The former Vanity Fair editor recalls a time when the expense accounts were limitless, the photo shoots were lavish, and the ...
In 1966, Simone wrote and performed “Four Women,” a musical portrait of different stereotyped Black women who were exploited ...
David Sellers — internationally renowned architect, serial entrepreneur, teacher, visionary and a longtime resident of ...
The Texas governor gained national attention by busing migrants to Democratic cities. Now he’s paving the way for President Trump’s mass-deportation campaign. The New Yorker Interview We Might ...
One hundred years after The New Yorker published its first issue, we delve into the rich history of movies that have been inspired by its writing – from Meet Me in St. Louis to Adaptation.
It was through MAD, Spiegelman says, that he learned “the whole adult world is lying to you.” That lesson helped him to create the consumerist sticker parodies Wacky Packages and the Garbage ...
In a corner of that nondescript parking lot sits a stone the size of a backyard grill, with a small plaque commemorating the birthplace of Ultimate Frisbee in 1968, and the three students credited ...
"An expert on both the people and the magazine?" "That's right." "You can tell me what we published in 1979, but you can also tell me who's mad at whom?" "Yeah, and I can tell you why they're mad ...
The madcap Londoner returns in a third sequel that is just as deliciously satisfying as the first movie in the series — maybe even more. By Elisabeth Vincentelli When you purchase a ticket for ...
But in the tender, sexy coda “Mad About the Boy,” the fourth film adapted from Helen Fielding’s Bridget Jones’s Diary novel series, she discovers there’s more life to live after the ...