The Cases Against Trump: A Guide
Thirty-four felony convictions. Charges of fraud, election subversion, and obstruction. One place to keep track of the president-elect’s legal troubles.
Thirty-four felony convictions. Charges of fraud, election subversion, and obstruction. One place to keep track of the president-elect’s legal troubles.
A new Netflix documentary explores the cost of Martha Stewart’s chase for domestic perfection.
For years he used fake identities to charm women out of hundreds of thousands of dollars. Then his victims banded together to take him down.
It’s probably leaching chemicals into your cooking oil.
In a populist moment, the Democratic Party had the extremely rich and the very famous, some great music, and Mark Ruffalo. And they got shellacked.
Revenge on the military is just the start of it.
Every generation has an Oz story, but one retelling best captures what makes L. Frank Baum’s world sing.
I know I sound naive, but this wasn’t like a “normal” affair.
Why can’t I get anything done?
On his new album, GNX, a rapper who’s obsessed with excellence tries to entertain the masses.
An autonomous delivery robot in Barcelona, a heat wave in Australia, a triceratops auction in France, a lava flow in southwestern Iceland, Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York City, and much more
Yáng Shuāng-zǐ’s Taiwan Travelogue shows how colonization shapes a country’s culinary landscape.
Survivalists, drifters, and divorcées across a resurgent wilderness
Nature documentaries mislead viewers into thinking that there are lots of untouched landscapes left. There aren’t.
Tech giants such as Google and Meta need something more than compelling chatbots to win.
The hollowness at the center of Heretic
The high aspirations with which the tribunal was founded should not shield it from the consequences of its decision to pursue other agendas.
I ventured into the belly of the holiday-returns beast.
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.
You don’t have to become a Buddhist monk to realize the value of contemplating hard questions without clear answers.