The New Yorker
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The Connecticut senator Chris Murphy says he thinks people are picking up what he’s putting down “because they see that I am motivated . . . by my fear that we are going to sleepwalk through the transition of our country from a democracy to an autocracy.” https://t.co/AwieyGJH2m
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“I think Donald Trump represents something a lot of people just don’t see. And I didn’t see it for a long time, but I think I see it now.” The head of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary talks to @IChotiner about the evolution of his views on Trump. https://t.co/NLj3vjaTHj
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Keith Meister, a surgeon based in Texas, operates on seven pitchers’ elbows a day during what he calls his “busy season”—the weeks leading up to and immediately after M.L.B.’s opening day. https://t.co/R5BdS0ln4i
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In 1964, on their first world tour, the Beatles took pictures that have only recently been discovered. What do they show us? https://t.co/osyU4h8qGp
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“At first, I thought it was going to be about the friends growing apart, about envy, or motherhood—and I was startled when all these issues gave way to aging.” Ayşegül Savaş talks about her new fiction, “Marseille.” https://t.co/EwDy7vOV37
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“Sometimes being bewildered is just part of reading,” Jesmyn Ward, the author of “Salvage the Bones” and “Sing, Unburied, Sing,” shares a selection of laborious books. https://t.co/rKz3r98LbY
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“ ‘Much Ado About Nothing,’ in this instance, is saved by the inhabitants of Marvel.” Anthony Lane writes about the new London production of “Much Ado About Nothing,” starring Tom Hiddleston and Haley Atwell, and why not all celebrity casting is a gimmick. https://t.co/SpLFy0udSo
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Candy Clark carried her Polaroid with her everywhere in the 70s and early 80s. “The reason that I felt I could do that was because of Andy Warhol,” she said. See her photographs of familiar faces, from Harrison Ford to Carrie Fisher. https://t.co/baLvF0i4wR
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Why has Disney’s new live-action remake of “Snow White” flopped at the box office? Recent articles pin much of the blame on Rachel Zegler. But the real reasons behind its implosion are “structural and multifaceted,” Jessica Winter writes. https://t.co/SmVZmkrTwb
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Over a month after she was laid off from the U.S. Geological Survey, a geologist received notice that her removal was rescinded. She felt “tossed in a current,” E. Tammy Kim writes. “The mass reinstatements were as shambolic as the mass firings had been.” https://t.co/F8dxZRIyiC
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Two individuals, each with plenty of issues and their own communication quirks, collide on opposite ends of a mental-health helpline in Jeremy Beiler’s short film “Happy to Help You.” Watch it here. https://t.co/EdKAR4OYx4
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Gilbert, a quickly expanding community in Arizona, was called one of the best places in the West to raise a family. But then the Gilbert Goons, a shadowy teen gang, was implicated in a series of violent attacks—including a killing. https://t.co/5zkegINYRm
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In the Yiddish novel “Sons and Daughters,” the revolt of the younger generation against Judaism drives the plot, but the author, Chaim Grade, doesn’t forfeit his sympathy with the old men who are trying to keep Judaism alive. https://t.co/OaOxf4ivXZ
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Trump’s breathtaking exercise of executive authority puts him on a collision course with the courts and Congress. If Chief Justice John Roberts’s view is taken to its logical end, the executive branch is bound to prevail, @cristianafarias writes. https://t.co/aUdqRB4hZS
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Susan Crawford’s win cemented the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s liberal majority. The election was seen as a crucial test for the growing backlash against Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s agenda. https://t.co/XM6bZFB4a7
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Frog and Toad are “of the same sex, and they love each other,” the daughter of its author, Arnold Lobel, said. “It was quite ahead of its time in that respect.” https://t.co/iS8BxxBref
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Our yearning to be fully known is inevitable—and, perhaps, misleading. https://t.co/dhJ4P29Lg0
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“Risotto is governed by a set of laws that are rooted in tradition, rich in common sense, and aching to be broken or bent,” Anthony Lane writes. https://t.co/qYl1ZqJFgw
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“Behind each new revelation of white-collar crime lurks an uncomfortable question about some of America’s most lucrative businesses: Are they attracting rogues or grooming them?” In 2021, @eosnos explored the failure to hold top executives accountable. https://t.co/NAuKE5fW4T
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Greg, a contractor living in Lake Tahoe, had a bear try to get into his house. The bear had used its upper-body stretch to reach the window, which stood about seven feet off the ground. Bears “could probably lift a car up if they wanted to,” he said. https://t.co/685LZhjlzQ
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