Looking to Harry Truman to understand Hillary Clinton.
From diner coffee to onstage scars with the Crucible actor.
Talking to the Hare Krishna leader who’s bringing the movement into the age of Lululemon.
A new doc goes behind the scenes of Anthony Weiner’s implosion.
Famous townies — like Wayne Coyne, George R.R. Martin, and Erykah Badu — who’ve become their cities’ mascots.
What has (and hasn’t) changed about workplace sexism since 1973.
Readers sound off on the threat of an overripe republic, the history and future of SeaWorld, and more.
Our deliberately oversimplified guide to who falls where on our taste hierarchies.
A feminist bookstore, natural cleaning products, and more new stuff in New York stores.
The artist who made her dress out of paper.
Le Coq Rico takes its poultry almost too seriously.
Delaware and Hudson’s Pennsylvania Dutch specialty, schnitz und gnepp.
One-hundred-and-one picks for the absolute best things to eat, drink, and just generally do all around New York City.
How Naughty Dog – the developer behind Uncharted 4, the year’s most anticipated video game – makes summer blockbusters interactive.
What Bob sings when he doesn’t sing his own songs.
Seth Rogen’s passion project is a comic-book adaption of a supernatural preacher’s gonzo quest to meet God.
Highbrow theoretical discourse isn’t exactly the most obvious comedy material. Unless, as Rebecca Miller discovered, it stands for something else.
Urs Fischer’s portrait of Julian Schnabel will dissolve into a puddle.
A part of speech with all of those functions can’t possibly do all of them well.
American Psycho hacks its way onstage.
Waitress is sweet and sassy.
Tuck Everlasting may not be for the ages.
The one-man comedy Fully Committed returns.
Jessica Lange steps up into Long Day’s Journey Into Night.
Twenty-five things to see, hear, watch, and read.
21 notables on the clothes that take them back in time. Interviews by Alexa Tsoulis-Reay
The evolution of women’s work wear, from shoulder pads to exposed delts.
By Amy Larocca
See lost images of Edie Sedgwick, Andy Warhol, and Lou Reed from a 1966 shoot that was never published. Photographs by Larry Fink
Fashion standbys that were invented in New York.
The clothes — and the lack of them — that shocked New York.
By Véronique Hyland
Bergdorf Goodman, Century 21, Patricia Field, and more.
8 shows that pushed fashion forward.
The band is New York, and the color is black.
When did New York have the best style?
100 Years of New York’s sneakers crazes.