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The New Yorker

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Young Americans

For followers of Charlie Kirk, faith and patriotism are intertwined. Eliza Griswold reports on how Kirk’s conservative youth movement has evolved since his death.

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Today’s Mix

Can Sonny, South Korea’s Legendary Captain, Deliver in His Final World Cup?

Illustrated collage of Son Heungmin

All eyes are on Son Heung-min, the beloved thirty-three-year-old striker, as he attempts to re-create the magic of the country’s 2002 run.

The A.I.-Design Aesthetic That’s Taking Over the Internet

Illustration of a conveyor belt producing a boring Claude website

How Anthropic’s new tool, Claude Design, is creating overnight web-design clichés.

New York Primary-Election Results

A map of New York state with Election 2026 above it.

Micah Lasher, along with a slate of candidates backed by Mayor Zohran Mamdani and the Democratic Socialists of America, won in competitive races across New York City.

A Sprawling Monument to How Things Get Made

A construction site.

Mark Power’s “Fashion” lavishes formal attention on industrial machinery and, by extension, on the human effort behind it.

Who Is the Real Kevin Warsh?

A man an a podium.

Before the new Fed chairman got the job, he intimated that the central bank could cut interest rates, but last week he assumed the role of an inflation hawk.

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Personal History

What Science Knows About Grief

After my husband’s death, I had never been more pliable, tender, open, or raw. It was then that I tried E.M.D.R. therapy.

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The Lede

A daily column on what you need to know.

The Torture Chamber of British Politics Crushes Its Latest Prime Minister

Keir Starmer

Keir Starmer becomes the sixth Prime Minister over the past decade to resign, surrendering to the U.K.’s manifold problems.

Chronicle of a Disaster Foretold

Donald Trump

Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan’s “Regime Change” is packed with news about the Trump White House that will stay news.

The NY-12 Primary Is Awash with Money but Short on Belief

Figures gather around another figure who wears a tie and is speaking

The race—whose candidates include Micah Lasher, Alex Bores, George Conway, and Jack Schlossberg—is at once glitzy, confusing, and uninspiring.

The Difference Between the Knicks and the White House Cage Fight

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Sports, spectacle, and what Juvenal would have made of this moment.

How the Trump Administration Pushed Judges to Deport Children

Illustration of a judge zoom screens

The D.O.J. has fast-tracked immigration cases for unaccompanied minors and fired judges who appear not to comply.

Donald Trump’s Iran Deal Is Israel’s Disaster

Benjamin Netanyahu

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has few allies but Trump—and that partnership is now in question.

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U.S. Journal

The Repo Man Coming for Your Ride

As America’s auto debt nears $1.7 trillion, repossessions are reaching levels not seen since the Great Recession. Inside an industry at the front line of the country’s affordability crisis.

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The Critics

Books

What’s the Point of Sex, Anyway?

A praying mantis in a circle of animals.

The world’s life-forms reproduce sexually in a bewildering variety of ways, even though scientists still aren’t sure why they bother.

On Television

“Widow’s Bay” Sets a High Bar for Horror Comedy

Matthew Rhys smiling.

The Apple TV series starring Matthew Rhys follows a winning cast of small-island bureaucrats through a living hell.

Songs of Summer

A Lonely Adolescent Summer, Set to “Bad Moon Rising”

An animated image of a man singing a record spinning a boy on his bike a band on stage psychedelic images and the moon.

To an eleven-year-old in a Long Island suburb, Creedence Clearwater Revival’s 1969 hit sounded like it came from somewhere distant, deep, and haunted.

The Current Cinema

“The Invite” Is a Witty Relationship Comedy That Could Be Wilder

Two couples facing each other in an apartment.

In Olivia Wilde’s bickersome couples comedy, an evening of refreshments and recriminations leads to an intriguing proposition.

Pop Music

Olivia Rodrigo’s Early-Twenties Lament

Olivia Rodrigo in a pink dress holding a daisy

On her new album, “You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love,” the singer inches away from frisky pop-punk and toward the velvety yearning of New Wave.

Page-Turner

J. D. Vance’s Contemptuous Conversion Memoir

Figure looks away from camera.

“Communion” tells the story of Vance's decision to become Catholic, but it’s strangely disdainful of the faith he has joined.

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What We’re Reading

A short but powerful biography about the lives of Anthony Jansen van Salee and his wife, Grietje Reyniers, who rose from obscure origins to become one of New Netherland’s founding families; an examination of the men and women employed in the intertwined fields of finance and Big Law in nineteen-eighties New York; and more.

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Our Columnists

Q. & A.

Do Netanyahu’s Domestic Opponents Offer a Real Alternative?

Benjamin Netanyahu stands at a lectern and speaks.

Moshe Tur-Paz is one of many centrist Israeli politicians criticizing Donald Trump’s deal to temporarily stop the war with Iran.

The Sporting Scene

The U.S. Men’s Team Is Building Something, and Marching On

Soccer players celebrating.

The power of the diaspora is the story of this World Cup—and the U.S. team, which beat Australia 2–0 on Friday, embodies it as well as anyone.

Open Questions

Are Dads Getting Better?

Illustration of a giant baseball glove holding a baby.

