Read The New Yorker’s complete coverage of the coronavirus pandemic and Black Lives Matter protests.
America’s Coronavirus Endurance Test
To defeat the virus, we will have to start thinking in years rather than months.
After Twin Explosions, an “Apocalypse” in Lebanon
The political aftershock from the explosions in Beirut—and the criminal negligence that they exposed—will be much bigger than the disaster itself.
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.
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Spotlight
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.
The North American Maximalism of Gigi Hadid’s and Drake’s Home Design
There’s a sensibility at play at the highest end of interior decorating right now, the fulfillment not of a designer’s vision but of a personal identity.
“The Well,” a Daring Drama About a Small-Town Race Riot
The film, about a community’s response to the disappearance of a five-year-old Black girl, highlights American crises with dramatic audacity.
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.
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.
A Moderately Challenging Puzzle
Disingenuous response to an unwanted text: fourteen letters.
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Rules of Baseball, 2020
Players are banned from visiting bars, honky-tonks, and strip clubs, unless they’re really restless and just need to get out of the hotel for a while.
The Personal Side of an East German Spy’s Defection in “Betrayal”
The short documentary is full of espionage and intrigue, but, at its core, it is a story about those who get left behind.
Hinder: A Dating App for Emotionally Unavailable Men
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.
Americans Support Using U.S. Postal Service to Ship Trump to Different Address
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.
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From This Week’s Issue
The Picnic Baskets of the Pandemic
Bubby’s craggy fried chicken, Café Kitsuné’s frilly ham and Gruyère on baguettes, Otaku Katsu’s sando set, and more blanket-ready fare.
Joseph McCarthy and the Force of Political Falsehoods
McCarthy never sent a single “subversive” to jail, but, decades later, the spirit of his conspiracy-mongering endures.
Who Is Kanye’s Running Mate?
Residents of Cody, Wyoming—where Kanye West has a ranch—compare notes on Michelle Tidball, the local mystic who works in a dentist’s office and says she can communicate with God.
“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.