons to be cheerful about Generation Z

They are not doomed to be poor and anxious.

Inside the Kenyan cult that starved itself to death

During covid-19 a preacher lured thousands of people into a remote forest. Then he told them to stop eating

TikTok Pledged to Protect U.S. Data. $1.5 Billion Later, It’s Struggling.

The video-sharing app said it had walled off American data in Project Texas, but employees said data is still sometimes shared with its China-based parent.

Advertisement
You did not use the site, Click here to remain logged. Timeout: 60 second