Two visions fight for the Democratic Party’s soul as it sear ches for purpose, direction, and a modicum of popularity.
By Simon Van Zuylen-Wood
Who, beyond Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Zohran Mamdani, and Jon Ossoff, are most likely to rebuild the Democratic Party?
By Matt Stieb and Kaleigh Rogers
Talking to the gerontocracy.
By Rebecca Traister
An extremely early, surely premature analysis of who might win the Democratic presidential primary.
By Ben Terris
Political violence as cultural obsession.
A swanky terminal on the rise at JFK.
Divorce attorney to the stars Laura Wasser.
Even fun is at the mercy of ChatGPT.
The play ottoman children (and parents) love.
How Andrew Carmellini debones fish, the king of cake carriers, and clogs fit for hiking.
How to handle an extremely long flight
Listens to 24 hours of transcendent music in Red Hook.
A West Village railroad that’s been all over the world.
Kiko is an elevated canteen made for its Hudson Square neighbors.
Chef Ben Wexler-Waite gets his mozzarella from Italy. The lobster and tomatoes come from Maine.
Ramen by Ra returns and will start serving its broth at 9 a.m.
Some fresh jazz.
Five new restaurants for November.
The comedian is incapable of self-censoring — not that she wants to.
How Stavros Halkias became a guiding light for “young male losers”
Scenes from her last day with the American Ballet Theatre.
Jeremy Allen White adds depth to an otherwise shallow Springsteen biopic.
Murdaugh: Death in the Family is refreshingly uncomplicated.
Leanne Morgan wrestles with her newfound success in Unspeakable Things.
Twenty-five picks for the next two weeks.
Matt Gaffney’s latest puzzle.
Readers sound off on the violent arrests of migrants attending routine hearings at 26 Federal Plaza and more.
Our deliberately oversimplified guide to who falls where on our taste hierarchies.