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Skip to main content THE NEW YORKER * Newsletter Story Saved To revisit this article, select My Account, then View saved stories Close Alert Sign In Subscribe Limited-time offer. Get 12 weeks for $29.99 $6, plus a free tote. Subscribe Cancel anytime. Search Search Open Navigation Menu Menu Story Saved Find anything you save across the site in your account Close Alert * The Latest * 2023 in Review * News * Books & Culture * Fiction & Poetry * Humor & Cartoons * Magazine * Puzzles & Games * Video * Podcasts * Goings On * Shop HAS GRATUITY CULTURE REACHED A TIPPING POINT? Paying extra for service has inspired rebellions, swivelling iPads, and irritation from Trotsky. Post-pandemic, Zach Helfand writes, the practice has entered a new stage. Dots Support The New Yorker's award-winning journalism. Subscribe today » THE LEDE Reporting and analysis on the affairs of the day. WHY THE NOISE OF L.A. HELICOPTERS NEVER STOPS The L.A.P.D. says it has the largest local airborne law-enforcement unit in the world. A recent audit found little evidence that its choppers deter crime. By Emily Witt SHOULD THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT BE USED TO DISQUALIFY TRUMP? The Colorado decision opens the way not just for more whining about witch hunts but for unprecedented confusion about whether and where Trump is on the ballot. By Amy Davidson Sorkin WATCHING JA MORANT FLY AGAIN One of the N.B.A.’s most thrilling, perplexing players soars on the court, but stumbles off of it. By Louisa Thomas WHEN AMERICANS ARE THE THREAT AT THE BORDER Many people charged with trafficking in Tucson are U.S. citizens, suffering from the same problems of poverty and addiction that plague the rest of the country. By Geraldo Cadava COLORADO’S TOP COURT KICKED TRUMP OFF THE BALLOT. WILL THE SUPREME COURT AGREE? A legal scholar analyzes how the nine Justices are likely to view the blockbuster decision. By Isaac Chotiner THE DISTURBING IMPACT OF THE CYBERATTACK AT THE BRITISH LIBRARY The library has been incapacitated since October, and the effects have spread beyond researchers and book lovers. By Sam Knight THE BEACH TOWN AND THE BORDER CLOSURE The shutting of a crossing in Arizona has reduced access to a popular Mexican beach town, leading to outrage from unfamiliar sources. By Rachel Monroe DotsDots 2023 in Review THE YEAR WE STOPPED BEING ABLE TO PRETEND ABOUT TRUMP The story of 2023 wasn’t the search for another Republican leader—but the Party’s embrace of the one it already has. By Susan B. Glasser Dots Profiles HOW A SCRIPT DOCTOR FOUND HIS OWN VOICE For decades, Scott Frank earned up to three hundred thousand dollars a week rewriting other people’s screenplays—from “Saving Private Ryan” to “The Ring.” Finally, he decided to stop playing ventriloquist. By Patrick Radden Keefe Dots 2023 IN REVIEW THE TOP TWENTY-FIVE NEW YORKER STORIES The articles that sustained the longest hold on readers during a year when many avoided the news. By Michael Luo AN EXHAUSTING YEAR IN (AND OUT OF) THE OFFICE After successive waves of post-pandemic change, worn-out knowledge workers need a fresh start. By Cal Newport THE BEST MOVIES The superhero-industrial complex is tottering, and there’s major creative energy in the realm of production. By Richard Brody THE YEAR OF THE ORCA A group of killer whales ramming boats in the Strait of Gibraltar this summer launched a tidal wave of cheeky projection from would-be marine biologists. By Rachel Riederer THE BEST BOOKS Our editors and critics on the year’s fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. By The New Yorker THIS YEAR’S BEST THEATRE On Broadway and off, a return to deep introspection—and Stephen Sondheim. By Vinson Cunningham and Helen Shaw THE BEST TV SHOWS The industry faces an uncertain future, but this year’s finest rival those of the Peak TV era. By Inkoo Kang THE YEAR IN MOVIEGOING Some large, loud, and costly films were so poorly conceived that they led me to wonder, Why not get A.I. to write them? By Anthony Lane DotsDots 2023 in Review THE YEAR OF THE FEMALE CREEP In novels from “The Guest” to “Biography of X,” vaguely menacing wallflowers took center stage. By Katy Waldman Dots THE CRITICS The Front Row A SENSE OF MYSTERY AND WONDER IN A NEW “COLOR PURPLE” Blitz Bazawule’s second feature catches the novel and musical’s extremes of sorrow and joy, love and memory. By Richard Brody The Theatre BRANDEN JACOBS-JENKINS, ON BROADWAY AT LAST Starring a Peak TV supercast, the playwright’s “Appropriate” investigates a dysfunctional Southern family’s buried secrets. By Helen Shaw A Critic at Large THE MONGOL HORDES: THEY’RE JUST LIKE US Scholars now argue that early nomadic empires were the architects of modernity. But do we have the right measure of their success? By Manvir Singh Critics at Large THE YEAR OF THE DOLL Narratives about cloistered women contending with a new political reality have dominated the cultural landscape. Why do these stories hit so hard? With Vinson Cunningham, Naomi Fry, and Alexandra Schwartz The Current Cinema MICHAEL MANN’S BEGUILING “FERRARI” The film, starring Adam Driver as the company’s founder, features