At the Pentagon, the circle of people Pete Hegseth trusts grows smaller every day.
By Kerry Howley
The writer turned Trump antagonist shows a side of herself she kept buried during the trials.
By Jessica Bennett
Protests have outgrown social media.
Immigrants show up at 26 Federal Plaza not knowing what will come next.
Pablo Torre, the podcaster obsessing over Bill Belichick.
Brian Wilson, Sly Stone, and the double standard of genius.
An electrolyte packet that can power a marathoner.
Andy Cohen’s portable speaker, tiny-balcony décor, and summer-camp essentials.
How dedicated beachgoers set up their space.
Inspects the tailoring at a menswear pop-up.
From Tashkent to Misipasta, the hottest restaurants right now are these grocery stores.
The White Lotus star is happy to dish but too canny to name.
Is it possible to reclaim focus in an era of constant scrolling?
How The Gilded Age finds comedy and drama in unexpected places.
On her debut album, Addison Rae breaks with the past.
Trauma weighs down good storytelling in Stick.
Eurydice is as whimsical as it is rigorous.
The Bear returns, a dystopian beach read for Love Island fans, Akira Kurosawa’s last great epic at the Japan Society, and more.
Matt Gaffney’s latest puzzle.
Readers sound off on Michael B. Jordan, Hollywood leaving Los Angeles, and AI in filmmaking.
Our deliberately oversimplified guide to who falls where on our taste hierarchies.
Contributor Suzy Hansen looks at how Israel, with the help of the U.S., broke not only Gaza but the foundations of humanitarian law.