The justice has never been afraid of dissenting alone.
By Irin Carmon
An epic roommate drama on Barrow Street.
By Bridget Read
In a volatile mayoral race, Eric Adams is struggling to attract key support.
Where else would Zoom’s executives meet?
Sam Bankman-Fried, cryptocurrency magnate.
An immodest proposal for Twitter’s future.
Matt Gaffney’s latest puzzle.
Readers sound off on tumultuous three-week period in Washington starting, anew biography of director Mike Nichols, and more.
Our deliberately oversimplified guide to who falls where on our taste hierarchies.
In New York’s February 1-14, 2021 issue, a look behind the statistics at the millions of women who’ve been forced out of the workforce this past year.
Protect your neck.
To scouting out furniture on Instagram.
Visits the newly vaccinated.
A Williamsburg apartment stays in the family.
Mark’s Off Madison is more than just Freds with an apostrophe (and a proper club sandwich).
What to eat, drink, and Zoom right now.
On the cusp of the Lunar New Year and 12 months after COVID-19 upended the neighborhood, Adam Platt searches for signs of rebirth (and dumplings).
Grace Young eats her way through Chinatown in order to save it.
Morfydd Clark, the mesmerizing lead of Saint Maud.
How the sitcom Superstore pivoted for a pandemic.
Remembering the anti-hero of underground hip-hop.
Appearances is a breakthrough for the podcast form.
Novelist Melissa Broder on the delights of online erotica.
The White Tiger is a brutal tale of ambition and corruption.
Anuel AA and Ozuna are better off making separate albums.
100 Boyfriends isn’t afraid of exploring gay culture (or sex).
Our biweekly guide to what to see, hear, read, and watch.