TV Is Back in Its Commercials Era
Amazon Prime is the latest streaming platform to offer consumers a hard choice: Pony up, or sit through ad breaks.
Amazon Prime is the latest streaming platform to offer consumers a hard choice: Pony up, or sit through ad breaks.
A recent lawsuit argues that Snapchat causes harm to young people through its basic design.
By tying Iran’s fate to an unruly Axis, Khamenei has endangered his country and put it at serious risk of war.
It isn’t DEI.
Sasquatch Sunset is the latest in a long line of art-house films that turn viewing into an endurance test.
A dozen combination views of spiral galaxies captured by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope and Hubble Space Telescope
I teared up as I watched news coverage of the Carroll verdict. Trump is not above the law.
Whatever kind of EV you might want, chances are China has it.
Throughout the defamation trial, Donald Trump eroded the distinction between the court and the court of public opinion.
The news industry has been in decline for decades, but the latest round of layoffs is especially ominous.
George Eliot took up the question of Jewish self-determination in her last novel, Daniel Deronda, and arrived at a surprising answer.
It’s a question I’ve asked myself many times, as I’ve tried and failed to sell my house and buy a new one.
Silicon Valley has its own ascendant political ideology. It’s past time we call it what it is.
Conservative Republicans continue to abandon decency to defend Trump.
Images of several Indian-security-force motorcycle-stunt teams, stacking many riders atop a single motorcycle
Something is broken in the current policy of brinkmanship with Iran, and something unusual might be needed to restore a status quo.
America’s segmented, limited, and naive policy approach toward Iran continues to fail. The U.S. needs to try something new.
Greg Abbott is taking a stand to protect his state’s right to let children die in the Rio Grande, and four justices of the Supreme Court are encouraging him to do so.
The group has a reasonable criticism of American politics, but its approach won’t help matters.
The protagonist in Kaveh Akbar’s new novel wants to believe in something strongly enough that he’s willing to die for it.