Annals of Law
The Attorney Fighting Revenge Porn
By Margaret Talbot
Carrie Goldberg is a pioneer in the field of sexual privacy, using the law to defend victims of hacking, leaking, and other online assaults.
Carrie Goldberg is a pioneer in the field of sexual privacy, using the law to defend victims of hacking, leaking, and other online assaults.
More worrying than his cabinet or his business conflicts is the change this threatens to inflict on our conception of what it means to be American.
“Rat Race,” the artist’s cover for this week’s issue, is but the latest in a parade of fanciful animals that he has created for the magazine.
The incarceration industry was having a tough time. Then Trump got elected.
Historians have long noted the vulnerability of African-American ex-soldiers to extrajudicial violence.
You’re thinking that this type of painting is easy, and that you could do it. It’s not, and you couldn’t.
“I had an inordinate amount of pets growing up,” Peter de Sève said, when we asked him about the mouse on this week’s cover.
Drawings and drollery from this week’s magazine.
I love a good face mask. My favorite thing is eating some peyote, cracking open “Thus Spoke Zarathustra,” and putting on something super hydrating.
At the Bushwick ramen restaurant Ichiran, personal booths offer patrons, who are perhaps tired of talking about certain subjects, the experience of dining alone together.
The susceptibility of black ex-soldiers to extrajudicial murder and assault has long been recognized by historians.
She knew that each meal might be the diners’ only hot one all week, and she wanted to make it as nourishing as she could.
Cuba’s longtime leader, more than any other political figure in recent memory, had the stature of a living myth in his own country.
The dish was popular in New York long before the recent national upset, but now those steaming noodles feel like the antidote to everything.
I call him Thespis, and his manic temperament reveals itself repeatedly in my checkered history.
Charles Gabriel is running one of the last old-school chicken joints in the city.
“L’Amour de Loin” is the first opera written by a woman to be performed at the Met in more than a century.
“Early morning: They deliver my father’s corpse in the trunk of a ’49 Mercury coupe, dew still heavy on the taillights.”
James Dyson hosts a boisterous celebration for the U.S. launch of his Supersonic hair dryer.
Two theories about what he intended to get out of the interview, and how it fits into his broader political strategy.
He has a record of turning bigotry into political action, and now the President-elect wants him for Attorney General.
“I Googled it, and, I must say, I was surprised,” he said. “There was a lot in it that really made sense, to be honest.”
When a man who bragged about groping women got elected to the highest office in the land, Google searches for I.U.D.s spiked.
Because many Party élites found Trump’s rhetoric and personality abhorrent, they overstated the extent of their policy differences. In fact, they agree on plenty.
Like Scorsese’s “The Departed,” Kenneth Lonergan’s new film is a classical melodrama, overwhelming and exquisite.