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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. Three factors to keep in mind about Michael Cohen.

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  2. “Angels in America,” Tony Kushner’s brilliant, maddening, and necessary masterwork, reminds us how sexuality dictates and shapes its own culture:

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  3. There has been sad Drake, triumphant Drake, chip-on-his-shoulder Drake, bitter Drake, globetrotting Drake. Now, in “Nice for What,” we experience a purely exuberant Drake.

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  4. An opioid addicted baby is now born every half hour. The Sackler family has made billions on the opioid crisis.

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  5. Calvin Trillin's family moviemaking tradition comes to an end.

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  6. A colleague of a Palestinian reporter who was fatally shot in Gaza accuses Israeli forces of targeting journalists:

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  7. Mark Zuckerberg's tie, Facebook blue, was visibly less than taut, as if knotted nervously, and the jacket was just the tiniest bit large around the shoulders. All this seemed to convey something about his forced acquiescence.

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  8. The former hedge-fund manager Michael Novogratz is the third of seven children, and his charm and his skills as a storyteller are tied to his membership in this brood of hyper-successful siblings:

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  9. California represents the American future that Trump—with his white nativism and economic protectionism—is trying to turn back, Canute style.

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  10. "It’s hard for me to understand how John Hughes was able to write with so much sensitivity, and also have such a glaring blind spot," writes:

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  11. Confessions of a houseplant addict:

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  12. At this point, dismissing Robert Mueller wouldn’t end the investigations encircling the President.

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  13. The former hedge-fund manager Michael Novogratz is an on-again, off-again billionaire, and his dramatic turns of fortune have made him one of the most storied men on Wall Street:

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  14. Junot Díaz confronts the legacy of childhood trauma: “I never told anyone what happened, but today I’m telling you. And anyone else who cares to listen.”

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  15. Again and again, Mark Zuckerberg referred to “a broader responsibility”—one that Facebook had failed to recognize, but one that it was now ready to assume.

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  16. Mark Zuckerberg has spent most of his adult life apologizing, but he hasn’t managed to improve much:

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  17. 9 hours ago

    . answers questions about whom she most admires, her earliest memory, and her family traditions.

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  18. “How Did We Come to Know You?”: A short story by Keith Gessen. “I thought maybe I was getting the hang of this country, this life. And then my grandmother fell down the stairs.”

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  19. There is no one from Raqqa who didn’t lose a family member, a friend, a neighbor, a beloved person.

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  20. According to Michael Novogratz, cryptocurrencies were a direct result of the 2008 crisis, when people lost faith in banks and bankers. “I call it the decentralized revolution,” he says, with the ardor of a true believer.

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