The Water Wars Come to the Suburbs

A community near Scottsdale, Arizona, is running out of water. Amid the finger-pointing, the real question is: how many developments will be next? | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Double Mystery: the nature of twins (1995)

Recent studies of identical twins have challenged our most entrenched views of behavioral development. What do these studies reveal about human nature? | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Double Mystery: the nature of twins (1995)

Recent studies of identical twins have challenged our most entrenched views of behavioral development. What do these studies reveal about human nature? | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Does Hungary Offer a Glimpse of Our Authoritarian Future?

American conservatives recently hosted their flagship conference in Hungary, a country that experts call an autocracy. Its leader, Viktor Orbán, provides a potential model of what a Trump after Trump might look like. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

As Gas Prices Reach New Highs, Oil Companies Are Profiteering

With the price of crude oil soaring to more than a hundred dollars a barrel this year, and A.A.A. reporting that the average national gas price reached a new high of $4.37 per gallon last week, Big Oil has been making historic profits.(newyorker.com) | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

The Dance Between Editor and Writer in “Turn Every Page”

A new film about Robert Caro and Robert Gottlieb is a rare window into a relationship that usually goes undocumented. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Regardless of the legal obstacles to convicting the former President, Hutchinson’s testimony reconfirmed that he must never again be allowed anywhere near power. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

The Weird, Analog Delights of Foley Sound Effects

E.T. was jello in a T-shirt. The Mummy was scratchy potpourri. For Foley artists, deception is an essential part of the enterprise. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

“Blade Runner” has its own look, and a place in film history (1982)

Pauline Kael’s 1982 review of Ridley Scott’s futuristic thriller “Blade Runner,” starring Harrison Ford. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Love the Fig

Although many people dismiss it as a geriatric delicacy, it is a biological and evolutionary wonder. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Tom Davies has become a beloved icon of the Google Maps guessing game

Tom Davies has become a beloved icon of the Google Maps guessing game. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Jia Tolentino on the death of Roe

"we are entering an era not just of unsafe abortions but of the widespread criminalization of pregnancy" # | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

The New Poem-Making Machinery

Shall code-davinci-002 compare thee to a summer’s day? | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Why the “Privacy” Wars Rage On

Privacy rights protect personal autonomy and shield survivors of abuse. They also conceal abuse and safeguard the powerful. Is the concept coherent? | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Jennifer Egan's Fiction and Visions of the Future

On June 21st, the Pulitzer Prize winner discusses technology, memory, and her work, including her latest novel, with The New Yorker’s fiction editor. The conversation will be part of The New Yorker Live Summer Series, exclusively for subscribers. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Why Casanova Continues to Seduce Us

He fought for liberties, undaunted by his persecutors—and took liberties, unconcerned for his victims. Can we make sense of the Enlightenment libertine? | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

How to Buy a New Mattress Without a PhD in Chemistry

The disrupter economy has set its sights on your bedroom, offering gel capsules, ice fabric, green-tea memory foam, and copper-infused toppers. Will they help you get a better night’s sleep? | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

A Chaotic Twitter account is one of the most incisive works of social criticism

A chaotic Twitter account has become one of America’s most incisive ongoing works of social criticism. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

The Rise of the Internet’s Creative Middle Class

Fourteen years ago, Kevin Kelly famously proposed that an artist could make a living online with a thousand true fans. Has time proved him correct? | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

The Rise of the Internet’s Creative Middle Class

Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

When Baking and Real Estate Collide

Tartine, a beloved San Francisco bakery, wanted to grow. Partnering with a developer was one way to rise. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Yoko Ono’s Art of Defiance

Before she met John Lennon, she was a significant figure in avant-garde circles and had created a masterpiece of conceptual art. Did celebrity deprive her of her due as an artist? | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Harvey Weinstein's Army of Spies

The film executive hired private investigators, including ex-Mossad agents, to track actresses and journalists. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

James Patterson Became the World’s Best-Selling Author

His new autobiography adds another title to his enormous stack, but does it deepen the plot? | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Airbnb Reviews Decoded

