Savannah Guthrie brought warmth and optimism to morning TV. Can the show survive her tragedy?
By Irin Carmon
Instead of fixating on what isn’t working in the luxury industry, we should be paying attention to what is — and why.
By Cathy Horyn
Dominick Dunne believed that if he fulfilled his ambitions, the world would know when he died.
By Griffin Dunne
What happens when immigration enforcement no longer inspires outrage?
Homestretch for the Thoroughbreds at the city’s last racetrack.
Thom Browne, not just a designer for the svelte.
Sailing for America’s semiquincentennial.
A wastebasket worth showing off.
Hardens its calluses at construction school.
The former Park Slope boardinghouse with an indoor olive tree.
Bistrot Ha’s yuba, Stars’ pepper bites, and the other dishes our critics can’t get out of their heads.
After the disastrous rollout of Don’t Worry Darling, the director needed to rebuild herself.
Indie filmmakers on the reality of making movies with no money.
The Idea of You author Robinne Lee sets out to prove she can write more than romance.
Olivia Rodrigo avoids the third-album rut.
Toy Story 5 delivers nostalgia alongside a dose of parental anxiety—but little else.
In its third season, House of the Dragon reaches its grisly potential.
Twenty-five picks for the next two weeks.
Matt Gaffney’s latest puzzle.
Our deliberately oversimplified guide to who falls where on our taste hierarchies.