New from The New Yorker Radio Hour: The power of police unions.
How a Cheese Goes Extinct
When you talk with aficionados, it usually doesn’t take long for the conversation to veer away from curds, whey, and mold, and toward matters of life and death.
Nneka Ogwumike and the W.N.B.A.’s Big, Complicated Moment
Amid a global pandemic and nationwide protests, the W.N.B.A. is playing basketball in a bubble. Ogwumike is trying to make sure it succeeds.
Beyoncé’s Knowing Ethnic Splendor in “Black Is King”
The “visual album” does not attempt to provide cultural lessons but, rather, invitations to awesome delights.
The Second Act of Social-Media Activism
Has the Internet become better at mediating change?
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Spotlight
The Ongoing Relevance of “Norma Rae”
Viewed today, the 1979 movie, starring Sally Field, is most striking in its suggestion that no struggle can take place alone.
The Laughing-Gas Wars of London
Whatever the reason—ostentatious littering, the mad desire for a furtive lockdown high—nitrous-oxide cannisters are ubiquitous in London this summer.
Fighting the Coronavirus, from New York to Utah
They volunteered during the New York City surge—then returned home to watch the virus come to them.
Urgent Care from the Army Corps of Engineers
While Trump flails in the pandemic, the military’s builders are getting it done.
Rethinking the Science of Skin
What is all the scrubbing, soaping, moisturizing, and deodorizing really doing for the body’s largest organ?
A Challenging Puzzle
Early-two-thousands drama with the theme song “California”: five letters.
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Americans Insanely Jealous of Spain After Corrupt Head of State Flees Country
Americans expressed frustration that multiple criminal investigations were “all it took” for the former Spanish ruler to voluntarily leave Spain forever.
New Kinds of Surprise Health-Care Billing
A hospital administrator drives by your house and throws a brick with a medical bill wrapped around it through your window, and more.
Mayor Lori Lightfoot and the Federal Forces in Chicago
President Trump is deploying two hundred federal agents to “drive down violent crime” in Chicago. Mayor Lori Lightfoot gives David Remnick her take on the situation.
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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 Film Recounts the Imbalances of Obsession
In “The Song Is You,” the rarefied air of the art world serves as a backdrop for the complicated relationship between a would-be stalker and the couple she is following.