In a time of crisis, the Academy is offering a bulwark of humane consensus, though its blind spots remain.
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Author: The New Yorker
The Long Shadow of the Chinese Exclusion Act
The true cost of the immigration policy can be measured in the generations of Chinese Americans who were never born.
Imani Perry on Experimental Histories of Black Life
The scholar recommends four inventive books that offer instruction on how to create meaning, beauty, and intimacy amid fragility and social exclusion.
The Best Books We’ve Read in 2025 So Far
Our editors and critics review notable new fiction, nonfiction, and poetry.
How the Academy Awards Have Adapted to Catastrophe
The L.A. wildfires have resurfaced an old question: Are times too dark for a glitzy awards ceremony?
Is Social Media More Like Cigarettes or Junk Food?
Lawmakers attempting to regulate children’s access to social media must decide whether bans or warning labels are the optimal route for keeping kids safe.
Should You Question Everything?
In “Open Socrates,” the philosopher Agnes Callard reminds us how thinking should feel.
What D.C. Saw at Donald Trump’s Second Inauguration
Thousands of MAGA supporters poured into the Capital One Arena as the new Administration took shape in ballrooms across the city.
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.
Donald Trump Plays Church
On Inauguration Day, the forty-seventh President cast himself as an especially favored vessel of the Almighty.
Washington’s Hostess with the Mostes’
Dinner parties in the capital have long been a path to power, but Perle Mesta had her eye on a different prize.
Briefly Noted Book Reviews
“American Oasis,” “Before Elvis,” “Another Man in the Street,” and “Going Home.”
Revisiting “The Plot Against America”
I read and reread Philip Roth’s book to try to understand the present, to make sense of what may happen.
The Attention Crisis Is Just a Distraction
From the pianoforte to the smartphone, each wave of tech has sparked fears of brain rot. But the problem isn’t our ability to focus—it’s what we’re focussing on.
Till Lauer’s “Flames and Shadows”
Paradise turns to ashes.
Restaurant Review: Alex Stupak’s Seriously Playful Seafood Joint
At the Otter, the chef behind Empellón offers a fish-forward menu that performs tricks of the tongue.
How a School Shooting Became a Video Game
Games are often blamed for gun violence, but the parents of one victim believe the form can raise awareness instead.
The Henri Cartier-Bresson of South Korea
Han Youngsoo chronicled the postwar transformation of mid-century Seoul, complicating popular depictions of that era as one solely of deprivation and hardship.
Madame President: The Cover That Never Was
If Kamala Harris had won.
The Cruel Abstraction of “Beast Games”
On a competition show made by the YouTube sensation MrBeast, the people are faceless and the challenges are vicious.
How David Lynch Became an Icon of Cinema
The late director’s unique vision and the love that his persona inspires make it easy to forget how winding his path to greatness was.
“Silo” and the Dystopia We Live In
The sci-fi series “Silo” is the latest in a string of popular post-apocalyptic dramas with an increasingly uncanny resonance.
The Ghost’s-Eye View of Steven Soderbergh’s “Presence”
Doing his own camerawork, the director gleefully enriches the haunted-house genre with a simple but ingenious device.
Ali Smith’s Playful Dystopia
The author discusses why she has a dumbphone, how to “meet reverses boldly,” and her new novel, “Gliff.”
Ballet Past and Present, at New York City Ballet
Plus: the sadistic “Saw: The Musical”; Michael Roemer’s end-of-life documentary; and Rachel Syme on adult classes on offer in N.Y.C.
Garth Risk Hallberg’s Essential Joyce Carol Oates
The author of “The Second Coming” and “City on Fire” selects recommendations from the great American writer’s sprawling body of work.
Blake Lively, Justin Baldoni, and the Collapse of the Hollywood #MeToo Era
The reportage that thrived in the late twenty-tens cannot break through on today’s volatile Internet, where information is misinformation and victims are offenders.
The Enigmatic Artistry of Terrence Malick
The director has long shunned the spotlight, but his work conveys the force of a mighty personality. A new biography offers a rare look at his life and work.
Sara Bareilles Talks with Rachel Syme
The songwriter and performer on her journey from pop music to theatre, with a live performance of “Gravity.”
Food Review: The Best Restaurant Dishes of 2024
A food critic’s favorite menu items from a year of dining out.
Audra McDonald Triumphs in “Gypsy” on Broadway
In the latest revival of Arthur Laurents, Stephen Sondheim, and Jule Styne’s iconic musical, George C. Wolfe humanizes a famously monstrous stage mother.
The Best Theatre of 2024
This year’s standout productions ran the gamut from outrageously fabulous to quasi-religious in feeling.
Food Review: Three Exceptional Panettones
When it comes to the Italian holiday loaf, there’s magnificence and there’s stultifying disappointment, with little in between.
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 Best TV Shows of 2024
In an otherwise bleak year for television, a few truly great entries shone all the more brightly.
The Berlin Philharmonic Doesn’t Need a Star Conductor
The musicians possess a powerful collective personality, creating an organic mass of sound.
Restaurant Review: Borgo Is Worth the Trip to Manhattan
Andrew Tarlow is known for Brooklyn spots with low lighting, tattooed servers, and hunks of meat. Now, across the East River for the first time, he shifts the vibe toward stately elegance.
The Best Albums of 2024
It’s possible that I listened to more music this year than any other. I lost interest in podcasts. I lost interest in silence. There was too much extraordinary work out there.
The Meditative Organ Soundscapes of Kali Malone
The eighty-minute suite “All Life Long” is slow, hushed, and gnawingly beautiful, but it does not supply conventional musical comforts.
The Amazing, Disappearing Johnny Carson
Carson pioneered a new style of late-night hosting—relaxed, improvisatory, risk-averse, and inscrutable.