
‘That’s Just Like White Noise.’
Any writer with an interest in probing “American magic and dread”—to borrow a phrase from the novel—is probably in conversation with Don DeLillo, whether or not she knows it.
Any writer with an interest in probing “American magic and dread”—to borrow a phrase from the novel—is probably in conversation with Don DeLillo, whether or not she knows it.
One hundred years after the publication of The Waste Land, its vision has never been more terrifying.
An unforgettable year of cinema by newcomers and old masters alike
In-person browsing allows for something that’s become a novelty in our algorithm-addled age: serendipity.
Amazon and Spotify offer a raw deal for artists.
What’s the secret to making great pop music? A Max Martin–inspired musical has some answers.
His two final novels are the pinnacle of a controversial career.
The show finally got satire right ... with the help of Hello Kitty.
As if on cue, 2022 has reached into its bag and delivered a jolly old elf who slays.
Netflix’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover updates the book’s treatment of sex, presenting the act as not just an erotic force, but a miraculous one.
The swastika that the rapper tweeted ties a nasty little bow on his ever-expanding collection of disturbing ideas.
CNN’s Headline News may seem thoroughly old-fashioned now that it’s dead. But its demise is a reminder of the creeping nature of media obsolescence.
Kevin Wilson’s Now Is Not the Time to Panic features narrators haunted, yet not bound, by troubled pasts.
On his debut solo album, Indigo, the South Korean rapper finds meaning within the noise of global stardom.
“You Make Loving Fun” showed that the late Fleetwood Mac member was a titan in her own right.
Many of us want to feel like we’re benevolent, yet we pay substantial attention to how the process of giving will make us feel about ourselves.
In the Netflix film The Wonder, a “fasting girl” becomes a holy spectacle of self-annihilation.
Intangible in cultural heritage, tangible in my mouth
In Bones and All, the gore is paired with a love story that’s surprisingly tame.
A modern generation of animated sitcoms shows a rarity in the genre: well-adjusted fathers.