Review: Their bed has the fluffiest pillows we’ve ever slept on. Decoded: Too fluffy. We had severe neck pain after just one night’s sleep. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

The Strange and Secret Ways That Animals Perceive the World

Nonhuman creatures have senses that we’re just beginning to fathom. What would they tell us if we could only understand them? | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Reports of the Pay Phone’s Death Are Greatly Exaggerated

Days after the city bid farewell to its “last pay phone” with much hoopla, one sleuth reported on several remaining phone booths—by making calls from said phone booths. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

The Theft of the Commons

Across centuries, land that was collectively worked by the landless was claimed by the landed, and the age of private property was born. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

To Catch a Beat (2011)

In a bubble of time-gone-by that hadn’t yet burst, a beaten-down beatnik tried his luck at bookselling. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Can Researchers Show That Threat Assessment Stops Mass Shootings?

Threat assessment aims to prevent attacks like the Uvalde school shooting. Studies suggest that it’s effective in other ways. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

When Shipping Containers Sink in the Drink

We’ve supersized our capacity to ship stuff across the seas. As our global supply chains grow, what can we gather from the junk that washes up on shore? | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Brainwashed: Where the “Manchurian Candidate” came from. (2003)

The story behind “The Manchurian Candidate” and its Cold War-centric focus on brainwashing. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

The Abyss (2007)

From 2007: Oliver Sacks on Clive Wearing, an English musician struck by a devastating brain infection that left him with retrograde amnesia and a memory span of only seconds. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

The Surreal Case of a CIA Hacker’s Revenge

A hot-headed coder is accused of exposing the agency’s hacking arsenal. Did he betray his country because he was pissed off at his colleagues? | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

The “Nathan for You” Finale, My New Favorite Love Story

What’s the difference between true love and delusion? That we believe in it? This question comes to a head in the show’s fourth-season finale. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Riding London’s Unexpectedly Fantastic Elizabeth Line

The new express train is four years late, wildly over budget, and beautiful as hell. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

How the Internet Turned Us into Content Machines

Two new books examine how social media traps users in a brutal race to the bottom. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Would Showing Graphic Images of Mass Shootings Spur Action to Stop Them?

On an evening seven years ago this month, a twenty-one-year-old white supremacist named Dylann Roof entered the Emanuel A.M.E. Church on Calhoun Street, in Charleston, South Carolina, pulled a semi-automatic handgun, and murdered nine Black congregants, in the midst of their Bibl … | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

How Harmful Is Social Media?

There’s a general sense that it’s bad for society—which may be right. But studies offer surprisingly few easy answers. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

The L.A. County Sheriff’s Deputy-Gang Crisis

Whistle-blowers say that a group called the Banditos functions as a shadow government within local law enforcement. The sheriff says there is no such gang in his department. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

The Zombie Hunters (2005)

On the trail of cyberextortionists. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

When Cars Kill Pedestrians

A boy’s death launches a movement to end pedestrian and cyclist fatalities in New York City and beyond. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Bicycles Have Evolved. Have We?

From the velocipede to the ten-speed, biking innovations brought riders freedom. But in a world built for cars, life behind handlebars is both charmed and dangerous. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

The Problem with Blaming Robots for Taking Our Jobs

For decades, the effects of automation have been fiercely debated. Are we missing the bigger picture? | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Florida Woman Bites Camel

Some thoughts on the art of the newspaper lede. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Would the World Be Better Off Without Philanthropists?

Critics say that big-time donors wield too much power over their fellow-citizens and perpetuate social inequality. But don’t cancel Lady Bountiful just yet. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

The Children's Hour: Watching the First Presidential Debate of 2020

I am one hundred years old and first voted in the Presidential election of 1944, while stationed with the Army Air Forces in the Central Pacific. I did this by mail, of course, and recall that this privilege was heavily shared by my fellow-G.I.s.(newyorker.com) | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago

Could Google’s Carbon Emissions Have Effectively Doubled Overnight?

A new report suggests that the money Big Tech companies keep in the banking system can do more climate damage than the products they sell. | Continue reading


@newyorker.com | 2 years ago