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Jason Blum, Sophia Takal, and others on how the scariest stories are always a little bit true. (article)
Jason Blum, Sophia Takal, and others on how the scariest stories are always a little bit true. (episode)
A young director revisits a nineteen-seventies slasher film, with toxic masculinity and the MeToo movement in mind.
Blumhouse Productions is spearheading a new crop of horror films with political and social import, like Jordan Peele’s “Get Out.”
The only thing scarier than a hidden killer, a ghost, a homicidal drifter, or a haunted doll is all four at the same time.
A heist story that sounds like a technological thriller—except that it happened this year, to a hapless executive in London. And it could happen to you.
Addams set out to write a pitch-dark satire of suburban life, and ended up creating one of the most beloved cartoons of all time.
A vocal octet expands the definition of classical music. (article)
The reporter details the efforts by men like Harvey Weinstein to censor their accusers and to intimidate journalists. (article)
The House Speaker talks with Jane Mayer about President Trump’s Ukraine call and more. And Farrow details the efforts by men like Harvey Weinstein to intimidate their accusers. (episode)
The reporter details the efforts by men like Harvey Weinstein to censor their accusers and to intimidate journalists.
The House Speaker talks impeachment and more with the legendary investigative journalist Jane Mayer.
The House Speaker talks impeachment and more with the legendary investigative journalist Jane Mayer. (article)
Just back from China, Evan Osnos and Jiayang Fan look at what the protesters want, and how the country’s leadership is handling the most visible protest movement in thirty years. (article)
Two writers analyze the protests in Hong Kong. And, from the archive, a report about Richard Nixon’s deliberations after Tiananmen Square. (episode)
Just back from China, two writers look at what the protesters want, and how the country’s leadership is handling the most visible protest movement since Tiananmen Square.
In 1989, an aging Richard Nixon planned to revisit China, but the Tiananmen Square massacre threatened his plans. He held a dinner party to solve the problem.
A vocal octet expands the definition of classical music.
As the population ages, Adam Gopnik explores what it’s like to be elderly. Plus, Elizabeth Strout returns to a hill on her college campus, where she’d contemplate the world. (article)
Five writers address the responses to “Ukrainegate.” (article)