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Read The New Yorker’s complete coverage of the coronavirus pandemic and Black Lives Matter protests.

Dispatch

Searching with the Mothers of Mexico’s Disappeared

More than seventy thousand people have disappeared in Mexico, victims of drug-related violence. Their loved ones are grieving, searching, and, now, keeping their distance.

Our Columnists
U.S. President Donald Trump listens during a meeting.

Trump’s Attempt to Obscure the Reality of the Pandemic Is Getting Comical

The President, having restarted his regular coronavirus briefings, is again the Administration’s primary spokesperson on the pandemic. The consequences are, by turns, absurd and alarming.

Our Columnists
Courtroom sketch of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev

Why a Court Overturned the Boston Marathon Bomber’s Death Sentence

“Even the very worst among us deserves to be fairly tried and lawfully punished,” a judge wrote.

Under Review
Kate Zambreno.

Kate Zambreno’s Present Tense

The fragmentary novel is everywhere. For a self-portraitist like Zambreno, it becomes a medium for exploring the difficulty of sustaining a self.

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Spotlight
Annals of Gastronomy
Selection of cheeses

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.

The Front Row
A younger and older character, both played by Seth Rogen, sit across a table.

Seth Rogen’s Empty Ethics in “An American Pickle”

The sentimental fantasy of generational conflict and an immigrant’s struggles, starring Rogen in a double role, strains to achieve a reconciliation with the recent cultural past.

Q. & A.
Stuart Stevens speaks to reporters.

Why Stuart Stevens Wants to Defeat Donald Trump

The longtime Republican strategist discusses his opposition to Donald Trump, his involvement in the Lincoln Project ad campaign, and why he thinks Mitt Romney would have made a great President.

Kitchen Notes
Five raw hot dogs.

Hear Me Out: Hot-Dog Salad

Hot dogs and hamburgers are so simple to cook and yet so strangely difficult to repurpose as leftovers.

Dept. of Law Enforcement
Image may contain: Human, Person, Helmet, Clothing, Apparel, Shoe, Footwear, Military Uniform, Military, Police, and Officer

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.

Crossword
Eustace with a crossword puzzle

A Moderately Challenging Puzzle

Disingenuous response to an unwanted text: fourteen letters.

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The Latest

After Twin Blasts, an “Apocalypse” in Lebanon

Smoke rises from the site of an explosion in Beirut's port area.

The political aftershock from the explosions in Beirut—and the criminal negligence that they exposed—will be much bigger than the disaster itself.

6:08 P.M.

What to Stream: “The Well,” a Daring Drama About a Race Riot in a Small Town

Two men hold a woman back.

The film, about a community’s response to the disappearance of a five-year-old Black girl, highlights American crises with dramatic audacity.

4:44 P.M.

The Personal Side of an East German Spy’s Defection in “Betrayal”

Various portraits of a man.

The short documentary is full of espionage and intrigue, but, at its core, it is a story about those who get left behind.

2:00 P.M.

Hinder: A Dating App for Emotionally Unavailable Men

Fitness Fred's dating profile on Hinder.

Swipe right to meet Fitness Fred, Fragile-Ego Fergus, and other charming chaps who don’t have time for you and can never really be reached.

2:00 P.M.

Americans Support Using U.S. Postal Service to Ship Trump to Different Address

 US Postal Service truck drives down Pennsylvania Avenue, with the US Capitol in the background.

Americans agreed that, after a new President is inaugurated on January 20th, Trump should be left on the curb outside the White House for pickup by a local mail carrier.

11:15 A.M.
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From This Week’s Issue
Movies
Drive in movie theatre.

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.”

Books
Buttocks and arm.

Rethinking the Science of Skin

What is all the scrubbing, soaping, moisturizing, and deodorizing really doing for the body’s largest organ?

Comment
Image may contain: Human, Person, Military, People, and Military Uniform

Protest Delivered the Nineteenth Amendment

The amendment, ratified a century ago, is often described as having “given” women the right to vote. It wasn’t a gift; it was a hard-won victory achieved after more than seventy years of suffragist agitation.

Fiction
Image may contain: Human, Person, Nature, and Outdoors

“Heirlooms”

“So, Mitsuko says, how long have you been sleeping with my son? Or is it casual? Not really, I say.”

Video

How A Spy's Defection Changed His Son's Life

The fallout from an East German spy's defection to the West continues to be felt by his son, Andy Stiller Hudson, who grew up without knowing about his father, or his career with the Stasi.

Daily Cartoon

Podcasts

The Power of Police Unions

Rows of police officers with their backs turned against a politician.

William Finnegan on what the repeal of an arcane law reveals about the conflict among police, protesters, and politicians. Plus, an interview with the mayor of Chicago, Lori Lightfoot.

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