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Richard Brody offers his take on Best Picture of 2017, and the writer Chang-rae Lee goes shopping (article)
Masha Gessen reports on Russian-American politics. And a former border patrol agent looks back at his time on the job (article)
The New Yorker hosts an alternative Oscars ceremony, and Masha Gessen discusses Russian and American politics. (episode)
A disgruntled server has some opinions about the house-made ketchup: it’s disgusting.
Masha Gessen is uniquely positioned to write about Putin’s Russia, Trump’s America, and how the two intersect.
In a new memoir, a former Border Patrol Officer examines the emotional and physical toll of his time on the job.
Richard Brody offers his take on Best Picture of 2017—the movies you should have seen, and still can.
In a world where every purchase can be reviewed, the writer Chang-rae Lee takes us to a Hawaiian store where such precision is impossible.
Director Ava DuVernay talks with Jelani Cobb about civil rights, women in Hollywood, and interplanetary travel. (article)
An inside report on how the effect of Russian meddling in the 2016 election is forcing change at Facebook. (article)
Director Ava DuVernay on the distance between “Selma” and “A Wrinkle in Time.” And a report on how Facebook is reckoning with the fallout from Russian tampering during the election. (episode)
An inside report on how the effect of Russian meddling in the 2016 election is forcing change at Facebook.
Director Ava DuVernay talks with Jelani Cobb about civil rights, women in Hollywood, and interplanetary travel.
The New Yorker director of photography (and N.B.A. superfan) Joanna Milter talks basketball—especially her beloved Cavaliers—with David Remnick.
The New Yorker’s Ian Frazier, holding on for dear life, looks at the birth of a new sport: high-speed drone racing. (article)
Steve Coll on his new book detailing the failings of American intelligence in Afghanistan. Plus, Amy Davidson Sorkin asks how hard it is for extremists to get elected. (article)
Ian Frazier, holding on for dear life, looks at the birth of a new sport: high-speed drone racing. And a political scientist analyzes the midterm elections. (episode)
Both parties in Washington have seen a rise in extremist candidates. A political scientist sheds light on how this will affect midterm elections.
The Pulitzer Prize winner Steve Coll on how the repeated failures of American intelligence and policy led to the nation’s longest and most intractable war.
The New Yorker’s Ian Frazier, holding on for dear life, looks at the birth of a new sport: high-speed drone racing.
Novelist, T. Coraghessan Boyle grapples with the devastation wreaked by wildfires and mudslides, which took the lives of his neighbors and transformed swaths of his town into mud flats.
A former vegetarian investigates a veggie burger that “bleeds” like meat. And Elizabeth Kolbert takes stock of Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke. (article)