Something’s Fishy About the ‘Migrant Crisis’
The federal government’s dysfunction leaves immigrant-friendly cities feeling overwhelmed.
The federal government’s dysfunction leaves immigrant-friendly cities feeling overwhelmed.
Recusal is the right course for the Fulton County district attorney, even if the judge rules in her favor.
A new study of Republican attitudes helps explain why.
A star since childhood, she spent decades guarding her privacy. On-screen, she’s always played the solitary woman under pressure. But in a pair of new roles, she’s revealed a different side of herself.
A poem for Sunday
Culture and entertainment musts from Karen Ostergren
Digging into the GOP front-runner’s claims on the stump and in legal filings
Something I’ve seen in Putin’s most effective opponents: Even if it costs them their life, they defy him with humor.
A new film about the reggae legend sanitizes his commitment to social justice—and loses what made him so magnetic.
Our writers’ perspectives on arguing and communicating in healthier ways
He’s coming for Tom Brady’s legacy.
A rapper, a true-crime story, and the politics of distraction
A conversation with Charlie Warzel on Joe Biden’s foray into content creation
Justice Arthur Engoron’s ruling is not fatal for Trump’s business empire, but it might be a near-death experience.
A new program from the ChatGPT maker promises to create videos from simple text prompts, but little is known about how it will actually work.
The best installment of the Hong Kong–based drama connects the privileged protagonists with a society they inhabit at a distance.
He never quite says what precisely he thinks Russia gets right.
Jennifer Lopez would like us to take her seriously now.
Does it matter if writers turn their back on their work?
Even behind bars, the dissident leader was a threat to the corrupt Russian dictator.