T/24-by-section
An index of 186 articles and 5 interactives published over the last 24 hours by NYT.
U.S.
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As Trump Covets Nobel Peace Prize, FIFA Cozies Up to Him With Its Own Award.
Gianni Infantino, head of soccer’s governing body, has been ingratiating himself with the president to help ensure a successful 2026 World Cup.
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Investigators Find Human Remains Buried at a San Diego Home.
Prosecutors are looking at potential connections to a former resident, who faces a murder charge in another case.
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Second Strike Scrutiny Obscures Larger Question About Trump’s Boat Attacks.
Congress is focusing on two deaths in one strike. But nine other people died in that same attack, and the United States has killed 87 in all. Were any of those killings legal?
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Judge Dismisses Harvard Antisemitism Lawsuit by a Former Student.
Yoav Segev said he was harassed “for being Jewish and Israeli” during a campus protest in October 2023, an episode that had drawn the attention of Republicans in Washington.
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War and Peace: A Day of Cognitive Dissonance in Trump’s Washington.
President Trump presided over a Congo-Rwanda peace deal on the same day his administration was being questioned about potential war crimes.
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Trump Returns Coast Guard Helicopter to Oregon Fishing Town After Uproar.
Some residents in Newport, Ore., believed that the Trump administration had removed its Coast Guard rescue helicopter to make way for an immigration detention site.
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Trump Switches Architects for White House Ballroom Project.
The president had clashed with the original designer and insisted on increasing the size and scope of the ballroom on a short timeline.
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Tim Walz Calls Trump’s Tirade Against Somalis in Minnesota ‘Vile’
Minnesota’s governor said the president’s xenophobic remarks were dangerous as the state continued to face fiscal questions about a fraud scandal.
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Trump Officials Cut Length of Work Permits for Asylum Seekers and Refugees.
The move was the latest in an intensifying crackdown on legal immigration after an Afghan national was charged with shooting two National Guard members.
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Remapping Florida Could Be Huge for Republicans. But Some Aren’t in a Rush.
Redistricting talks in Florida got off to a slow start on Thursday, as state lawmakers grapple with political and legal questions amid internal power struggles.
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Supreme Court Clears the Way for Republican-Friendly Texas Voting Maps.
Texas officials had asked the court to allow the state to use the new maps in the midterm elections, part of a push by President Trump to gain a partisan advantage.
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Grand Jury Said to Decline to Reindict Letitia James.
After a judge dismissed the Trump administration’s first attempt to indict the attorney general of New York State, a new grand jury effort failed, according to people familiar with the matter.
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New Dietary Guidelines Delayed Until Early 2026.
The updated Dietary Guidelines for Americans will not come until the new year, a government official said.
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Suspect Is Arrested in D.C. Pipe Bomb Investigation.
Federal agents arrested a 30-year-old man from Prince William County, Va., on Thursday. The suspect is accused of planting two pipe bombs near the Capitol before the Jan. 6 riot.
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Biden to Attend First Event for Presidential Library.
His plans for the library have been slow to take shape, but he has invited potential donors to a holiday reception in Washington this month.
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Appeals Court Pauses, for Now, Order Blocking National Guard in Washington.
A week after the president surged more members of the National Guard to Washington, an appeals court halted an order that would have required the Guard to pull out after Dec. 11.
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Takeaways From the Pentagon Investigation on Hegseth’s Use of Signal.
The inspector general concluded that the defense secretary violated the Pentagon’s instructions on using a private electronic device to share sensitive information.
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Most Immigrants Arrested in City Crackdowns Have No Criminal Record.
In high-profile operations, more than half of those arrested had no criminal record, an analysis shows.
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As Health Care Subsidies Teeter, Congress Is Again at an Impasse.
Democrats won an agreement for a floor showdown after the shutdown, but consensus still eludes the Senate. Will Republicans pay a political price?
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Bipartisan House Group Proposes Long-Shot Health Care Plan.
Republicans and Democrats released a two-year plan to scale back and extend expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies, but it faces long odds in the G.O.P.-led House.
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Top Military Officers Show Lawmakers Video of Sept. 2 Boat Attack.
Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Adm. Frank M. Bradley, commander of the operation, met with members of Congress behind closed doors.
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False Report of 5.9 Earthquake Sends Phones Buzzing in Nevada.
