The Rise of the Passive Spectator

The famed twentieth-century photojournalist Weegee was just as fascinated with tragedy—fires, car crashes, murders—as he was with our desire to gawk.

The New Yorker |
Categorised as Culture

The L.A. Chefs Keeping Their Neighbors Fed

After wildfires displaced thousands of Angelenos, a patchwork of cooks, restaurateurs, and volunteers have operated something like a citywide meal train.

The New Yorker |
Categorised as Culture

The Profile Hemingway Could Never Live Down

When Lillian Ross profiled the celebrated novelist, the world saw ridicule and ruin. But letters between the reporter and her subject reveal something far more complicated.

The New Yorker |
Categorised as Culture

Briefly Noted Book Reviews

“Land Power,” “After Lives,” “Helen of Troy, 1993,” and “The Riveter.”

The New Yorker |
Categorised as Culture

“Mo” ’s Urgent, Uneven Homecoming

Mohammed Amer’s unlikely comedy about a family of Palestinian refugees in Houston returns for a season that’s sillier, sadder, and timelier than ever.

The New Yorker |
Categorised as Culture

Under the Radar Keeps Rollin’ Along

Highlights include a spare reworking of the 1927 musical “Show Boat” and a surprisingly touching new piece by the shock connoisseur Ann Liv Young.

The New Yorker |
Categorised as Culture

Donald Trump Plays Church

On Inauguration Day, the forty-seventh President cast himself as an especially favored vessel of the Almighty.

The New Yorker |
Categorised as Culture

The Best Pop Songs of 2024

The year’s breakthrough music moments included a Taylor Swift comeback, an unexpected Internet-rap collab, and an absurdist sample of “Somewhere Over the Rainbow.”

The New Yorker |
Categorised as Culture