Why Elon Musk gave Walter Isaacson, the ultimate insider biographer, unvarnished access into his world.
By Shawn McCreesh
For years, Columbia University received troubling reports about one of its OB/GYNs. It did nothing to stop him.
By Bianca Fortis and Laura Beil
The dream construction project and the Fifth Avenue nightmare.
Why are Democrats too polite to challenge Biden?
Volunteer firefighter and senatorial spouse Gisele Barreto Fetterman.
The phonics crowd seizes the high ground.
Matt Gaffney’s latest puzzle.
Readers sound off on the trio behind Bottoms and the making of Stephen Sondheim’s last musical.
Our deliberately oversimplified guide to who falls where on our taste hierarchies.
Allison P. Davis on how babies are a friendship killer, and Casey Gerald profiles Erykah Badu as she emerges for her biggest tour in decades.
An ultrasafe straight razor.
A home-stager-approved mirror, Fat Joe’s favorite T-shirts, and back-to-school backpacks.
A former Rockaways swim club transformed into a garden paradise.
Cake shops for any celebration.
Stops by the U.S. Open.
Libertine’s high prices clash with its bistro ambitions. Plus: Meet Our Restaurant Critic, Matthew Schneier
With Chiang Mai Chi dogs, Krapow smashburgers, and more.
In her latest novel, the writer’s many voices amount to noise.
Country Revival Nashville goes back to the glitz.
Are noses to Bradley Cooper what feet are to Quentin Tarantino?
How a faulty ratings system holds Hollywood captive.
On sophomore set Guts, Olivia Rodrigo gets more personal and less restrained.
Netflix somehow pulled off a skillful live-action anime adaptation with One Piece.
Public Works’s Tempest in the park is (mostly) no thoughts, just vibes.
She hasn’t put out an album since the Obama era, but the Queen of Neo-Soul’ never been bigger.
By Casey Gerald
Now, she fights with other women on TV.
By Matthew Schneier
What happens when you put down your phone and meet people face-to-face?
Dylan Mulvaney is pretty sure she can win everyone over. Well, most everyone.
By Brock Colyar
Body and shine came at a high toll for some women who relied on relaxers.
By Angelina Chapin
The world’s awash in ribbons, and it’s costing us.
Fashion’s talent problem.
Eight designer drinking vessels for high-class sipping.
No one was spared the Pandemic Skip.
Workplace hotties are born from a combination of scarcity and proximity.
Running errands in see-through Miu Miu.
Four fashion-director-approved ensembles.
Not everyone can handle the chop.
A brief list of terms for leaning into your most unambitious self.
Why are they doing that to their sweaters?