New from The New Yorker Radio Hour: Who gets to be Italian?
How the Simulmatics Corporation Invented the Future
When J.F.K. ran for President, a team of data scientists with powerful computers set out to model and manipulate American voters. Sound familiar?
What Vermont Might Teach Us About Handling the Coronavirus
The Green Mountain State has had the fewest cases of COVID-19 in the country, and it isn’t just—or even mainly—the governor who has carried the day.
How Police Unions Fight Reform
Activists insist that police departments must change. For half a century, New York City’s P.B.A. has successfully resisted such demands.
Olivia de Havilland, the Last Lioness of the Hollywood Studio System
The actress, who died on Sunday, at a hundred and four, spent a lifetime crusading for what she felt she deserved.
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Spotlight
Homeland Security Was Destined to Become a Secret Police Force
This is a government agency built on fear and intended to engender fear.
The Board-Game Series for the Age of the Coronavirus
Games have exploded in popularity during quarantine, but Pandemic Legacy is more than a diversion.
America’s Looming Primary-Care Crisis
The pandemic could put thousands of doctors out of business. Saving them may require changing how the health-care system works.
A Floating MAGA Rally Washes Up in New York Harbor
When a Trump flotilla (or “Trumptilla”) swarmed into town, its organizers hoped it would “make liberals cry.” The more immediate effect was to freak out the Coast Guard.
Perfecting Roast Chicken, the French Way
The method—call it poach-and-roast—is regarded, at least in France, as the best way to insure a moist and not-ruined chicken.
A Challenging Puzzle
First Book of the Month Club pick written by a Black American: nine letters.
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Perfecting Roast Chicken, the French Way
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The Cold War Bunker That Became Home to a Dark-Web Empire
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The Crossword: Monday, July 27, 2020
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The Latest
Realistic Manual for Installing Your New Air-Conditioner
Step 1: Attach the top rail to the main unit, using the four screws provided. Oh, wait, it seems that you have somehow already lost the screws.
Emily Oster on Whether and How to Reopen Schools
An economist at Brown University and co-author of the Web site COVID Explained discusses the seemingly impossible trade-offs required by in-person classes.
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From This Week’s Issue
The Return of the Drive-In
With New York movie theatres closed, drive-ins, including the Warwick, upstate, and the Skyline, in Greenpoint, are thriving, offering familiar films and such new releases as “Relic” and “She Dies Tomorrow.”
American Tragedy and Comedy, Streaming on YouTube
“The Line,” a play of communal horror, follows health-care workers battling COVID-19, and Hannibal Buress’s new special turns a police encounter into comedy and catharsis.
Summer School for Protest Writing
With a reading list ranging from W. E. B. Du Bois to Kendrick Lamar, a remote class teaches Philadelphia teens how to express their frustration with society—including, in some cases, their schools.
“Heirlooms”
“So, Mitsuko says, how long have you been sleeping with my son? Or is it casual? Not really, I say.”
Video
A Couple Faces the Questions Posed by Male Infertility
As a couple grappling with infertility considers adoption and sperm donation, they grieve their loss and reconsider the meaning of family and legacy.