The famed twentieth-century photojournalist Weegee was just as fascinated with tragedy—fires, car crashes, murders—as he was with our desire to gawk.
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Author: The New Yorker
Before He Formed Led Zeppelin, Jimmy Page Played a Prom in Ohio
A new documentary about the band’s early days offers a rich backdrop to an unlikely performance of a star on the rise.
Richard Brody Presents the 2025 Brody Awards
Oscar who? The film critic, a true believer in the art of cinema, picks the winners of the most coveted award of all: the Brodys.
M Is for Mortality: Lessons from Edward Gorey on His Hundredth Birthday
Gorey said, “I write about everyday life.” His work reminds us that death is a major fact of existence.
“The White Lotus” Overstays Its Welcome
In the third season of Mike White’s HBO satire of the rich and terrible, a now familiar formula yields diminishing returns.
“Moby-Dick” Sets Sail at the Met Opera
Also: the psychodramas of Father John Misty, a humble “Henry IV,” the return of the Flamenco Festival, and more.
The Theatrical Release of “Compensation” Is Cause for Celebration
Zeinabu irene Davis’s 1999 feature, a century-spanning vision of two deaf Black women in Chicago, is among the greatest independent films but has rarely been screened.
Min Jin Lee’s Indelible Twentieth-Century Women
The “Pachinko” author recommends four novels that present character studies of bold women making their way in changing times.
The Palantir Guide to Saving America’s Soul
Alexander Karp, Palantir’s philosopher-C.E.O., thinks that a restored military-industrial complex can make our country great again.
The Second Trump Administration’s New Forms of Distraction
The first time around, the President’s bad deeds galvanized people on social media. This time, they’re looking to “flush out their brains.”
The Best Books We’ve Read in 2025 So Far
Our editors and critics review notable new fiction, nonfiction, and poetry.
Restaurant Review: L&L Hawaiian Barbecue Brings New Yorkers the Plate Lunch
The Honolulu-based franchise specializes in simple meals that stick to the ribs.
The Man Who Captured the Unique Beauty of Snowflakes
The microphotographic innovator Wilson Bentley believed that “every crystal was a masterpiece of design.”
The Manic Brilliance of “Breakfast of Champions”
Scorned by critics on its release, in 1999, Alan Rudolph’s Kurt Vonnegut adaptation now emerges as an inspired comic extravaganza, whose very originality was its undoing.
Bartees Strange’s Interior Hauntings
On his third studio album, “Horror,” the genre-spanning musician deconstructs old fears and finds ways to survive new ones.
Faith Ringgold’s Message of Hope
Also: Rachel Syme on shopping like it’s 1925, and a New Yorker anniversary quiz.
Papa Elon or Donald, Sr.
Which father knows best?
Reëxamining Romantic Tropes with the Ripped Bodice
Leah Koch, a co-owner of the romance bookstore, describes how the genre has changed and what makes it special.
“The Last of the Nightingales” Tells the Story of How Soundscapes Change After a Fire
Masha Karpoukhina’s documentary follows a soundscape ecologist who lost everything in a California wildfire.
Elon Musk’s A.I.-Fuelled War on Human Agency
Musk seeks not only to dismantle the federal government but to install his own technological vision of the future at its heart—techno-fascism by chatbot.
The Nocturnal Masterwork “Toute Une Nuit” Comes to Light
Chantal Akerman’s rarely screened, dance-like drama of lovers’ encounters, separations, and reunions is newly available to stream.
An Argentinean Writer and the Movement for Women’s Rights
Selva Almada’s work is central to the battle to protect hard-won victories that President Javier Milei has vowed to overturn.
Digging Deep with Jilaine Jones
In her show at 15 Orient, the sculptor shows us how life shapes and reshapes us.
A Glow of Discovery in the Chill of Sundance
Three new films stand out at a festival in search of a new home.
Kendrick Lamar’s Meta-Performance at the Super Bowl
The best word to describe the rapper’s Super Bowl halftime show is “existential.”
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 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.
Briefly Noted Book Reviews
“Land Power,” “After Lives,” “Helen of Troy, 1993,” and “The Riveter.”
Lundy’s and the Risks of Restaurant Revivals
An iconic Brooklyn seafood spot is back, after a fashion.
The Old-School Heroics of “The Pitt”
The hectic medical drama, now streaming on Max, is a throwback to a different era of television—and a counterintuitive comfort watch.
Restaurant Review: Provence in the West Village, at Zimmi’s
At a cozy new restaurant inspired by the South of France, humble ingredients are lavished with respect, butter, and time.
“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.
“Hugh Jackman LIVE” and “Beckett Briefs” Make a Spectacle of Time’s Passage
In two new shows, the Oscar-nominated, Tony Award-winning star and F. Murray Abraham play against their younger selves.
L.A.’s New-Music Bastion
Monday Evening Concerts has showcased living composers for eight decades.
Helen Shaw Reviews Sanaz Toossi’s “English,” on Broadway
The Pulitzer Prize-winning play, set in an E.S.L. classroom in Iran, examines the internal displacements of learning a language.
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.
“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.
Sara Bareilles Talks with Rachel Syme
The songwriter and performer on her journey from pop music to theatre, with a live performance of “Gravity.”
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.”