The Democratic Party abandoned Obama-era pragmatism. Kamala Harris might restore it.
By Jonathan Chait
Why did the real-estate industry let the Alexander brothers act with impunity?
By Bridget Read and James D. Walsh
On the campaign trail, the left flexes its new view of manhood.
Private-school provocateur Sophie Brickman.
Every heat death represents a failure.
Matt Gaffney’s latest puzzle.
Readers sound off on Kamala Harris and how two literary marriages fell apart.
Our deliberately oversimplified guide to who falls where on our taste hierarchies.
For the cover image, a prosthetic-makeup artist applied foam-latex molds to each “pet” before tweezing strands of hair onto the masks.
The professional-grade kitchen set every home cook needs.
This year’s enormous sold-out skeleton, Denzel Curry’s body oil, and a case that’ll transform an iPhone into a 2007-era BlackBerry.
Under the covers with a throuple and their dachshund.
Browses the racks at a plus-size closet sale.
Two designers dress up a farmhouse near an old Girl Scout camp.
Is the follow-up to Rezdôra bigger and better — or just bigger?
New York’s Thai scene has never been better.
Restaurants are enforcing some strict time limits — whether or not dinner is finished.
Blink Twice could catapult the actress to a new level of fame, regardless of whether she wants it.
Coming soon to the High Line: a 16-foot-tall bird.
From Sex and the City to Emily in Paris, Darren Star has made a career out of proving critics wrong.
The bride of Chucky is thrilled to be a vessel.
Josh Har tnett is the best par t of Trap.
Life and Trust lacks the throat-grabbing intimacy of Sleep No More.
In his first live Netflix special, Joe Rogan is exhaustingly blameless.