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Showing page 38 of 3498.
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The ethics professor Agnes Callard divorced her husband after she fell in love with her graduate student Arnold. “Your entire philosophical career is a discussion of our marriage, in one way or another,” Arnold said. https://t.co/cNflWfwEk3 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The Indian film “RRR,” which is streaming on Netflix, thrusts its imaginative artistry thrillingly and gleefully to the fore, @tnyfrontrow writes. https://t.co/w8KFytjdAV — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
It seems there's a curious link between our minds and our feet. https://t.co/Bff3AQa0Oa — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“It was opened in 1854 and is the oldest saloon in the city”: Joseph Mitchell’s classic 1940 story about McSorley’s Old Ale House. #NewYorkerArchive https://t.co/tO5WMJ5uad — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The @Guggenheim presents a series of site-specific installations by the brilliant American artist Sarah Sze, Georgia O’Keeffe returns to @MuseumModernArt, and more. https://t.co/iouUhySTkk — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Are we the same people at age four that we will be at 24, 44, or 74? Or do we change dramatically through time? https://t.co/Ft9t4s2hFx — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
William Finnegan writes about the toughest and most consequential public-works problem in New York—Penn Station—and the politics of getting it fixed. https://t.co/1OZCItjwv4 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“Divorcing”—the only published book by Susan Taubes, who died shortly after its release, in 1969—is, as the title suggests, about a divorce. But it is also about the problem of being. https://t.co/WtmmhtrGXI — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Most Black Panther posters—armed figures in berets and leather jackets, often in black-and-white with a single bold color—were printed on the back pages of Panther newspapers. A new exhibition collects the movement’s ephemera. https://t.co/IGhq24LGjp — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Long before Prince Harry’s “Spare,” there was “The Heart Has Its Reasons,” published by the Duchess of Windsor in 1956. In it, Wallis Simpson recalls her first marriage, early striving, and a royal love affair. https://t.co/eex6qjSpXS — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
William Klein’s “Life Is Good and Good for You in New York” is one of the most exciting and idiosyncratic photography books of the past century. https://t.co/u8dCW0hyYZ — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
A Profile of the author Salman Rushdie, whose new book, “Victory City”—his 16th since a fatwa was issued against him—is an affirmation of the power of storytelling. https://t.co/IF21DZv6oh — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“The lines of power really interest me: Who enables it, and what benefit do they get from it?” the Oscar-nominated director of “Tár,” Todd Field, says. “And when is it no longer a benefit?” https://t.co/oKmtxZ7aRR — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Putting olive oil in coffee was a no-brainer, by the account of the Starbucks C.E.O. Howard Schultz. “It does seem as though the number of brains involved was narrowly circumscribed,” Gideon Lewis-Kraus writes. https://t.co/mCmSLc4JLs — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
.@henryfingjames makes a proposal: split the baby boom in half and dub those born between 1956 and 1964 the “Dazed and Confused” generation, after Richard Linklater’s quintessential teen movie, which is approaching its 30th anniversary. https://t.co/f6BllIgbOw — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
When Jamie Dack was 17, she started dating a 33-year-old man she met on an Amtrak train. In her first feature-length film, Dack uses the protagonist as a proxy for her younger self. “I was this very vulnerable teen-age girl,” she says. https://t.co/nN942bwoXz — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The murder trial of the South Carolina lawyer Alex Murdaugh, the scion of a prominent legal dynasty, was a fittingly epic finale to his protracted downfall, James Lasdun writes. https://t.co/ACEhLla0zM — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“My neighbors are Meghan and Prince Harry,” Jane Lynch said. “I haven’t actually seen them. I have seen Rob Lowe around, though. He’s a man of the people.” https://t.co/1sbRRPdmN8 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Ian Falconer, the author of the “Olivia” books and of more than 30 New Yorker covers, died today, at the age of 63. https://t.co/r3NFUe8CMX — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
A cartoon by @EmilyFlake. #NewYorkerCartoons https://t.co/sdKeHEzfHn — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Ian Falconer, the author of the “Olivia” books and of more than 30 New Yorker covers, died today, at the age of 63. https://t.co/tURt2ERTI8 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
.@dahliasc discusses the current political situation in Israel, and what it means for the country’s future. https://t.co/XpkIe8wty5 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
What role should politics play in the writing of history? https://t.co/2TrMlzr3TU — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Eleanor Catton’s novel “Birnam Wood” opens with a seemingly impersonal catastrophe: a landslide in New Zealand kills five people. From this disaster a complex and often shocking sequence of events unfolds. https://t.co/lgVM2SGNT5 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Breast milk remains the widely acknowledged gold standard in infant nutrition; to replicate it in a laboratory would be alchemy. Can startups reinvent it? https://t.co/DGDwqCo63O https://t.co/7cuEn1YDSA — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
For many boxing fans, the rigor and riskiness of boxing can seem self-justifying: fighters are inspiring precisely because the thing they do is so gruelling and so dangerous. https://t.co/dvNrLjegha — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Revisit Renata Adler’s report on Martin Luther King, Jr., and the historic civil-rights march from Selma to Montgomery, which set out on this day in 1965. https://t.co/HqZqjYkNp9 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The private-aviation market has cooled since its pandemic boom. Every rich person seems to be unloading the family plane. https://t.co/aeMG8PaWjJ — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“Coronababies,” “cottagecore,” and “corntastic” are among the lexical finds of @NYT_first_said, a bot that tweets whenever the Times uses a word that it has never used before. https://t.co/ZcoZgxvnYu — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Alex Murdaugh’s murder trial didn’t reveal much about his cousin Eddie, the alleged shooter in Murdaugh’s botched assisted suicide, and his possible accomplice in the narcotics schemes that both men have been charged with. https://t.co/PLaavqZOnm — PolitiTweet.org