What the Green Party Surge Means for Europe’s Tenuous Future
Since the global financial crisis, European politics have fragmented and swerved alarmingly to the right, as voters across the continent have elected nationalists and given far-right parties their largest vote shares of the postwar era. When, in late May, the European Parliament held its first election since 2014, many feared that far-right parties would increase…
Robert Mueller Says It’s Up to Congress to Indict a President
After two years of studiously avoiding the spotlight, the special counsel, Robert Mueller, was finally ready to speak to the public. Standing at a lectern with a sign behind him that said “Department of Justice Washington,” he looked every inch the part: dark chalk-stripe suit, white button-down shirt, navy-blue tie, hair parted at the side,…
A Comprehensive Guide to Your Extremely Evil Fitness Mirror
Congratulations! You are now the proud new owner of the world’s premier at-home interactive workout mirror. Each FITNESS MIRROR reflects our company’s high standards, as well as the high fitness standards you’ve chosen to set for yourself. When you look in a FITNESS MIRROR, you’re guaranteed to like what you see, and be totally unaware…
A Scandal in Austria and the Far Right’s Fortunes in Europe
Earlier this month, a video circulated online of the chairman of the far-right populist Freedom Party of Austria (F.P.O.), Heinz-Christian Strache, drinking and talking at a holiday villa in Ibiza with a young woman whom he believed to be the niece of the Russian oligarch Igor Makarov. Strache, in a tight-fitting low-necked gray T-shirt, slouches…
What to Stream: “Tux and Fanny,” Albert Birney’s Boldly Imaginative Instagram Animation
In filmmaking, circumstances create techniques, which in turn result in artistic innovation. Some of the most original independent films in recent decades—those of Joe Swanberg, for instance—have forged new modes of production out of economic and practical constraints, and these alternative practices have also given rise to original cinematic aesthetics. A new animated project, “Tux…
Saying Goodbye to Bill Buckner, and the Myths We Attached to Him
Even in the bad years, before the Boston Red Sox won the World Series, in 2004, and upended all the foundational bad-luck stories of the franchise, the smart take among Sox fans was that it wasn’t really Bill Buckner’s fault. Blame it—and the word “it” alone always sufficed—on a rogue’s gallery of pitchers (Roger Clemens…
Remembering Tony Horwitz, a Historian Who Reckoned Fearlessly with the Legacy of the Civil War
Tony Horwitz’s great-grandfather Isaac Moses Perski came to America from tsarist Russia in 1882, a penniless teen-ager, and one of the first things he bought in his new country was a book, an illustrated history of the Civil War. In 1965, he showed that book to his very little great-grandson. “Peering over his arm, I…
Facebook’s False Standards for Not Removing a Fake Nancy Pelosi Video
Last week, when a doctored video of the Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, began circulating on Facebook, it seemed like it would only be a matter of time before it was removed. After all, just one day before, Facebook proudly announced that it had recently removed 2.2 billion fake accounts between January and March…
Ayşegül Savaş Reads “Canvas”
Listen with: iTunes WNYC Stitcher TuneIn Ayşegül Savaş reads her story from the June 3, 2019, issue of the magazine. Savaş is a Turkish writer who lives in Paris and teaches at the Sorbonne. Her first novel, “Walking on the Ceiling,” was published in April. Click Here: