‘It’s Really First-Class Work’
Watching Oppenheimer with Richard Rhodes, who wrote a definitive account of the Manhattan Project
Watching Oppenheimer with Richard Rhodes, who wrote a definitive account of the Manhattan Project
Israel hasn’t destroyed its democracy yet. But something similarly essential is already gone.
Just not in the way I ever expected
Everyday tiredness is nothing like the depleting symptom that people with long COVID and ME/CFS experience.
Sound of Freedom and the limits of culture-war marketing
Turning your leisure into learning offers the happiest holiday experience of all.
The letter can be a meaningful signifier or a generic stand-in. Why is it so compelling?
Even Congress is getting in on the hype.
Israel’s political crisis is about the sense that something deep, sacred to many, has broken.
Authoritarians would have you think that they can do certain things better than their counterparts who have to deal with checks, balances, and public opinion. Don’t believe it.
The most powerful office in the nation presents his best chance to terminate the cases against him.
Authors are at the mercy of people who don’t bother reading their work.
You can lead a dog to grass, but you can’t make his human scoop.
The left has embraced an approach long favored by the evangelical right.
Search engines, ChatGPT, and other AI tools wouldn’t function without an army of contractors. Now those workers say they’re underpaid and mistreated.
Barbie purports to be critical of Mattel while being enthusiastically sponsored by Mattel.
A conversation with Annie Lowrey about how to diversify these schools—and by extension, America’s elite
Not taking advantage of the success of Barbie and Oppenheimer would be a catastrophic mistake.
“You’re interested in what you’re interested in, and I’m interested in women.”
Netanyahu’s judicial overhaul mistakes majoritarianism for democracy.