Why Nikki Haley appeals to a party that pretends its problems don’t exist.
The SUV that mistook the subway for parking.
America’s most divisive Israel-Palestine scholar, Norman Finkelstein.
Henry Kissinger’s long final act in high-society New York.
Matt Gaffney’s latest puzzle.
Readers sound of on the war and New York.
Our deliberately oversimplified guide to who falls where on our taste hierarchies.
New York Magazine’s 19th Annual “Reasons to Love New York” issue is meant to remind us why we’d be fools to live anywhere else.
A pleasingly powerful toothpaste.
Nicer-looking tote bags, actually stylish snow boots, and idiosyncratic Christmas stockings.
How to gift the city itself.
Ventures into an anime convention.
A Village apartment where the view is the point.
The rise of Fauxdeons.
Lawn Club puts a big green spin on the sports bar.
An exploration of what, exactly, makes the Wonka-to-be so compelling.
He could be our next great leading man — if he can figure out what kind he wants to be.
An assessment of Chalamet’s sex appeal as he steps into the role of Willy Wonka, one of the most sexless characters put to screen.
How to navigate this year’s glut of memoirs.
André 3000’s solo album trades rhymes and 808 drums for something looser and lusher.
Ridley Scott’s Napoleon has the faltering rhythms of a rough draft.
In its fifth season, Fargo jars itself out of complacency.