The United States Geological Survey quickly deleted the alert, saying it had been sent in error. “This isn’t a good look,” one earthquake expert said.
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Read the Pentagon Watchdog’s Report on Signal Use.
The Defense Department’s Inspector General released a long-awaited report about Secretary Pete Hegseth’s disclosure of plans for airstrikes in Yemen on a Signal chat group.
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2026 Midterm Primary Election Calendar.
See the state-by-state schedule for every primary leading up to the midterm election.
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California Bear Makes Crawl Space His Home.
A California man discovered a 550-pound black bear moved into the crawl space of his house by installing a security camera in June after finding the underside of his house in disarray.
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Her Roof Was About to Be Fixed. Then Immigration Agents Showed Up.
The Trump administration’s deportation agenda is reverberating beyond immigrant communities as agents begin fanning out around New Orleans.
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Suspect Arrested in Inquiry Into Pipe Bombs in D.C. Ahead of Jan. 6 Riot.
The person’s identity remained unclear for the moment, but the arrest could ultimately provide an answer to one of the mysteries arising from the Jan. 6. attack.
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Poll Suggests G.O.P. Will Face More Blame if Obamacare Subsidies Go Away.
About half of people covered under the Affordable Care Act say that if their health costs spike, it will have a “major impact” on how they vote in the 2026 midterm elections, a survey found.
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More Than a Million Bags of Cheese Were Recalled. Here’s What That Means.
A warning over shredded cheese is the latest of hundreds in the U.S. food system. Understanding recalls can help shoppers determine what’s truly dangerous.
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Trump to Host Congo and Rwanda Leaders for Peace Talks in Persistent Conflict.
The president will meet with the leaders of Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo to advance a deal meant to end a long war in eastern Congo.
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The Furor Over Trump’s Boat Attacks and a Particular Follow-Up Strike, Explained.
Bipartisan congressional oversight is underway, but for now is focusing on narrow details about one missile instead of broader legal issues.
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A Volunteer’s Dire Warnings About the National Guard Shooting Suspect.
More than a year before the Trump administration granted asylum to the Afghan immigrant, the volunteer’s emails raised concerns that he was unraveling.
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Inside Kennedy’s Methodical Quest to Shake Up America’s Vaccine System.
The health secretary has walled himself off from government scientists and empowered fellow activists to pursue his vaccine agenda.
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San Francisco Mayor Names Derrick Lew as New Police Chief.
Mr. Lew is a veteran police officer whose experience includes major operations against drug dealing.
World
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Trump’s Relationship With the President of FIFA.
Gianni Infantino, head of soccer’s governing body, FIFA, has lauded President Trump at almost every opportunity, even starting a FIFA Peace Prize after Mr. Trump didn’t win the Nobel. Luke Broadwater, a White House reporter, describes the bromance.
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With A.I. and Wordle, Pope Leo Proves to Be a Pope of the Digital Age.
On his first trip as pontiff, Leo XIV predictably called for peace and unity. But he also addressed technology’s promise and pitfalls.
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Yemen’s Civil War Could Escalate Again. Here’s What to Know.
An armed group backed by the United Arab Emirates has pushed into the oil-rich province of Hadramout, a move that could reignite conflict in Yemen after years of a stalemate.
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Canada Declares Stellantis in Default for Moving Jeep Production to U.S.
The automaker switched production from Ontario in a bid to please President Trump. But the company defaulted on contracts covering hundreds of millions of dollars in assistance, Canada said.
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Several Countries Boycott Eurovision 2026 Over Israel’s Participation.
Spain, Ireland, the Netherlands and Slovenia said that they were boycotting next year’s Eurovision Song Contest because Israel would continue to be allowed in the competition.
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When Kids Adopt New Technologies, Hype Can Turn to Backlash.
The arc of mobile phones and social media may foretell the future of artificial intelligence in schools.
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U.N. Warns of ‘Another Wave of Atrocities’ in Sudan’s Civil War.
Paramilitary groups have intensified an offensive on a crucial region bordering Darfur, prompting fears of another massacre.
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After Years of Debate, Vatican Says No to Women Deacons, at Least for Now.
But a papal commission examining the question said further study was required, and advised that women should be given other leadership roles in the Catholic Church.
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Israeli Strike Kills Several People at a Gaza Encampment.
