An I.V.F. Mix-Up, a Shocking Discovery and an Unbearable Choice
Two couples in California discovered they were raising each other’s genetic children. Should they switch their girls?
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Two couples in California discovered they were raising each other’s genetic children. Should they switch their girls?
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The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on hypocrisy.
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Can you prevent your spouse from growing a plant that (occasionally) smells like a rotting corpse?
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Ipo, Tahitian coconut bread, takes the place of toasty French bread, merging long histories.
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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.
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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.
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Moths Were Destroying My Clothes. Tiny Parasitic Wasps Saved Them.
A “weird city version” of common countryside wisdom saved my favorite outfits.
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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.
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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.
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The New York Times for Kids goes inside the sweaty, funny, heartfelt world of high school mascots.
By Tim O’Shei
Mohammad Rasoulof had to make the most difficult decision of his life.
By Amir Ahmadi Arian
Saddle edges up? Or down?
By John Hodgman
The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on the kinds of remarks strangers sometimes make about women’s looks.
By Kwame Anthony Appiah
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
Use the technique behind these butter-poached carrots to get the mushroomiest mushrooms or the green-beaniest green beans.
By Eric Kim
How did pigeons came to dominate our streets? Where did Katharine Hepburn live? The answers might be more interesting than you think.
By Eleanor Cummins
As revolutionary new weight-loss drugs turn consumers off ultraprocessed foods, the industry is on the hunt for new products.
By Tomas Weber
Dr. Ellen Wiebe, who has performed hundreds of medical aid in dying (or MAID) procedures, discusses what constitutes a good death.
By David Marchese
If you make the request funny, can you tell your guests how to use your toilet?
By John Hodgman
The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on conveying the truth on a pivotal form.
By Kwame Anthony Appiah
Two weeks in the life of Pennsylvania’s Luzerne County, one of the many places that shifted to the right in this year’s election.
By Philip Montgomery and Michael Sokolove
The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on whether a patient is entitled to be informed of provider changes.
By Kwame Anthony Appiah
Older Americans hold an outsize share of the nation’s wealth and power. Television loves watching their children scramble for a taste.
By Elizabeth Nelson
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A study of Gila monster venom helped start the revolution in weight-loss drugs. But scientists think that’s just the beginning.
By Kim Tingley
Tiny, mighty cumin seeds bring their gentle strength to a sweet, savory winter slaw.
By Yotam Ottolenghi
Warwick Schiller made his name as an expert trainer. An enigmatic little horse completely changed his outlook.
By Sterry Butcher
A low-stress video game that’s cleansing in more than one sense.
By Andrew Willett
He fled brutal repression — only to discover, as so many Uyghur refugees have, that China’s power stretches far beyond its borders.
By Nyrola Elimä and Ben Mauk
The former House Speaker reflects on Donald Trump’s victory, Kamala Harris’s candidacy and the future of the Democratic Party.
By Lulu Garcia-Navarro
In her first extended interview after the election, the former House speaker was not interested in analyzing Democratic losses and was eager to put a sunny spin on the future.
By Lulu Garcia-Navarro
The abortion rights movement won in many states — even some that voted for Donald Trump. Where does it go from here?
By Emily Bazelon
The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on the responsibility one has to dispose of an outmoded appliance.
By Kwame Anthony Appiah
Every year, Santa Fe incinerates a giant puppet of Zozobra — a ritual meant to purge anxiety and promote a reset.
By Caity Weaver
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The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on an aging couple’s financial plans.
By Kwame Anthony Appiah
Jackie G goes viral with her readings of stars’ private conversations. She’s kinder about it than any of the people snooping on you.
By Jody Rosen
Pecans step in for almonds in this play on classic French desserts.
By Lisa Donovan
Today’s teenagers were born into the global-warming crisis, but already it’s upending their adolescence — and will define their future.
By Charley Locke
On Oct. 7, an Israeli college student opened her phone. What she did next landed her in prison.
By Jesse Barron
The controversial philosopher discusses societal taboos, Thanksgiving turkeys and whether anyone is doing enough to make the world a better place.
By David Marchese
White and Black women have joined together to power progressive causes — from abolition to civil rights — but it’s a tenuous alliance.
By Nikole Hannah-Jones
It may take a while. Here’s what could happen next.
