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The New Yorker is a weekly magazine with a mix of reporting on politics and culture, humor and cartoons, fiction and poetry, and reviews and criticism.

New York, NY
Joined May 2008

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  1. This week, among the things we're listening to, is an all-time great concert opener from the Breeders:

  2. Frankie Shaw’s new Showtime series, “SMILF,” set in South Boston, is about being a local, whether you like it or not.

  3. For some veterans grappling with post-traumatic stress disorder, hope may lie in virtual-reality tools for prolonged-exposure therapy, which is sometimes called immersion therapy.

  4. Pete Souza and the politics of looking at Barack Obama:

  5. In : The story of how I found myself the custodian of two elderly, cranky dogs.

  6. Where the small-town American dream lives on:

  7. In : Welcome to book club. If you haven’t read the book, you still have options.

  8. Orange City, Iowa, is small and cut off, but, unlike many such towns, it is not dying:

  9. . revisits her piece “Autocracy: Rules for Survival.” Here's what she got right, what she missed, and the one rule she thinks she needs to amend:

  10. Louis C.K.'s brand was telling the stories you weren’t supposed to tell. As it turns out, other people have those stories, too.

  11. Why Tom MacMaster, a white man and publishing failure from Georgia, pretended to be an Arab-American lesbian:

  12. What litmus tests does the Republican Party have these days?

  13. “Lady Dynamite” is an overstuffed, frenetic, and surreally addled comedy about a woman trying to slow down and live in control:

  14. The updated New Yorker Today App is here, and it comes with magazine issues all the way back to 2008. Download here:

  15. Read Nicholas Schmidle’s 2013 story about the life and death of Chris Kyle, the decorated Navy SEAL behind the memoir “American Sniper.”

  16. Gay men should follow the lead of the women who have spoken out about powerful men like Harvey Weinstein:

  17. In their own words, men and women who served in Iraq describe their time there.

  18. The writer Philip Roth wants to find a morally rigorous way to claim an American identity:

  19. Barbara Kruger’s best-known art works—simple messages in red-and-white Futura typeface—began as a way of subverting the vernacular but have become a part of the vernacular itself. Visitors to this year’s Performa biennial can see them up close.

  20. New York’s majestic passage in the sky:

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