News

Germany's next foreign minister, Johann Wadephul, is a former soldier, trained lawyer and conservative MP who has long been a strong supporter of military backing for Ukraine as it fights Russia's ...
The Patriots endured a dour campaign in the 2024 NFL season. They might be better for it in 2025. New England toiled through a loss-laden slate, falling to the cellar of the AFC East standings ..
The White House removed a top trade official after learning that he had attended the wedding of Miles Taylor, author of a 2018 opinion piece critical of President Donald Trump. George Bogden, who ...
A new portrait of the King and Queen has been panned by as 'sinister and uninspiring' by a critic. The painting of Charles and Camilla will be unveiled by Tatler magazine on the cover of their ...
A prolific critic for The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Atlantic magazine and The Village Voice and an author of seven books, Davis won a Grammy award for his liner notes on the 50th anniversary reissue ...
It’s the mawkish sentimentality of manufactured nostalgia that rankles me. To be fair, some progress has been made. We seem to have finally shucked off the Kennedys, and none too soon ...
Ayra Starr and Wizkid have yet again created magic in the new release of “Gimme Dat.” The highly anticipated collaboration was released in the early hours of Friday. This work of art is ...
This launch follows a growing fast food pattern: frozen drinks that double as candy-coated nostalgia. According to Datassential’s 2025 food and beverage trends, younger consumers — especially ...
Both emerged from economic nostalgia and fear of change. Both were politically attractive. And both were costly, backward-looking mistakes that undermined the economies they were meant to protect.
Nate Chinen, writing for NPR, called Davis “an articulate and gimlet-eyed cultural critic who achieved an eminent stature in jazz.” Corby Kummer, a longtime Atlantic staffer who edited Davis ...
Both emerged from economic nostalgia and fear of change. Both were politically attractive. And both were costly, backward-looking mistakes that undermined the economies they were meant to protect.
The pen-pal relationship Lorde manages through her email newsletter gives off a pronounced old-soul air. Her prose scratches at the colorful candor of letters exchanged between 19th-century authors.