An Israeli attack on an encampment in Khan Younis killed several people and injured many more, a Palestinian health official said. The Israeli military said it killed a militant in retaliation for a Hamas attack that injured several of its soldiers.
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Aid Workers Stand Trial for Helping to Smuggle People Into Greece.
The activists provided support to people who sought sanctuary in Greece during Europe’s migration crisis.
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Militant Leader Backed by Israel Is Killed in Gaza, Official Says.
Yasser Abu Shabab, a Bedouin man in his 30s, was at the center of an Israeli project in Gaza to build up anti-Hamas militias.
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Putin ‘Must Have’ Authorized Poisoning, U.K. Inquiry Finds.
The death of a British woman from Novichok was the result of a botched assassination attempt on a former Russian spy, an official report said on Thursday.
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Deadly Attacks in Gaza Test Cease-Fire as Body of Another Captive Is Returned.
Israel launched a military strike after it said Hamas militants attacked its soldiers, the latest clashes in the two months since a truce was signed.
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Cambodia Shuts Down Group That Laundered Billions in Scam Profits.
A New York Times investigation in March found that Huione’s group of companies were at the heart of a global money laundering network for fraudsters, scammers and hackers.
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Ruined Rice Fields and Broken Rail Lines: Sri Lanka Counts Cost of Cyclone.
Officials estimate the damage runs into billions of dollars, a headache for the island nation just recovering from an economic crash.
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How Israel’s Settlement Surge in the West Bank Is Displacing Palestinians.
The Israeli government authorized 22 settlements in May, the largest expansion in decades, and Palestinian families are now being forced from their homes.
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Spain Sees Itself as a Beacon for Immigrants. So Do Many Latin Americans.
The government presents its migrant policy as a welcoming alternative to U.S. crackdowns. But activists say those arriving on boats from Africa are excluded from that embrace.
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The Heist of Its Culinary Crown Jewels Rocks a French Village.
Shop owners say the thieves who took 990 pounds of snails must have been escargot cognoscenti.
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Kenya Kept a Diplomat in His Job Despite Years of Sex Abuse Accusations.
President William Ruto faces pressure after a Times investigation showed that his government downplayed or ignored the mistreatment of women working in Saudi Arabia.
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Macron Urges Xi to Help End War in Ukraine.
As President Emmanuel Macron of France visited China, its leader, Xi Jinping, said his country would play a constructive role in ending the fighting.
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Hamas Returns Body of Last Thai Hostage in Gaza.
The militant group took more than 250 hostages from Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, including 31 from Thailand. The remains of all but one other hostage, an Israeli, have been recovered.
New York
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Where Is Jacob? His Mother Won’t Say, and the Police Cannot Find Him.
Jacob Pritchett, 11, has been missing for months. A judge has said his mother must remain at Rikers Island until she reveals his whereabouts.
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N.Y.P.D. Officers Won’t Be Charged in Fatal Shooting of Queens Man.
Win Rozario, who had called 911 in distress, was holding scissors when two police officers shot him. The New York attorney general said it was unlikely the officers would be convicted.
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ICE Separates Boy, 6, From Father During Effort to Deport Them to China.
The child and his father fled China earlier this year and the boy had just been enrolled in school. Federal officials have tried and failed to send them back.
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2 Cocaine Cases. 2 Honduran Politicians. Only One Faces Years in Prison.
Just three days after President Trump pardoned the former Honduran president, Midence Oqueli Martinez Turcios, a former congressman and drug trafficker, got nearly 22 years.
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Brooklyn Borough President Will Run for House Seat as Socialists Circle.
Antonio Reynoso’s bid to replace Representative Nydia M. Velázquez will most likely be contested by a candidate backed by the Democratic Socialists of America.
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174 Million Stolen Rides: The Cost of Fare Evasion.
The M.T.A. is deploying a variety of tools to combat fare beating, and the authority says that they are working.
Business
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Warner Bros. Discovery Said to Be in Exclusive Talks With Netflix.
Netflix would acquire Warner television and film studios as well as HBO Max in a deal that would bulk up the world’s biggest paid streaming service.
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As Trump Threatens to Leave North American Deal, Supporters Urge Him to ‘Do No Harm’
Hearings that began Wednesday in Washington reflected anxiety over the future of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade pact and whether the president could end up scrapping it.
