Sunday, February 22, 2026

Culture

The Heartrending Movies of John Cazale

With his sallow face and boulder-like forehead, John Cazale was one of the indelible character actors of the nineteen-seventies, but his career was tragically brief. He appeared in only five feature films—all Oscar nominees for Best Picture. He...

Why Did New Zealand Turn on Jacinda Ardern?

In 2022, Jacinda Ardern, the then Prime Minister of New Zealand, was approached by a stranger in an airport bathroom. Ardern was alone, washing her hands, when a middle-aged woman walked up to her at the sink. She...

Alison Bechdel and the Search for the Beginner’s Mind

One weekend in 1986, on a jaunt in a rented cabin with her soon-to-be-ex-lover, Alison Bechdel, a virtually unknown cartoonist in her twenties living in the Twin Cities, had an anxiety attack. The next installment of “Dykes to...

How the Broadway Musical “Maybe Happy Ending” Creates Visual Magic

The scenic designer Dane Laffrey on the inspiration he found while travelling in Tokyo and the ideas that led to the groundbreaking set design of the Broadway musical, which stars Darren Criss and Helen J. Shen. Source link

What We Get Wrong About Violent Crime

Late on a Sunday night in June of 2023, a woman named Carlishia Hood and her fourteen-year-old son, an honor student, pulled into Maxwell Street Express, a fast-food joint in West Pullman, on the far South Side of...

Jarvis Cocker Is Out of the Rain

This month, the beloved British pop band Pulp will release “More,” its first new album in twenty-four years. Jarvis Cocker, the band’s founder, lyricist, and front man, has engaged in innumerable interesting projects in the meantime—an album with...

Sebastião Salgado’s View of Humanity

Last year, on the occasion of Taschen’s reissue of “Workers” (originally published in 1993), I had the chance to interview Salgado over video chat. He was in Paris, sitting in his studio, with a mural-size print of one...

Brian Eno Knows “What Art Does”

Listen and subscribe: Apple | Spotify | Google | Wherever You ListenSign up for our daily newsletter to get the best of The New Yorker in your inbox.In the music business, Brian Eno is a name to conjure...

Is “The Phoenician Scheme” Wes Anderson’s Most Emotional Film?

Wes Anderson’s new film, “The Phoenician Scheme,” is a funny-ha-ha comedy, but there’s nothing funny about its story, which involves a wealthy industrialist’s attempts to realize a grandiose infrastructure project. Anderson’s signature is instantly recognizable in the movie’s...

The Criminalization of Venezuelan Street Culture

On the morning of April 23, 2024, Claudio David Balcane González, a twenty-six-year-old musician from the state of Aragua, in Venezuela, arrived at the Texas border. In the previous three months, he had travelled through nine countries, before...
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31 Dairy-Free Desserts That Don’t Taste Like a Compromise

Gone are the days when dairy-free desserts meant long ingredient lists and lackluster results. Today’s recipes rely on...
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