the trusty components of a Mann movie: the smooth mechanics of professional labor, plus the exhaust manifold of men’s emotional lives. By Anthony Lane Listening Booth NICKI MINAJ’S “PINK FRIDAY” SEQUEL IS PURE SPECTACLE The rapper’s new album harkens back to her début, but it mostly serves as a reminder that times have drastically changed. By Hanif Abdurraqib Dots Find holiday gifts for yourself and loved ones in The New Yorker Store.Browse and buy » Letter from Gaza A PALESTINIAN POET’S PERILOUS JOURNEY OUT OF GAZA Following Hamas’s October 7th attack and Israel’s invasion, Mosab Abu Toha fled his home with his wife and three children. Then I.D.F. soldiers took him into custody. By Mosab Abu Toha Dots DEPT. OF HOOPLA Resolve to laugh more in 2024. NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONS FOR AN ANTEATER By Emma Rathbone LEGITIMATE REASONS THAT I CAN’T GO FOR A RUN By Kerry Elson NEW YOU SHOPPING SPREE By Catherine Mevs NEW YEAR’S PLANS? By Matt Passet TEN MINUTES ’TIL THE NEW YEAR By Marc Philippe Eskenazi THE TIMES SQUARE NEW YEAR’S BALL TELLS ALL By Ellis Rosen and Colin Stokes DotsDots Persons of Interest HOW LEA YPI DEFINES FREEDOM The Albanian-British political philosopher insists that democracy is a “demanding ideal.” By Han Zhang Dots DEPT. OF HEALTH AND MEDICINE ALL THE CARCINOGENS WE CANNOT SEE We routinely test for chemicals that cause mutations. What about the dark matter of carcinogens? By Siddhartha Mukherjee THE CASE THAT BEING POOR AND BLACK IS BAD FOR YOUR HEALTH The professor Arline T. Geronimus has spent a forty-year career researching how inequality takes a “weathering” toll on the body. By Lauren Michele Jackson BIOMILQ AND THE NEW SCIENCE OF ARTIFICIAL BREAST MILK The biotech industry takes on infant nutrition. By Molly Fischer WHY ARE WE SO BAD AT GETTING BETTER? Convalescence used to be central to medicine. We don’t talk about it anymore. By Dhruv Khullar Dots The Weekend Essay WHEN PHILOSOPHERS BECOME THERAPISTS The philosophical-counselling movement aims to apply heady, logical insights to daily life. By Nick Romeo Dots PUZZLES & GAMES Take a break and play. NAME DROP A quiz that tests your knowledge of notable people. Play a quiz at random THE CROSSWORD A puzzle that ranges in difficulty, with themes on Fridays. Solve the latest puzzle THE CRYPTIC A puzzle for lovers of wily wordplay. Solve this week’s puzzle CARTOON CAPTION CONTEST We provide a cartoon, you provide a caption. Enter this week’s contest Dots LISTEN TO THE NEW YORKER A Reporter at Large THE NEXT TARGETS FOR THE GROUP THAT OVERTURNED ROE Alliance Defending Freedom has won fifteen Supreme Court cases. Now it wants religious exemptions to anti-discrimination laws—and is going after trans rights. By David D. Kirkpatrick Brave New World Dept. HOW JENSEN HUANG’S NVIDIA IS POWERING THE A.I. REVOLUTION The company’s C.E.O. bet it all on a new kind of chip. Now that Nvidia is one of the biggest companies in the world, what will he do next? By Stephen Witt A Reporter at Large SENTENCED TO LIFE FOR AN ACCIDENT MILES AWAY A draconian legal doctrine called felony murder has put thousands of Americans—disproportionately young and Black—in prison. By Sarah Stillman Books HOW GLOSSIER MADE EFFORTLESSNESS A BILLION-DOLLAR BRAND In the influencer era, Emily Weiss built a beauty empire on hashtags, highlighter, and customer-led marketing campaigns. By Molly Fischer FICTION “CROWN HEIGHTS NORTH” By Rivka Galchen Illustration by Leo Jung The dead man decided to try the running app. He hadn’t run for years. Not since his mid-thirties. Now he was in his early fifties. Or he had been in his early fifties, recently enough. Would he be in his early fifties forever? He tapped the gray oblong and waited as the percentage-downloaded dial advanced, slowly. Much has yet to be revealed, he whispered to himself, in a tone he had used more often when he was a kid.Continue reading » This Week in Fiction Rivka Galchen on the Inner Lives of the Dead The Writer’s Voice The Author Reads “Crown Heights North” All fiction » THE TALK OF THE TOWN Paris Postcard TAGWALK TAKES ON THE HEMLINE INDEX By Lauren Collins Raised Eyebrows Dept. WHEN A COMEDY HISTORIAN GOOGLES “DISGUSTING COMEDIAN” By Sarah Larson L.A. Postcard MR. SPOCK’S WIDOW PUTS ON A SHOW By Dana Goodyear Sketchpad HOW TO FILL THE DEAD WEEK BETWEEN CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEAR’S By Emily Flake Dots DAILY CARTOON “This year went by so fast that I can literally still see myself saying the exact same thing last year.” Cartoon by Colin Tom This week’s cartoons » SHOUTS & MURMURS Cartoons, comics, and other funny stuff. Sign up for the Humor newsletter. Daily Shouts O.O.O. MESSAGES FOR EVERYDAY LIFE Daily Shouts HOW TO DISAPPEAR YOUR PARTNER’S UGLY SWEATER Shouts & Murmurs NATURE, WOW Daily Shouts FROM THE DIARY OF SANTA’S GRANDSON Daily Shouts REASONS THAT “LOVE ACTUALLY” COULD NEVER BE MADE IN 2023 Blitt’s Kvetchbook THE NAPOLEONIC WARS DotsDots Limited-time offer. Get 12 weeks for $29.99 $6, plus a free tote. Subscribe Cancel anytime. Get 12 weeks for $29.99 $6, plus a free tote. Subscribe Cancel anytime. 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