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Showing page 69 of 3498.
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Ron Klain, who recently stepped down as the White House chief of staff, discusses the lessons of the first two years of Joe Biden’s Presidency, and what might lie ahead for the President, Democrats, and American democracy. https://t.co/6bNgkPHGrG — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
In @newyorkerhumor, Emily Dickinson pens some classroom Valentines. https://t.co/cBFNSbT72L — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Cate Blanchett reunites with @adamgopnik, her opening-scene partner in the Oscar-nominated film Tár,” for a conversation about listening to music, the limits of language, and the art of acting in life and in the movies. https://t.co/34TYj8w1aM — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
The science-fiction writer Ted Chiang explores how ChatGPT works and what it could—and could not—replace: https://t.co/TrklGO9bzu https://t.co/4V2WUJ70m1 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Every time Ralph Ellison received another prize for “Invisible Man,” he had to face the inevitable question: Where was his second novel? https://t.co/TpPqc4P0z5 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
For the documentary “In Silico,” a filmmaker set out to track the creation of a simulated brain. He ended up capturing a more complicated story. https://t.co/5wdH5YjWPD — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
What if the pattern of evolution is not actually a tree? https://t.co/XwBMPsfKSD — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Straight talk about climate change is crucially important right now, not just because the world is enduring enormous and unnatural disasters but because these disasters coincide with a man-made flood of obfuscation. https://t.co/eELETw3O0G — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“Real life, life at last laid bare and illuminated—the only life in consequence which can be said to be really lived—is literature,” Marcel Proust writes, in the last volume of his autobiographical novel, “In Search of Lost TIme.” https://t.co/CD3MbJ3Kcp — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
.@andrewmarantz: Can you make up a pun about rogue A.I.? ChatGPT: Sure: “Why did the rogue AI cross the road? To get to the other side of the algorithm!” @andrewmarantz: Thank you. That was extremely bad. https://t.co/77bZOiiXhi — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“I believe in monogamy,” the celebrity-divorce attorney Laura Wasser says. “I don’t know if I believe in forever monogamy.” https://t.co/43llitZdxV — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“You are the only person known to have this exact mutation,” an investigator at the National Institute of Health told Beverly Gage. “In other words,” she writes, “I am one of a kind, and therefore a medical curiosity.” https://t.co/7V80BPagrR — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
According to medical historians, the collision between sports and concussions began around the 1880s. American-style football was gaining in popularity at Ivy League colleges, and violence was fundamental to its allure. https://t.co/O8xPH6gcBH — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Critical race theory has been mischaracterized as Black-supremacist racism, false history, and the terrible apotheosis of wokeness. What did its foundational thinker, Derrick Bell, actually believe? https://t.co/RNJyAqhxsy — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Targeted police units that were created to go after gangs, guns, and drugs often use trivial infractions as a pretext to justify pulling over a car and looking inside it. These stops are not only inefficient; they spark a deadly cycle of fear. https://t.co/T4GZlfonJ4 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
.@eosnos interviewed six American superyacht owners, and almost all insisted on anonymity. “It’s really hard to talk about it without being ridiculed,” one confessed. https://t.co/2XkXSOCvGg — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Are “universal” Russian novels a product of expansionist ideology? Elif Batuman investigates. https://t.co/mprYuedtro — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
In France, an alternative nursing home insists that a person with Alzheimer’s flourishes and evolves as a human being until the end. https://t.co/g2HozquVao — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Ellen Carey made wacky pictures of her friends and kaleidoscopic, hand-painted SX-70 Polaroid self-portraits that were heavily inspired by the Surrealists. https://t.co/ADKKJpzCD1 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
You know you’ve made it in San Francisco if you live in a 250-square-foot studio apartment in Nob Hill, which only set you back $3 billion. https://t.co/F4ViZfNNWL — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
Literature departments seem to provide a haven for studying books, but they may have painted themselves into a corner. https://t.co/xV5FAB30Hs — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
For the pyschotherapist Esther Perel, love is “an active engagement with all kinds of feelings—positive ones and primitive ones and loathsome ones. And it’s often surprising how it can kind of ebb and flow.” https://t.co/xmDJVP1b65 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
A cartoon by John McNamee. #NewYorkerCartoons https://t.co/muxw9h0wCm — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
In Syria, volunteers that have been pulling civilians out of the rubble of homes bombed by Russian and Syrian air strikes for years did their best to rescue earthquake survivors. They had none of the advanced rescue equipment brought to Turkey. https://t.co/91CTIgcTD1 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“There was no one like Tom,” Patti Smith writes. “He possessed the child’s gift of transforming a drop of water into a poem that somehow begat music.” https://t.co/Ai8HKtxfXs — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
A cartoon by Amy Hwang. #NewYorkerCartoons https://t.co/cdfRemBJdd — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“Being perceived as false or fake or not authentic or not real enough—all of those tropes are used as a criticism of the clown, or of this idea of hiding behind humor,” @kateberlant says. “That’s always been such a toothless thing to me.” https://t.co/b5lBI55gRx — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
RT @MJSchulman: “I’m sixty-four years old—it’s, like, “O.K., when?” For The New Yorker's digital Interviews Issue, I spoke to Angela Basse… — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“One of my goals was to show that Black women are not monolithic,” Janelle Monáe says, of her eclectic acting roles. “We can be in space and we can be in the ghettos and still make an impact in both.” https://t.co/N0nq7Enyq9 — PolitiTweet.org
The New Yorker @NewYorker
“Art is work. Work is art,” the songwriter John Cale says. “I never realized until I arrived at the Factory how important it was having a place to go every day. Andy [Warhol] fostered so much creativity for so many of us.” https://t.co/4x05iIWReu — PolitiTweet.org