01-10 Gen Z is rebelling against the economy with ‘disillusionomics,’ tackling near 6-figure debt by turning life into a giant list of income streams (news.google.com)
04:43 What Makes the Iranian Protests Different This Time - Unrest has spread across the Islamic Republic as it faces economic disaster at home and a profound weakening of its network of regional allies. (www.newyorker.com)
01-10 Lagos Is a Vortex of Energy - In a recent book, “Èkó,” the photographer Ollie Babajide Tikare captures the messiness and hope of the Nigerian city. (www.newyorker.com)
01-10 The Robot and the Philosopher - In the age of A.I., we endlessly debate what consciousness looks like. Can a camera see things more clearly? (www.newyorker.com)
01-10 TV Review: “Heated Rivalry,” Streaming on HBO Max and Crave - The show, a sexy romance between two closeted hockey players, began on a small Canadian streaming platform, but has become a huge, unexpected hit. (www.newyorker.com)
01-10 How an Attack on Obamacare Saved Abortion in Wyoming - In the most conservative state in the U.S., libertarianism can lead in surprising directions. (www.newyorker.com)
01-10 Donald Trump Was Never an Isolationist - He once defied the G.O.P. by blasting military interventions. But what looked like anti-interventionism is really a preference for power freed from the pretense of principle. (www.newyorker.com)
01-10 Is Donald Trump Creating the Conditions for Another World War? - “What you’re seeing both abroad and at home are completely optional conflicts created by the character of the President,” Jane Mayer says. (www.newyorker.com)
01-10 “Dead Man’s Wire” Is a Tangle of Loose Threads - In dramatizing a real-life hostage crisis from 1977, Gus Van Sant teases out enticing themes that remain undeveloped. (www.newyorker.com)
01-10 Minneapolis Reacts to ICE’s Killing of Renee Nicole Good - The city where George Floyd was murdered finds itself again at the epicenter of a national crisis. (www.newyorker.com)
01-10 Donald Trump’s New Brand of Imperialism - The historian Daniel Immerwahr says that Trump’s embrace of imperialist adventuring is not just about business interests—it’s an appeal to masculinity which “seems to sell.” (www.newyorker.com)
01-10 Does Every Marriage Need a Prenup? - The staff writer Jennifer Wilson explores why prenuptial agreements have boomed in popularity among millennial and Gen Z couples. (www.newyorker.com)
01-10 The Gospel According to Emily Henry - How the best-selling author of “People We Meet on Vacation” channelled her love of rom-coms—and her religious upbringing—into a new kind of romance novel. (www.newyorker.com)
01-09 The Zealous Voyagers of “Magellan” and “The Testament of Ann Lee” - In two portraits of seafaring religious zealots, the directors Lav Diaz and Mona Fastvold employ bold formal devices to hold their protagonists at a compelling remove. (www.newyorker.com)
01-09 Dances of the Georgian Court and Countryside - Also: Bang on a Can and St. Vincent in Richard Foreman’s “What to Wear,” the celestial folk of Cassandra Jenkins, Jennifer Wilson and Richard Brody on comfort in the cold weather, and more. (www.newyorker.com)
01-09 What “The Pitt” Taught Me About Being a Doctor - It’s as if the show’s creators absorbed every important conversation in health care today—and somehow transfigured it into good television. (www.newyorker.com)
01-09 Why Donald Trump Wants Greenland (and Everything Else) - There’s no Trump Doctrine, just a map of the world that the President wants to write his name on in big gold letters. (www.newyorker.com)
01-09 Béla Tarr’s Unbroken Visions - In muckily deliberative masterworks such as “Sátántangó” and “The Turin Horse,” the Hungarian director monumentalized the process of decay and the passage of time. (www.newyorker.com)
01-09 The Aggressive Ambitions of Trump’s “Donroe Doctrine” - After his assault on Venezuela, the President is turning his attention to the rest of the Western Hemisphere. (www.newyorker.com)
01-08 AllTrails Guide to Cringe Mountain - The lower section of this trail is gentle and promises landscape features familiar to most millennials, including plenty of heckin’ puppers and doggos, the crying-laughing emoji, and adulting. (www.newyorker.com)
01-08 Mr. Mamdani’s (New) Neighborhood - The corner of the Upper East Side the Mayor will call home is both far and not so far from Astoria. (www.newyorker.com)