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Newsom, Kirk, Bessent, A.I. and Other DealBook Summit Highlights.
The economy, inflation, tariffs, bubble fears, crypto and other big topics that made headlines this year.
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Harvey, a Maker of A.I. Legal Software, Raises New Funds.
The start-up is now valued at about $8 billion as it pushes to add new customers, including those outside law firms.
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But Who Is the Snake in ‘Zootopia 2’?
Gary Goldman, who has battled Disney in court over the franchise, thinks the viper Gary De’Snake is based on him.
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New York Times Sues Pentagon Over First Amendment Rights.
The lawsuit said the Defense Department’s new set of rules for journalists “violates the Constitution’s guarantees of due process, freedom of speech and freedom of the press.”
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A Growing U.S. Tech Hub Needs Workers. Colleges Try to Keep Up.
The success of efforts to turn Phoenix into a dominant center of semiconductor manufacturing may hinge on efforts to train local workers.
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18,000 Reasons It’s So Hard to Build a Chip Factory in America.
The transformation of Phoenix into a semiconductor hub by Taiwan’s TSMC illustrates the difficulties of large-scale projects in the United States.
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In Arizona Desert, Taiwanese Families Create Community and Build a Factory.
Skilled workers from Taiwan engaged in the chip industry have found ways to ease the transition to America while making an imprint on Greater Phoenix.
Technology
Obituaries
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Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, ‘The Last Emperor’ and ‘Mortal Kombat’ Actor, Dies at 75.
The actor, born in Japan, starred in dozens of film and television shows, including Amazon’s “The Man in the High Castle.” His career spanned more than three decades.
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Rebecca Heineman, Transgender Video Game Pioneer, Dies at 62.
Fleeing an abusive home life, she went on to win a national Space Invaders tournament, taught herself to program and left a trail of popular games in her wake.
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Dominik Duka, Czech Cardinal Jailed Under Communism, Dies at 82.
While in prison in 1981, he befriended the dissident and future Czech president Vaclav Havel. Later, he became a conservative voice in Rome.
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Overlooked No More: Dorothy Wise, the ‘Grandmother of Pool’ Who Defied the Odds.
She elbowed her way into what had long been a man’s game and won the first women’s national championship in 1967 — and then repeated the feat four more years in a row.
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Charles Norman Shay, Tribal Elder and World War II Hero, Dies at 101.
As a 19-year-old medic, he won a Silver Star for his service during D-Day. Later, in the Korean War, he earned a Bronze Star.
Briefing
Podcasts
Science
Climate
Opinion
Arts
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Jimmy Kimmel Thanks Trump for Google Superstardom in 2025.
The host said he wouldn’t have been the third-most-trending person in Google searches this year “without the support of loyal viewers” like the president.
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Art Gallery Shows to See in December.
This week in Newly Reviewed, Martha Schwendener covers Meredith James’s anti-architecture monument, Franz Gertsch’s take on Patti Smith, Ragnar Kjartansson’s postcard ode, Analivia Cordeiro’s merging bodies and Guanyu Xu’s hovering photos.
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Steve Cropper: 9 Essential Songs.
An architect of Memphis soul, Cropper made his guitar sing and sting. And as a songwriter, he collaborated on more than a few indelible anthems.
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Spain, Ireland and Others Boycott Eurovision Over Israel’s Participation.
The Netherlands and Slovenia also said they would not take part in next year’s contest, meant to be its celebratory 70th edition.
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Review: When Club Dance Bumps Into Latin Jazz.
Ephrat Asherie’s “Shadow Cities” pairs her group’s adept dancers with live music by the great Arturo O’Farrill.
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Jennifer Packer: Art at the Cosmic Edges of Longing.
Where does a painter’s grief go? Onto the canvas, in spectral realms.
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Drag Antics and ‘a Political Bomb’: Bringing ‘La Cage aux Folles’ Home.
The theater that drew acclaim last year for “Les Misérables” is hoping Paris can accept a new “Americano-French musical.”
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Best TV Shows of 2025.
Many of the year’s best series seemed to be in conversation with one another, including “Severance,” “The Pitt,” “Andor,” “Pluribus,” “The Lowdown” and others.
