The former President, at Mar-a-Lago on April 12, is rallying the right at home and seeking common cause with autocratic leaders abroad.Photograph by Philip Montgomery for TIME Donald Trump thinks he’s identified a crucial mistake of his first term: He was too nice. We’ve been talking for more than an hour on April 12 at his fever-dream palace in Palm Beach. Aides lurk around the perimeter of a gil
Reverend Sun Myung Moon gestures dramatically as he speaks at New York's Madison Square Garden. His chief associate, Col. Bo Hi Park, right, translates from Korean to English.Bettmann Archive/Getty Images It was 11.29 a.m. beneath pewter skies in Japan’s southern city of Nara when Shinzo Abe was handed the microphone. The nation’s former prime minister, wearing a navy blue jacket and crisp white s
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky photographed in Kyiv on April 19Alexander Chekmenev for TIME The nights are the hardest, when he lies there on his cot, the whine of the air-raid sirens in his ears and his phone still buzzing beside him. Its screen makes his face look like a ghost in the dark, his eyes scanning messages he didn’t have a chance to read during the day. Some from his wife and k
HistoryPeopleNatalie Wood’s Death Has Been Ruled Suspicious. Here’s What to Know About the Actor’s Mysterious Drowning Natalie Wood’s Death Has Been Ruled Suspicious. Here’s What to Know About the Actor’s Mysterious Drowning More than 35 years after the mysterious death of Hollywood star Natalie Wood, the actor’s 1981 drowning has returned to headlines. On Thursday, responding to interest generate
President Trump’s inflammatory warnings to North Korea appear to have unsettled the stock market as fears of nuclear war likely triggered a global sell-off this week. But far away from Wall Street, the looming threat of the apocalypse is good business. Larry Hall, the project manager and owner of the Survival Condo Project, is one of the few who’s benefiting in the wake of tension between the U.S.
PoliticsWhite HouseThe White House Keeps Tripping Up on the Truth. President Trump Doesn’t Seem to Mind The White House Keeps Tripping Up on the Truth. President Trump Doesn’t Seem to Mind Mike Pence is not prone to winging it. A lawyer-by-training and cautious politician-by-habit, Pence was preparing for a series of interviews and wanted more information. So Pence, then the Vice President-elect,
Updated: November 18, 2016 12:22 PM [ET] | Originally published: November 18, 2016 12:18 PM EST; During the 1990s, two amateur historians, Neil Howe and the late William Strauss, developed a new theory of American history in two books, Generations: the History of America’s Future (1991), and The Fourth Turning: An American Prophecy (1997). They identified an 80-year cycle in American history, punc
Most modern Presidents chart their opening moves with the help of a friendly think tank or a set of long-held beliefs. Donald Trump’s first steps had the feel of a documentary film made by his chief strategist and alter ego Stephen K. Bannon, a director who deploys ravenous sharks, shrieking tornadoes and mushroom clouds as reliably as John Ford shot Monument Valley. Act I of the Trump presidency
This is the 90th time we have named the person who had the greatest influence, for better or worse, on the events of the year. So which is it this year: Better or worse? The challenge for Donald Trump is how profoundly the country disagrees about the answer. Photograph by Nadav Kander for TIMEPresident-elect Donald Trump photographed at his penthouse on the 66th floor of Trump Tower in New York Ci
Donald Trump spoke with TIME’s Nancy Gibbs, Michael Scherer and Zeke J. Miller on Nov. 28 at Trump Tower in New York City. The following excerpts are from an interview for TIME’s Person of the Year issue. HOW TRUMP WILL MEASURE SUCCESS I think we’re going to have a lot of jobs brought back. I think we’re going to have a lot fewer companies leaving our country. I believe we will be successful with
Watch the world change over the course of over three decades of satellite photography Pictured: The Aral Sea has steadily shrunk as its water has been drained for farms LANGHOVDE GLACIER, ANTARCTICAThe world's largest ice formation, Langhovde Glacier in East Antarctica is slowly eroding. Global warming causes localized melting on its surface, leading to the formation of what are known as supraglac
Americans are heading to the polls today in droves after weathering endless campaign ads designed to influence their votes — especially in presidential battleground states such as Florida, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Ohio. Here’s what you need to know about the advertising assault: Team Clinton aired three times more ads than Team Trump More than 500,000 broadcast and national cable TV ads ha
Children play on a ferris wheel at an underground amusement park in Arbin, outside Damascus, Syria, Sept. 16, 2016. The underground amusement park was built to protect children from bombing and shelling. It consists of two underground halls connected through a tunnel.Mohammed Badra—EPA In an underground basement in Arbin, a rebel-held neighborhood on the outskirts of Damascus, the laughter of chil
Hillary Clinton’s campaign manager was tired of the fretting and the second-guessing. Donors were spooked, supporters were nervous and allies were asking what the high command of the campaign was doing to stop sliding poll numbers. Robby Mook wanted to stop the gnashing teeth and wringing hands. His message: We’ve got this under control. “Battleground states carry that name for a reason: They’re g
PoliticsDonald TrumpHeroin, Obamacare and Pride: Why Trump Is Finding an Audience In Southern Ohio Heroin, Obamacare and Pride: Why Trump Is Finding an Audience In Southern Ohio I had a memorable experience in Jackson, Ohio, in 2012. This is hillbilly country, the northwestern edge of Appalachia. Susan Rogers, who works for a local public-service agency, asked me to come visit. She put together an
Award-winning photographer Patrick Zachmann of Magnum Photos was on Republique Square in the center of Paris when he saw police cars and fire trucks speed by. “I knew something was strange,” he tells TIME in an interview. “I immediately thought of a terrorist attack.” In a career spanning four decades, Zachmann has covered everything from the 1989 Tiananmen Square showdown to the violent Neapolita
A Syrian refugee boy plays with a tire at Zaatari refugee camp, in Mafraq, Jordan, on Sept. 9, 2015.Raad Adayleh—AP In early 2012, it was an anonymous patch of desert in the north of Jordan but by the end of 2013, it was a city of 156,000 Syrian refugees, the fourth biggest population center in the country. Now it has shrunk to almost one third of its former size as Syrians desperate for a better
リリース、障害情報などのサービスのお知らせ
最新の人気エントリーの配信
処理を実行中です
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く