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The New Yorker

Helicopter Parents

Our devastation of nature is so extreme that reversing even a small part of it requires painstaking, quixotic efforts. Nick Paumgarten reports on a daring project that uses an aircraft to teach an endangered ibis species to migrate from Germany to Spain.

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Today’s Mix

A Fist-Fight Over Donald Trump at the Evangelical Version of Harvard

At Wheaton College, a controversy around one of its graduates, Russell Vought, a Trump Administration official, shows how deeply the past decade has fractured conservative Christians.

We Might Have to “Shut Down the Country”

Anthony Romero, the A.C.L.U.’s executive director, talks about what he thinks could happen if the Trump Administration defies the authority of the courts.

Elizabeth Warren Fights to Defend the Consumer Protection Agency She Helped Create

Elon Musk’s campaign to shutter the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will end up hurting the very people Donald Trump promised to safeguard.

The New Yorker’s Jane Mayer and Rachel Aviv Win Polk Awards

The prizes recognize investigations into misconduct by the newly confirmed Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth, and the family life of the late Nobel laureate Alice Munro.

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The New Yorker Turns 100

This month marks a hundred years since the first issue of The New Yorker was published, in February, 1925. Since then, the magazine has become renowned for its reporting, commentary, criticism, fiction, humor, and more. Explore a special collection of history and writing to celebrate the turn of our century.

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A Century of New Yorker Poetry! Join us on February 20th to celebrate the release of our new anniversary anthology.See details »

From The Anniversary Issue

Onward and Upward

Harold Ross founded The New Yorker as a comic weekly. Today, we’re doubling down on our commitment to the much richer publication it became.

Sisterhood

Nuns from a convent outside Waco have repeatedly visited women on death row—and even made them affiliates of their order. The story of a powerful spiritual alliance.

Company Town

Gary, Indiana, and the long shadow of U.S. Steel.

A Newly Discovered Poem by Robert Frost

“Nothing New,” which the American poet wrote in 1918, is published for the first time in The New Yorker’s Anniversary Issue.

Tangled Web

An arachnophobe pays homage to the spider.

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Onward and Upward with the Arts

High-School Band Contests Turn Marching Into a Sport and an Art

Band kids today don’t just parade up and down the field playing fight songs. They flow across it in shifting tableaux, with elaborate themes and spandex-clad dancers.

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The Lede

A daily column on what you need to know.

Danielle Sassoon’s American Bravery

A conservative prosecutor in New York makes the first bold move against Donald Trump’s rampaging Presidency.

The Strategy Behind Trump’s Defiance of the Law

His violations follow an old playbook—trigger lawsuits, giving the Supreme Court a chance to declare statutes unconstitutional.

It Took Trump Only Twenty-four Days to Sell Out Ukraine 

Amid the chaos in Washington, the President’s phone call with Putin has Moscow filled with glee.

What the Assault on Public Education Means for Kids with Disabilities

The future of the Department of Education may hinge on the world views of two billionaires who abhor what they perceive as weakness and waste.

Donald Trump’s Pro-Union Labor Secretary

The nomination of Lori Chavez-DeRemer reflects MAGA’s working-class contradictions.

Gaza Must Be Rebuilt by Palestinians, for Palestinians

Trump’s proposal to turn Gaza into the “Riviera of the Middle East” is a call for more ethnic cleansing.

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Photo Booth

The Man Who Captured the Unique Beauty of Snowflakes

The microphotographic innovator Wilson Bentley believed that “every crystal was a masterpiece of design.”

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The Critics

The Current Cinema

The Uneven Cross-Cultural Comedy of “Paddington in Peru” and “Universal Language”

Cinematic nods abound in two tales of homecoming, one starring Paddington Bear and the other set somewhere between Canada and Iran.

Pop Music

Bartees Strange’s Interior Hauntings

On his third studio album, “Horror,” the genre-spanning musician deconstructs old fears and finds ways to survive new ones.

The Front Row

The Manic Brilliance of “Breakfast of Champions”

Scorned by critics on its release, in 1999, Alan Rudolph’s Kurt Vonnegut adaptation now emerges as an inspired comic extravaganza, whose very originality was its undoing.

The Food Scene

L&L Hawaiian Barbecue Brings New Yorkers the Plate Lunch

The Honolulu-based franchise specializes in simple meals that stick to the ribs.

Critics at Large

How Romantasy Seduces Its Readers

The literary genre has skyrocketed in popularity, with titles dominating best-seller lists and commanding billions of views on TikTok. What’s behind the allure?

