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Highlights

  1. Judge John Hodgman

    Judge John Hodgman on Putrid Flowers

    Can you prevent your spouse from growing a plant that (occasionally) smells like a rotting corpse?

     By

    CreditIllustration by Louise Zergaeng Pomeroy
  2. Eat

    French Toast Gets a Polynesian Pick Me Up

    Ipo, Tahitian coconut bread, takes the place of toasty French bread, merging long histories.

     By

    CreditLinda Xiao for The New York Times. Food stylist: Maggie Ruggiero. Prop stylist: Sophia Eleni Pappas.
  1. Lovable Movie Robots Are Coming to Charm Your Children

    The adult world is ever more full of robots. Children’s entertainment feels as if it’s working hard to make them seem adorable.

     By

    CreditPhoto illustration by Mark Harris
    screenland
  2. Modern Warfare Is Breeding Deadly Superbugs. Why?

    Researchers are trying to understand why resistant pathogens are so prevalent in the war-torn nations of the Middle East.

     By

    A 25-year-old patient at the Specialized Burns Hospital in Baghdad’s Medical City, in July 2024. Like many Iraqi hospitals, the facility suffers from high rates of resistant infection.
    CreditEnri Canaj/Magnum, for The New York Times
  3. Moths Were Destroying My Clothes. Tiny Parasitic Wasps Saved Them.

    A “weird city version” of common countryside wisdom saved my favorite outfits.

     By

    CreditIllustration by Anna Haifisch
    Letter of Recommendation
  4. K-Pop Trained Rosé to Be ‘a Perfect Girl.’ Now She’s Trying to Be Herself.

    The Blackpink star strikes out on her own, away from the system that turned her into a global phenomenon.

     By

    CreditPhilip Montgomery for The New York Times
    The Interview
  5. My Mom Voted for Trump. Can We Let It Go?

    The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on how a family might proceed in the wake of a momentous presidential election.

     By

    CreditIllustration by Tomi Um
    The Ethicist

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  5. Screenland

    No More Nostalgia Concerts, Please

    The culture industry keeps getting better at monetizing the past — including the new ritual of musicians playing old albums, in full, onstage.

    By Peter C. Baker

     
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