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Arthur Szyk: Spotlight Returns to a Forgotten ‘Soldier in Art’
An exhibition reckons with the revived legacy of an immigrant artist who created ornate illuminations and scathing caricatures of Nazism and the horrors of the Holocaust.
Theater
Books
Movies
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‘Five Nights at Freddy’s 2’ Review: The Robots Are Malfunctioning (Again).
The bigger-budget follow-up to last year’s abysmal cult horror hit about haunted animatronic puppets is, at best, marginally scarier.
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‘La Grazia’ Review: Paolo Sorrentino’s Portrait of Waning Power.
The director reunites with Toni Servillo, casting the astonishingly expressive actor as a fictional Italian president facing the end of his term.
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‘Merrily We Roll Along’ Review: It’s a Hit (Reprise).
The Tony-winning Broadway revival of the notorious Stephen Sondheim flop, starring Jonathan Groff, Daniel Radcliffe and Lindsay Mendez, gets a live stage recording for the big screen.
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‘Rosemead’ Review: A Mother and Her Troubled Son.
In this drama, Lucy Liu offers a compassionate and grim portrait of the lengths a mother will go to protect — and thwart — her teenage son.
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‘Little Trouble Girls’ Review: Teenage Infatuation.
Despite awareness of taboos, two girls in a Catholic school choir are drawn to each other in this feature debut by the Slovenian director Urska Djukic.
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‘Jay Kelly’ Review: All His Memories Are Movies.
Noah Baumbach’s latest film has George Clooney playing the last of the old-school movie stars.
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‘Happy Holidays’ Review: Fissures in a Palestinian Family.
In Scandar Copti’s film, set in Haifa, Israel, secrets and deceptions strain relationships.
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‘Fackham Hall’ Review: Keep Calm and Chuckle On.
Clever sight gags jazz up this “Downton Abbey” sendup about a bookish aristocrat under pressure to marry her first cousin.
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‘Endless Cookie’ Review: An Animated Family History.
Two filmmaking brothers trade tales in a tonally singular documentary.
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‘The Chronology of Water’ Review: Saved by the Pen.
Kristen Stewart’s feature directing debut stars a riveting Imogen Poots in an uncomfortably visceral tale of abuse and addiction.
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‘100 Nights of Hero’ Review: A Feminist Fairy Tale.
This flawed but endearing film stars Emma Corrin as a protective maid and features Charli XCX as a sister with a secret.
Food
Style
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It Took Them Five Months to Meet. Then Only Six Weeks to Commit.
Sabrina Soto, a former HGTV host, and Nate Whitney, an MLB physical therapist, had a slow start to a speedy commitment.
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She Needed Help Setting Up Appliances. Her Future Husband Knocked at the Door.
When Melissa Cormier first met Devon Mistry in her high-rise, he was the construction manager who offered a helping hand.
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On His Healing Journey, He Wrote 300 Letters to His Future Wife.
Laterras Whitfield, the host of the hit podcast “Dear Future Wifey,” revealed his longtime partner, Ashley Woods, to fans as she walked down the aisle during a ceremony streamed to thousands.
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My Rebound Relationship With a Robot.
Raised on a commune, I resisted technology at every step. Until it saved me.
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From New York Beginnings to a Palm Beach Wedding.
A long-distance start didn’t deter Emily Kelly and Jordan Bargas, who built a life together between New York and Florida and married at the Flagler Museum.
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At Gucci, Demna Brings Back the Tom Ford Era.
The label’s latest collection provides another, potentially trendsetting, clue about where the luxury brand is headed.
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Ciara Takes Center Stage At a Night of Dancing.
Alvin Ailey’s annual gala began with suits and bare chests on the red carpet and ended with dancing to Madonna’s “Like a Prayer.”
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Pantone’s 2026 Color of the Year Is ‘Cloud Dancer’
A shade of white will be the defining color of the next year. Get those stain-removing pens ready.
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He Is Known for His Taste. Now You Can Buy It.
Chris Black, the host of the pop culture podcast “How Long Gone,” made the capsule wardrobe he wanted to see in the world.
T Magazine
Travel
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36 Hours in Dresden, Germany.
History never feels out of reach in the capital of Saxony, lush with avant-garde art, restored Baroque architecture and one of Europe’s oldest Christmas markets.
Real Estate
Health
Well
Corrections
The Learning Network
Gameplay
En español
Special Series