The smashed, fractured, and non-functional can frustrate us—and illuminate who we are.
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Author: The New Yorker
On “Hacks” and “The Studio,” Hollywood Confronts Its Flop Era
The industry has long loved to tell stories about itself—but, in 2025, the self-satirizing has an air of crisis management.
My New York City Tour of Tours
Things I learned by embedding with the tourists: the Ramones loved Yoo-hoo, Peter Stuyvesant was uptight, and how to do “a quick Donald Trump dance.”
Why I Can’t Quit the New York Post
The city’s least self-conscious, Rupert Murdoch-owned daily newspaper sticks to its story, new information be damned, yet holds real clout in liberal New York.
The Battling Memoirs of The New Yorker
A host of accounts by the magazine’s staffers covers a full century of its history, but the trove of recollection is fraught and jumbled.
Christoph Niemann’s “Spotted in New York City”
Small moments that span a century.
Keith McNally’s “I Regret Almost Everything,” Reviewed
The Manhattan restaurateur’s new memoir shows a canny instinct for the finer aspects of dining.
Briefly Noted Book Reviews
“Ghosts of Iron Mountain,” “Turning to Birds,” “The Imagined Life,” and “My Name Is Emilia del Valle.”
Lena Dunham on Why She Broke Up with New York
Most people accept the city’s chaos as a toll for an expansive life. It took me several decades to realize that I could go my own way.
“The Rehearsal” Finally Achieves Liftoff
The new season of Nathan Fielder’s HBO series takes a bold conceptual leap—and, with Sunday night’s episode, it went from an assemblage of stunts to a work of art.
Restaurant Review: The Caribbean Restaurant Reinventing the Momofuku Empire
At Kabawa, the chef Paul Carmichael gets scholarly without sacrificing the fun.
Bill Burr Does Not Want to Talk About Politics
Or does he?
My Brain Finally Broke
Much of what we see now is fake, and the reality we face is full of horrors. More and more of the world is slipping beyond my comprehension.
The Secrets of Physique Magazines
The mid-century publications didn’t need to announce themselves as gay, even if they had been able to. Their readers understood the necessity of balancing discretion and seduction.
Andrea Long Chu Owns the Libs
The writer is known for her acerbic criticism of liberals. Is she one herself?
“Caught by the Tides” Is a Gorgeous Vision of Loss and Renewal
More than two decades in the making, Jia Zhangke’s mostly archival film embodies the sweeping transformations of modern China in its very construction.
Disco Balls and Roller Skates, at Xanadu
Also: indie-rock legacy in “Pavements,” Jonathan Groff crooning Bobby Darin in “Just in Time,” the teeming embroideries of Madalena Santos Reinbolt, and more.
A Joyfully Chaotic Tribute to Pavement in “Pavements”
The band Pavement, big in the nineties and bigger in memory, returns to help celebrate themselves wryly in Alex Ross Perry’s loving, metafictional rock-bio-pic parody.
Rumaan Alam and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Female Protagonist
The author of “Leave the World Behind” and “Entitlement” discusses the merits of unpleasant characters.
The Miscalculations of COVID School Closures
Millions of American children were denied regular in-person instruction for more than a year after the virus emerged. What did we get right—and wrong?
How the Internet Left 4chan Behind
The anonymous forum thrived when edgelord content wasn’t acceptable on more mainstream social media. Today, it can be found most anywhere.
Why Even Try if You Have A.I.?
Now that machines can think for us, we have to choose whether to be the passengers or pilots of our lives.
How “The Great Gatsby” Took Over High School
The classroom staple turns a hundred.
For Watchers of “The Clock,” Time Is Running Out
Christian Marclay’s addictive masterpiece, soon ending its run at moma, offers an escape from our time into time itself.
The Return of “My Favorite Season,” a Great Modern Melodrama
This elegantly passionate tale of long-stifled family conflicts is a thrilling showcase for its star, Catherine Deneuve.
Jeremy Jordan Mines “Floyd Collins” for Its Sonic Gems
Adam Guettel and Tina Landau’s 1996 musical about a trapped caver resurfaces on Broadway, and Shayok Misha Chowdhury and Mona Pirnot play metaphysical games.
The Rise of Megan Moroney, Emo Cowgirl
The country singer, on her first headlining tour, plays achy-breaky songs about love and its failure to be respectfully reciprocated by various dudes.
Francis, the TV Pope, Takes His Final Journey
He built his lovable persona not on the page but via pictures and improvised chat, the stuff of screens.
Restaurant Review: A Georgian Restaurant’s Mother of All Dumplings
Laliko, in the West Village, finds memorable ways to bring the Eastern European country’s cuisine to the world.
The Show Can’t Go On
Funding shifts at three of the largest philanthropic foundations have brought turbulence and uncertainty to the intricate New York support system for the performing arts.
“Drop Dead City” Spotlights a Lost Era of Liberal Government
This documentary examines the economic changes and managerial missteps that brought the city to the brink of bankruptcy in 1975 and the political creativity and enduring cost of the rescue.
The Quest to Build a Perfect Protein Bar
A great number of Americans wish to optimize their diets—and their lives.
Can “The Last of Us” Outlive Its Antihero?
The series’ most exhilarating episode yet ended with the brutal murder of a beloved character. Where does the show go from here?
Restaurant Review: Bradley Cooper Makes an Awfully Good Cheesesteak
At Danny & Coop’s, the actor and director partners with a Philadelphia restaurateur to bring that city’s beloved sandwich to New Yorkers.
London Theatre Shimmers with Mirrors and Memory
New productions of Shakespeare’s “Richard II,” Annie Ernaux’s “The Years,” Robert Icke’s “Manhunt,” Tennessee Williams’s “The Glass Menagerie,” and more.
Kurt Weill Kept Reinventing Himself
Fresh New York stagings of “The Threepenny Opera” and “Love Life” show off the composer’s daring and range.
Jeff Bridges Is Digging It
The actor and musician discusses how to “let it do you,” why almost dying was a gift, and his new album, “Slow Magic.”
“The Handmaid’s Tale” Reflects the Exhaustion of Liberal Feminism
What’s most striking about the show, now in its final season, is not its hysteria but its lack of conviction.
The Evolution of a Folk-Punk Hero
Nine years after retiring his alter ego, Pat the Bunny, Patrick Schneeweis is ready to sing again.
The Play Where Everyone Keeps Fainting
Dozens of audience members have lost consciousness watching Eline Arbo’s adaptation of “The Years.” The internet has come to believe that a conspiracy is afoot.