By Nick Corasaniti
Grab a snack, do your laundry and cast a ballot.
By Helen I. Hwang
When families disagree on candidates, kids can get caught in the middle.
By Katherine Cusumano
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Three times the results were disputed after the votes were in.
By Peter Baker
Teens around the country are volunteering, canvassing and registering voters.
By Rebecca Pitts
It’s weird. It’s confusing. It’s how we elect the president.
By Lisa Lerer and La Tigre
Listen up for these terms as the votes roll in. Find them on the board to be the night’s big winner.
By Emily Reily
The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on the duty one has to rectify accounting errors and other billing mistakes.
By Kwame Anthony Appiah
It’s already powering remarkable visual innovations, like in the new movie “Here.” But boosters think that’s just the beginning.
By Devin Gordon
Do you have to live your whole life as “candy boy” if you hate the name?
By John Hodgman
The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on what to do when people in positions of power espouse harmful conspiracy theories.
By Kwame Anthony Appiah
The company has tried to shed its retrograde standards of beauty aspiration and perfection. But many women miss the old bombshell fantasy.
By Scout Brobst
Her take on beautifully ripe ‘ulu, or breadfruit in Hawaiian, is worth the wait.
By Ligaya Mishan
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A consideration of the big ideas on small political buttons.
By Ariel Lown Lewiton
Countries where democracy is in trouble share a common pattern, and it’s a worrying one for the United States.
By Amanda Taub
The senator discusses the “astonishing” support for the former president in Pennsylvania, his rift with progressives over Israel and his own position in the Democratic Party.
By Lulu Garcia-Navarro
The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on whether to exploit a store’s return policy.
By Kwame Anthony Appiah
An investigation in four battleground states found that Republicans have taken control of election boards with the aim of challenging and overturning outcomes that don’t go their way.
By Jim Rutenberg
A movement driven by disinformation about Trump’s 2020 defeat has taken over many of the boards that certify elections. It could cause chaos in the weeks ahead.
By Jim Rutenberg
Can you just reach into the box and go for it?
By John Hodgman
The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on what to do when your financial needs conflict with your scruples.
By Kwame Anthony Appiah
Destruction arrives not via solemn news reports but in a barrage of digital scraps — first-person views of what it looks like when the world changes.
By Brooke Jarvis
Robert Paxton thought the label was overused. But now he’s alarmed by what he sees in global politics — including Trumpism.
By Elisabeth Zerofsky
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Comforting Senegalese maafé meets Japanese onigiri, reflecting a couple’s culinary overlap.
By Eric Kim
For decades, the sport has been shaped in large part by one company — and one man.
By David Gauvey Herbert
Remember Microsoft Paint? It’s more perfect than ever.
By Jean-Luc Bouchard
For the OnlyFans star and influencer, navigating the internet is a full-time job.
By David Marchese
The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on canine naming conventions.
By Kwame Anthony Appiah
Elon Musk and a group of Silicon Valley allies have built a shadow campaign to put Donald Trump back in office.
By Jonathan Mahler, Ryan Mac and Theodore Schleifer
In a directorial career defined by alluring strangeness, Guy Maddin’s new comedy is radical for being almost … normal.
By Mark Binelli
Is broth a drink-drink? And if so, can it therefore be consumed from a drink vessel?
By John Hodgman
The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on what it means to be a customer of someone who espouses a radically different political perspective.
By Kwame Anthony Appiah
Hollywood’s polished leaders and legible story arcs never quite imagined the places real-life American politics would go.
By Ross Barkan
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A Times investigation found that the school built one of the most ambitious diversity programs in the country — only to see increased discord and division on campus.
By Nicholas Confessore
This squash stew, rich with sharp tamarind and creamy coconut, is meant to restore.
By Yotam Ottolenghi
A decade and a quarter of a billion dollars later, students and faculty are more frustrated than ever.
By Nicholas Confessore
Undocumented labor quietly props up the entire American economy — but nowhere more dramatically than on dairy farms.
By Marcela Valdes
Who built the Shell Grotto, and why do we care so much?
By Gabrielle Schwarz
The Republican vice-presidential candidate rejects the idea that he’s changed, defends his rhetoric and still won’t say if Trump lost in 2020.
By Lulu Garcia-Navarro
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