Daily Comment
Hillary and the Health Problem
By Margaret Talbot
This incident wouldn’t matter if it didn’t comport with one of her weaknesses: a knee-jerk preference not to disclose when it would save her grief in the long run.
This incident wouldn’t matter if it didn’t comport with one of her weaknesses: a knee-jerk preference not to disclose when it would save her grief in the long run.
How Yvon Chouinard turned his eco-conscious, anti-corporate ideals into the credo of a successful clothing company.
Remembering my visits to the restaurants that changed America.
The N.C.A.A. won’t hold championship games in the state, but Republicans won’t budge.
A Census report showed almost everyone doing better in 2015: the rich got richer, the poor got richer faster, and the middle class did quite well, too.
One reason why the film appeals to audiences is that both cat and mice are given broad excuses for their savagery, at least at first.
With his first and only American film, the director of “The Umbrellas of Cherbourg” revised the idea of cinematic style.
The flap over Clinton’s disclosure of her recent illness reminds us of the extent to which she is a creature of her history.
As authors well know, the writing process is filled with difficult choices.
A new Census report shows that almost all Americans had a good 2015: the rich got richer, and the poor got richer faster.
The N.C.A.A. won’t hold championship games in the state, as a protest against its anti-transgender legislation, but the state G.O.P. isn't budging.
A new volume of the writer’s correspondence with his mother marks the anniversary of his birth.
An excerpt of the new book “When in French”: Learning about culture, communication, and intimacy in my husband’s native language.
Today, Aung San Suu Kyi makes her first trip to the U.S. as the leader of Myanmar. From 2012: how a brutal regime became a democracy
Alessandro Michele, the brand’s creative director, looks at modern fashion with a historical eye.
An insightfully curated series at Anthology Film Archives corrects facile assumptions about the role of women in the early days of cinema.
Donald Glover’s new show on FX emphasizes character and mood, place and flow, a different type of originality. It’s shrewd, emotional, and impolite.
Naomi Yasuda’s ambitious, inventive manicures have been in music videos, fashion shows, and dozens of magazines.
The question now isn’t whether the candidates will release more medical information. It’s how much.
Donald Trump followed up a trip to Mexico by reaffirming his extreme rhetoric on immigration.
In a hypothetical matchup, voters chose an inert Hillary Clinton over an ambulatory Donald Trump by a margin of nine percentage points.
The writer and performer has honed a comedic style that combines coziness and courage, honesty and authority.
The senator’s moral fury has been deployed in a new way in the Presidential campaign: she has become a partisan takedown artist.
Terrence Malick’s new film, “Voyage of Time,” is a work of hypnotic, ecstatic textures.