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They Still Make Art in Soho
Reformed wild man” artist John Alexander and ceramicist Fiona Waterstreet’s loft life together.
KEEP BROADWAY'S LIGHTS ON
Theater landlord Ef inkel can prop up a struggling musical— and maybe an entire industry.
PROPEL COMEDIANS ONTO NETFLIX
Mike Lavoie and Carlee Briglia have charted a path from small theater to Broadway to beyond.
BUILD THE LARGEST AMERICAN LUXURY CONGLOMERATE
Fashion groups in New York have always been dwarfed by their Parisian rivals. A merger led by Joanne Crevoiserat might change that.
GET YOU PAST THE CO-OP BOARD
doesn’t just sell you a 50 million apartment.
FIX THE KIDNEY LIST
The transplant process relied on a racist algorithm. Michelle Morse changed that.
BROKER PEACE BETWEEN TECH AND CITY HALL
The reason they don’t hate each other—like they do in San Francisco—is Julie Samuels.
MAKE (OR BURY) A CAREER AT THE 'TIMES'
Carolyn Ryan decides who gets a good beat, and who gets beaten down.
Mike Crumplar
The self-mythologizing Substacker of the Dimes Square literary scene gives up.
Statement Fever
AS THE HORRORS MOUNTED in Israel and Palestine, in America we did what we do best: We issued statements. Then we found fault with those statements and issued new statements.
The War From Over Here
The conflict in Israel and Gaza has reverberated in New York and beyond, colliding with America’s own conflicts and history.
TURN A CELEBRITY INTO A MOGUL
Could a regular publicist get you an LVMH deal? Amanda Silverman will.
MAKE CHEFS BEG FOR CABBAGE
They all want S sweet, juicy leaves.”
INHERIT A MEGAGALLERY (MAYBE)
Of the Zwirner children working in their father’s empire, Lucas is front and center. Then there’s Marlene Zwirner.
LEAD YOUR FORMER BOSS'S REVENGE CAMPAIGN
When Andrew Cuomo was governor, was his right hand. With an eviscerating new book, she’s settling scores and prepping a comeback
SEAT YOU DOWNSTAIRS AT THE POLO BAR
Nelly Moudime decides if you make the cut
Sphere Is an Unnatural Wonder
It's a giant orb in Sin City. Is it also the future of live entertainment?
Rirkrit Tiravanija Would Prefer Not To
His new retrospective at MoMA PS1 celebrates avoiding making art
Dan Barber's New Onion
Garleek is just what it sounds like
Buckwheat Every Which Way
Soba's in the spotlight at Uzuki
His Gilded Age
The architectural preservationist Michael Henry Adams has filled his apartment with the history of Harlem. Some of it he found on the street
MICHAEL MANN
The director of moody, evocative films like Miami Vice and Heat on his inspiration rooms, clubbing with cocaine importers, and the decades of obsessive research that went into his new movie. Ferrari
SCOOP DREAMS
SHAMS CHARANIA HAS SPENT A DECADE TEXTING AND TWEETING HIS WAY TO THE TOP OF THE NBA REPORTING WORLD. HIS NEW COLLEAGUES AT THE NEW YORK TIMES WONDER IF HE'S A THREAT TO THEIR JOURNALISM
DO ANY OF THESE PEOPLE STAND A CHANCE... AGAINST TRUMP?
On the trail with the candidates (supposedly) vying for the Republican nomination
Grub Street Diet: Dwight Garner A Muffuletta in the Freezer
The book critic's week of organ meat, fried cheese, and PB&Ps
Molly Baz
Dinner at a SoCal steakhouse with Molly Baz, who built a recipe empire on Morty-D and Cae Sal
The Ghost in the Shell
Light-filled offices rise from the Domino Sugar refinery's dirty past
The National Interest: Jonathan Chait The Coup Déjà Vu Why House Republicans keep ousting one another
\"THE HISTORY OF THE EMPIRE is a monotonous story of the intrigues of priests, eunuchs, and women, of poisonings, of conspiracies, of uniform ingratitude, of perpetual fratricides,\" wrote a 19th-century historian
67 Minutes With... Werner Herzog
The filmmaker famous for bending the truth tries his hand at memoir.
'Romeo and Juliet' Was a Tragedy
In 1968, Olivia Hussey and Leonard Whiting were the most famous teenagers in the world. Fifty-five years later, they sued Paramount for child abuse.