On Television

The Old-School Heroics of “The Pitt”

The hectic medical drama, now streaming on Max, is a throwback to a different era of television—and a counterintuitive comfort watch.

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Peruse a gallery ofcartoons from the issue »

The Best Books We Read This Week

A sweeping study that examines the results of land changing hands throughout history; a poetry collection recasts Helen of Troy as an Appalachian housewife; a novel that presents a familiar tale of war and homecoming; and more.

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Takes

Revisiting notable works from the archive.

Rachel Aviv on Janet Malcolm’s “Trouble in the Archives”

Malcolm’s letters to a source reveal the intimate relationship behind one of her most influential pieces, from 1983.

Kevin Young on James Baldwin’s “Letter from a Region in My Mind”

The 1962 essay served as a definitive diagnosis of American race relations. Events soon gave it the force of prophecy.

Jia Tolentino on Joan Didion’s “everywoman.com”

Didion’s appraisal of Martha Stewart, from 2000, in which most glosses of the subject could also apply to the author, is an ur-text on contemporary feminine ambition.

Roz Chast on George Booth’s Cartoons

In the artist’s work for The New Yorker, which spans from 1969 to 2022, every object is lovingly drawn, in a way that only Booth could draw them. Every detail enhances the scene.

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The Art World

The Eternal Mysteries of Red

It’s often deemed the first color, the strongest color, the color that stands for color itself. So why does it keep slipping out of our grasp?

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Our Columnists

Stephen A. Smith for President

If the Democratic Party has a problem drawing young men who believe that the excesses of wokeness have left them behind, could there be a more appealing figure than the guy they’ve been watching argue about sports for the past decade?

The Tragedy and Farce of Luka Dončić’s Trade

The Dallas Mavericks handed their leading man to the Los Angeles Lakers. Now everyone is trying to make it make sense.

What Did the War in Gaza Reveal About American Judaism?

Peter Beinart on the story of Israel and the moral blind spot of the Jewish diaspora.

Elon Musk’s A.I.-Fuelled War on Human Agency

Musk seeks not only to dismantle the federal government but to install his own technological vision of the future at its heart—techno-fascism by chatbot.

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The Weekend Essay

An Academic’s Journey Toward Reporting

I was used to a disembodied way of working: identify a philosophical problem, then study it. What could spending time with a philosopher teach me about his ideas?

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Ideas

Can the Human Body Endure a Voyage to Mars?

In the coming years, an unprecedented number of people will leave planet Earth—but it’s becoming increasingly clear that deep space will make us sick.

Searching for Alien Life During the Cold War

For American and Soviet scientist trying to contact extraterrestrials, crossing the Iron Curtain was as hard as sending messages beyond the solar system.

How the Tiger Really Got His Stripes

People have wondered forever what determines the patterns that animals wear. We’re starting to figure it out.

The Long Quest for Artificial Blood

One of the most valuable substances in the world has never been replicated. Are we close?

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Personal History

A Visit to Madam Bedi

I was estranged from my own mother, so a friend tried to lend me his.

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Puzzles & Games

Take a break and play. 

The Crossword

A puzzle that ranges in difficulty, with the occasional theme.

Solve the latest puzzle

The Mini

A bite-size crossword, for a quick diversion.

Solve the latest puzzle

Laugh Lines

Can you place the cartoons in chronological order?

Play this week’s game

Cartoon Caption Contest

We provide a cartoon, you provide a caption.

Enter this week’s contest

Name Drop

Can you guess the notable person in six clues or fewer?

Play a quiz from the vault
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Toni Morrison and the Ghosts in the House

The acclaimed editor, author, and professor was born ninety-four years ago today. Read Hilton Als’s Profile, from 2003, about how Morrison fostered a generation of Black writers.

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In Case You Missed It

My Life with Left-Handed Women
In my family, left-handedness meant the omnipotence of motherhood—but also the burdens it could bring.
An Argentinean Writer and the Movement for Women’s Rights
Selva Almada’s work is central to the battle to protect hard-won victories that President Javier Milei has vowed to overturn.
I have always longed to be known, truly known, by another human being. Sometimes we live for years with yearnings that we cannot name. Until a crack appears in the sky and widens and reveals us to ourselves, as the pandemic did, because it was during lockdown that I began to sift through my life and give names to things long unnamed. I vowed at first to make the most of this collective sequestering.Continue reading »

The Talk of the Town

Reference Dept.

Most Likely to Own Madonna’s Yearbook

Brave New World

Doing the Robot, for Your School

Dept. of Sensitivity

The “Intactivists” Campaigning Against the Cut

Dept. of Reality

The Best Fake Books—Made Real

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