At times, the question seems less about parenthood than about our views of men in a shifting world.

Global Notes

The Spectacular Failure and Ruinous Costs of the Iran War

Donald Trump points with an American flag in the background.

Even though an agreement has been reached, nations around the world will be feeling the effects of the war for some time.

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A person tied to the mast of a ship.
A Critic at Large

Why the Odyssey Keeps Defeating Filmmakers

Full of violence, desire, monsters, and magic, Homer’s epic has tempted directors for decades. Can Christopher Nolan’s new adaptation survive the voyage?

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Remembering Mark Singer

A selection of the New Yorker staff writer’s unforgettable work.

Profiles

Secrets of the Magus

Blackandwhite photograph of a man in a dark suit holding a tiny playing card in one hand

From 1993: The magician Ricky Jay’s deft illusions flout reality, and he rejects the notion that magic is a suitable entertainment for children.

The Domestic Life

Mom Overboard!

Image may contain Furniture Table Desk Child Person Baby Plant Adult Chair Art Painting Car and Transportation

From 1996: What do career women turned full-time moms do all day? A look at the lives of three high-powered professionals who quit the fast track for motherhood.

Profiles

Trump Solo

Donald Trump at MaraLago.

From 1997: A portrait of Donald Trump, amid marital upheaval and post-bankruptcy resurrection, selling his brand, his buildings, and himself.

U.S. Journal

Who Killed Carol Jenkins?

A photograph of the street in Martinsville Indiana where Carol Jenkins was found

From 2001: The mystery of how Jenkins, a Black woman in a small Indiana town, died, the whodunnit, has competed with the mystery of why the whodunnit has never been solved.

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Matthew Rhys in black and white
The New Yorker Interview

How Matthew Rhys Stays Hungry

The star of “Widow’s Bay” on the series’ emotional season finale, his formative love for Richard Burton, and the subtle power of scarfing a whole chicken onscreen.

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Ideas

When Did White-Collar Work Start to Look So Bleak?

A graduate touches a glass building with office workers and high rise building in it

In the nineteen-eighties, an office job promised security and fulfillment. For graduates starting careers today, the prospect is often tinged with dread.

Did an English Nobleman Mastermind the American Revolution?

Americans on a boat inside a British tea cup.

America’s fight for independence is often considered a battle fought and won at home. A new book argues that it was propelled by a transnational élite an ocean away.

Was Ray Howell Responsible for His Crimes?

A collage of a photograph in color and in blackandwhite with some text on the side.

A small-town doctor’s abuse of power shocked his community and family. Then he was diagnosed with a rare neurological condition, leaving his culpability in doubt.

Are Americans Too Old?

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In “Gerontocracy in America,” the historian Samuel Moyn argues that the central conflict of our era is between the young and the elderly.

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Dispatches

Misery Loves Company—If There Are Snacks

Do “Admin Nights” make people more productive or less lonely?

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Peruse a gallery ofcartoons from the issue »

Puzzles & Games

Take a break and play.

Catalogues

Can you sort the items into the correct order?

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The Crossword

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

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Solve the latest puzzle

The Mini

A bite-size crossword, for a quick diversion.

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Solve the latest puzzle

Shuffalo

Can you make a longer word with each new letter?

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Laugh Lines

Can you place the cartoons in chronological order?

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Cartoon Caption Contest

We provide a cartoon, you provide a caption.

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Name Drop

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

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The Weekend Essay

A Diehard Drinker Accidentally Quits

The cultural discourse around avoiding alcohol never convinced me—and why sober up when the world is burning? Then life intervened.

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In Case You Missed It

The Weekend Essay
Kate Millett Disappears
Kate Millett Disappears
The writer and artist’s 1972 installation “Terminal Piece” shows us the failure of language in the face of violence.
Books
The Star-Crossed Recluse Who Brought Astrology to the Masses
The Star-Crossed Recluse Who Brought Astrology to the Masses
Linda Goodman argued that our destinies were written. But her own life took some unexpected turns.
Postscript
David Hockney’s Hidden Depths
David Hockney’s Hidden Depths
Remembering a master of color and light who understood life’s shadows.
Personal History
The Paperboy’s Secret
The Paperboy’s Secret
In boyhood, guilt was a constant companion. I stopped mentioning the quarters that Mr. Wood put into my pocket.

Early in my treatment, we decided that you wouldn’t read my work. If you had an intense reaction to my writing of whatever sort, I’d worry it might influence how you related to me, but if you were more or less indifferent to it, I would feel devalued, misunderstood, rejected. Your response, from my perspective, could only be too much or too little.Continue reading »

The Writer’s Voice
The Author Reads “The Readers”

The Talk of the Town

Dept. of Hoopla
Street view of the Knick's parade.

Pencils Up! The Knicks on Broadway

Brave New World Dept.
Isabel J. Kim writing in a board game cafe.

Isabel J. Kim Makes Her Own World

Anakainōsis Dept.
Alexandra Grant  Keanu Reeves in front of a painting.

Alexandra Grant Brings Spirit Back

Deadpan Dept.
Dan Mintz holding a microphone.

Dan Mintz, Reanimated

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