Read The New Yorker’s complete coverage of the coronavirus pandemic and Black Lives Matter protests.
How Can the Press Best Serve Democracy?
In the nineteen-forties, a panel of scholars struggled over truth in reporting, the flow of ideas, and the maintenance of a free and responsible press. Their deliberations are more relevant than ever.
The Roger Stone Case Shows Why Trump Is Worse Than Nixon
The commuting of the prison sentence of an ally who kept his mouth shut during the Trump-Russia investigation is a consummate act of corruption and cronyism.
What Do College Students Think of Their Schools’ Reopening Plans?
They should be taking the lead in reimagining what higher learning can look like during the pandemic.
“A Transparent Woman�
“She asked if she was under arrest. No, what made her think that? They were just going to have a little chat. The threat hidden in that twee bloodless phrase.�
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Spotlight
How the Coronavirus Swept Through the Texas Panhandle
No matter what, the meatpacking plants had to stay open. The rest of the world was distanced, but workers had to keep coming in.
President Winning-by-Losing Is, in Fact, Losing
Donald Trump has made a career of turning bad news into good, but the virus has already defeated him.
Slate Star Codex and Silicon Valley’s War Against the Media
How a controversial rationalist blogger became a mascot and martyr in a struggle against the New York Times.
The True Cost of Dollar Stores
Discount chains are thriving. But what do they do to poor communities?
Trump’s Impeachment Revenge on Alexander Vindman
The Army lieutenant colonel’s patriotism cost him his career.
A Lightly Challenging Puzzle
Promotes (but doesn’t necessarily endorse!) a post, for short: three letters.
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Foraged Foods Shorten the Supply Chain
Chicken-of-the-woods mushrooms that fry up like their namesake, snappy sea beans that need no extra salt, sassafras syrup, and other edible offerings from the wilds outside the city limits.
Musicians and Composers Respond to a Chaotic Moment
The pandemic and the protests inspire works of lamentation and rage.
Bill Nighy’s Obsessions, Onscreen and Off
It wasn’t too hard for the British actor to get into character for the new movie “Sometimes Always Never,� in which he plays a music-loving Merseyside tailor.
The Unruly Genius of Joyce Carol Oates
In an era that fetishizes form, Oates has become America’s preëminent fiction writer by doing everything you’re not supposed to do.
Video
The Cartoonist Emily Flake Demonstrates How to Draw a Child
Emily Flake discusses how having a child changed how she illustrates kids, and pokes fun at her pre-motherhood drawings.