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When Nicholson Baker published “The Lab-Leak Hypothesis” in early January, the subject itself was still deeply taboo across the American political and journalistic landscape. A year later, the hypothesis has been revived and reconsidered not just by major investigations by the New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, and The Atlantic, but also by the WHO and the U.S. Intellige
The White House Has Erected a Blockade Stopping States and Hospitals From Getting Coronavirus PPE Whenever you start to think that the federal government under Donald Trump has hit a moral bottom, it finds a new way to shock and horrify. Over the last few weeks, it has started to appear as though, in addition to abandoning the states to their own devices in a time of national emergency, the federa
Democracies end when they are too democratic. Illustration: Zohar Lazar As this dystopian election campaign has unfolded, my mind keeps being tugged by a passage in Plato’s Republic. It has unsettled — even surprised — me from the moment I first read it in graduate school. The passage is from the part of the dialogue where Socrates and his friends are talking about the nature of different politica
Consider the tilde. There it is, that little squiggle, hanging out on the far-upper-left-hand side of your computer keyboard. The symbol dates back to ancient Greece, though tilde comes from Spanish, and in modern English it’s used to indicate “approximately” (e.g., ~30 years) or “equivalence” (x ~ y) in mathematics. And, as of this year, according to a breakdown of the website emojitracker by Lu
It’s not hard to coax an opinion out of Marc Andreessen. The tall, bald, spring-loaded venture capitalist, who invented the first mainstream internet browser, co-founded Netscape, then made a fortune as an early investor in Twitter and Facebook, has since become Silicon Valley’s resident philosopher-king. He’s ubiquitous on Twitter, where his machine-gun fusillade of bold, wide-ranging proclamatio
Vexame. Humilhante. Furada historica. Apagão. Even if you don’t speak Portuguese, it’s easy to understand the extremely bleak front pages across Brazil this morning after the national team’s 7-1 humilhação against Germany in the World Cup semifinal. The host nation’s shame is palpable — and also kind of depressing — whether or not you know what the words mean. The visuals make clear it was more th
By Andrew Rice, a features writer at New York Magazine and has been a staff member since 2012. He is the author of two books, including ‘The Year That Broke America,’ a history of the contested 2000 election. Perhaps you are unfamiliar with the website BuzzFeed—though this is increasingly unlikely, as it’s currently enjoying a viral moment. The site is a hyperactive amalgam: simultaneously a jour
first person Looking for the Woman Who Made Us After a lifetime apart, my brothers and I went searching for our biological mother. Instead, we found a family we never could have imagined. By Casey Kahn
How to Make It in the Art World The art world made it through the real-world crash relatively unscathed, but not unchanged. And even as money still courses thick and blue-chip through its veins, the system is beginning to reexamine itself. Last month during Armory Week, there was not just the big Establishment fair but a handful of smaller and less-Establishment fairs; a couple of anti-money, ant
Here in New York City, we heard it first, the drone of the plane down the West Side, surprisingly loud. Then, if we were outside, our heads pointed in the right direction, we could see it: the dull-red gash in the North Tower, smoking ominously. Just as we’d begun to absorb this strange sight, wondering what pilot could have been so dim as to steer his plane into one of those towers on what seemed
Pursuing Self-Interest in Harmony With the Laws of the Universe and Contributing to Evolution Is Universally Rewarded If you want to understand Bridgewater Associates, the world’s largest and indisputably weirdest hedge fund, you might start with the story of the peas. It goes like this: In 2005, while the rest of the financial sector was busy pumping rocket-grade helium into the credit bubble, a
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HISTORICAL FICTION Peter Carey The two-time Booker Prize–winning author’s most recent novel is Parrot and Olivier in America (Knopf). The Radetzky March (1932) By Joseph Roth One could say this great novel is “about” the end of the Hapsburg Empire. I think it’s about the sentences, the light, the sad sweet poetry of loyalty and hubris, our ludicrous expectation that the world will always be the sa
Karmand Ahmed starts folding at eight o’clock in the morning. He works on the mezzanine of the three-floor Uniqlo flagship store in Soho, just north of Spring Street on Broadway. If the Uniqlo store were a ship of the line—and, at 37,000 square feet, it kind of is—the mezzanine would be the poop deck, the most important part of the vessel, from which all can be surveyed. With its 22-foot-tall LED
On any given day in New York City, there are usually close to a dozen, if not more, “meetups” for people who work for tech start-ups. There are NY Tech Meetups, monthly events that can attract nearly a thousand people to an auditorium at the Fashion Institute of Technology, where developers have five minutes to demonstrate what their technologies do and then get to network with the venture capital
From New York politics to the business scene, recent news published in New York Magazine and on Daily Intel.
Illustration by Glen Cummings/MTWTFPhoto: Anderson Ross/Corbis I. The Poverty of Attention I’m going to pause here, right at the beginning of my riveting article about attention, and ask you to please get all of your precious 21st-century distractions out of your system now. Check the score of the Mets game; text your sister that pun you just thought of about her roommate’s new pet lizard (“iguana
The Thousand Best An expertly curated, always-updated guide to New York’s best restaurants and bars.
I have been called the devil by strangers and “the Facilitator” by friends. It’s not uncommon for people, when I tell them what I used to do, to ask if I feel guilty. I do, somewhat, and it nags at me. When I put it out of mind, it inevitably resurfaces, like a shipwreck at low tide. It’s been eight years since I compiled a program, but the last one lived on, becoming the industry standard that se
By Will Leitch, a contributing editor covering sports and film at New York since 2008 and the author of six books, including the novels 'How Lucky' and 'The Time Has Come.' In case you don’t remember the precise details of what the Silicon Alley dot-com boom-and-bust in the late nineties and early aughts was like, allow me to remind you, because I was there. Everyone showed up to work, hung-over,
This guide to fashion models covers Supermodels, cover girls, rising stars, catwalk powerhouses, male models, and more. Get news, photos, and videos of your favorites.
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