Can the women who brought the vice-president to the top of the ticket take her all the way?
By Rebecca Traister
At home with a former president on the brink of self-reflection.
By Olivia Nuzzi
A writer unearths the family secrets her father recorded.
By Beth Raymer
The AI-enthusiast rabbit hole.
Thomas Houseago, the sculptor with supersonically famous friends.
The new face of helicopter-parenting: Dorm Room Mamas.
Matt Gaffney’s latest puzzle.
Readers sound off on Charli XCX and a bitter feud in the paleontology world.
Our deliberately oversimplified guide to who falls where on our taste hierarchies.
For New York’s special dual political cover, Olivia Nuzzi interviews Trump, Rebecca Traister examines grassroots movements that led to Harris’s rise
A blue-light blocker for a better night’s sleep.
Sydney Sweeney’s scented candle, beverage-director-endorsed martini glasses, and a shapely Japanese kettle.
Milk-fiber T-shirts, backpacks made with bananas, and other things made from old food.
Watches med-school students get their white coats.
A Brooklyn loft that holds an archive of designer clothing.
The Frenchette crew has taken over the 87-year-old restaurant, and the snails are as garlicky and the duck as pink as ever.
Shogun made Anna Sawai a star — and an Emmy front-runner.
Our annual roundup takes stock of a fast-changing comedy world.
Fifty years after writing The Power Broker, the biographer holds on to all the details.
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice is a delightfully gruesome return to form for Tim Burton.
Adam Sandler swerves from self-deprecation to sentimentality in Love You.
In Colored Television, Danzy Senna gets caught in her own feedback loop.