The ‘Pussy’ Presidency
Donald Trump ended his term in office the way he began it: by invoking a perverse vision of manliness.
Donald Trump ended his term in office the way he began it: by invoking a perverse vision of manliness.
Black fans of the Washington Football Team are adapting to a new future for their beloved franchise—and reckoning with its past disregard of Native Americans.
The bureau’s surveillance of Martin Luther King Jr. reflects a paranoia about Black activism that’s foundational to American politics.
A casualty of Argentina’s so-called Dirty War, Isabel haunted my childhood like a ghost. Then I started searching for her.
So far, the Disney+ show is telling a story not about an epic struggle to save humanity, but about one woman’s efforts to save herself from her grief.
Locked Down has the air of a homework assignment completed the morning it was due.
A new HBO documentary zeroes in on the immense psychological toll it took for the legendary golfer to go from prodigy to phenom.
Think of it as a public service: Photos can be powerful tools in overcoming skepticism toward inoculation.
“I’m a massive fan of cinema, but sometimes you have to go where the people are,” the Oscar-winning Small Axe director told The Atlantic.
The best-selling author, who died recently at the age of 59, created a world of fiction that understood and celebrated his most loyal readers.
The seditionist frontiersmen of the Capitol riot certainly meant to send a message through their clothing. But what was it?
The U.S. Capitol did not fall the way the Twin Towers did, but the American idea it embodies was brutalized. We must remember 1/6 the way we remember 9/11.
“The real fraud is that we call ourselves a democracy yet deny the people of our capital political representation.”
New fiction from Lauren Oyler
“You could say conspiracy theories are like bad fiction, which attempts to tie everything up and explain it all.”
The insurrectionists have been sold a fiction, and their costumes warp the works that inspired them.
The spectacle of Wednesday’s tepid police response to riotous mobs shocked many. But the passivity is not some surprising anomaly—it is the status quo.
Watching the insurrectionists, I felt outrage and horror and heartbreak. What some of them seemed to feel was boredom.
Thanks to the pandemic, this list is more familiar and tentative than most annual film previews.
Donald Trump was America’s first stateless president.
It’s too soon to know which images will become emblematic of the Black Lives Matter demonstrations, but previous movements have shown the dangers of adhering to a singular narrative.
Emerald Fennell’s debut movie is a revenge thriller explicitly designed to subvert assumptions about femininity and serious works of art.