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Culture
April 15, 2019
Magazine
Tom Scocca
Tucker Carlson, Unbowed
He's petty, whiny, and contradictory. So why does he keep ruling the ratings night after night?
April 11, 2019
Colin Dickey
Why
Pet Sematary
Refuses to Die
Stephen King’s story focuses on our culture’s obsessive denial of grief.
April 10, 2019
Magazine
Rumaan Alam
Susan Choi’s Missing Persons
Her novels have always championed the overlooked point of view. But "Trust Exercise" takes on a riskier experiment.
April 10, 2019
Jacob Soll
The Making of an Anti-Semitic Myth
Francesca Trivellato’s book on the history of credit debunks a bigoted cliché.
April 9, 2019
Magazine
Meehan Crist
Down to Earth
Why is the story of climate catastrophe so hard to tell?
April 8, 2019
Magazine
Jana Prikryl
Real
April 8, 2019
Magazine
Michael Prior
Century Plants
April 8, 2019
Magazine
Rachel Syme
Top Billing
For too long, Gwen Verdon missed out on her share of the spotlight.
April 4, 2019
Magazine
Geoffrey Wheatcroft
Never Sorry
Eric Hobsbawm’s awkward embrace of the Establishment
April 4, 2019
Ana Cecilia Alvarez
Valeria Luiselli’s Impossible Novel
To tell a story of migrant children and the American family following them, “Lost Children Archive” needed a wider lens.
April 2, 2019
Magazine
Max Holleran
The Dean
Out of the ruins of war, Walter Gropius made a vital political community.
April 1, 2019
Magazine
Christine Smallwood
Sally Rooney’s Great Expectations
Her new novel captures a generation's beleaguered idealism.
March 30, 2019
Jo Livingstone
The Charmed Life of Agnès Varda
The legendary filmmaker did it her way, her life as much an inspiration as her work.
March 29, 2019
Avi Asher-Schapiro
What the Theranos Documentary Misses
Instead of examining Elizabeth Holmes’s personality, look at the people and systems that aided the company’s rise.
March 28, 2019
Rachel Syme
The Best, Most Inaccessible Show on Television
Much like “Twin Peaks,” “The OA” is a visual vortex that raises more questions than it answers.
March 27, 2019
Jo Livingstone
Fat and Happy
Lindy West, the inspiration for the new Hulu series "Shrill," helped redefine the way we see and treat fat people. Can her ideas translate to television?
March 27, 2019
Daniel Kolitz
In Search of Generation Z
An unscrupulous, money-hungry marketing industry helped define the millennials, often with wildly inept results. And now it's getting to work on the next cohort.
March 26, 2019
Rachel Vorona Cote
The Act
Illuminates a Lethal Bond
A new drama about the murder of Dee Dee Blanchard renders an abusive relationship with brutal clarity.
March 25, 2019
Patrick Iber
How the Cold War Defined Scientific Freedom
The idea that liberal democracies shielded science from politics was always flawed.
March 21, 2019
Jo Livingstone
Jordan Peele’s “Us” Goes Down the Rabbit Hole of Identity
His sophomore effort, featuring a rampaging gang of doppelgängers, radically expands the themes of his film debut "Get Out."
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