From Cracker Barrel to Sydney Sweeney, Trump Has an Opinion to Share
In his second term, President Trump is using his power to reshape American culture, not just American policy. He has threatened consequences for many who disagree.
In his second term, President Trump is using his power to reshape American culture, not just American policy. He has threatened consequences for many who disagree.
Thaksin Shinawatra had struck a grand bargain with Thailand’s establishment, analysts say, that allowed his daughter to ascend to the prime minister’s job.
In February, the publication Marin Lately began satirizing the wealthy, idyllic swath of the Bay Area. The author has been a mystery, until now.
The health secretary is endangering the lives of American people now and into the future.
This Kennedy is no profile in courage.
There’s a reason America is now loving the band.
Yards should be wilder, freer and more alive.
This weekend marks summer’s unofficial end — but that doesn’t have to mean abandoning the season’s many splendors.
It was the second massive assault in three days, as the Kremlin rebuffed peace talks sought by Ukraine and the United States.
Robin W. Westman described how she had obtained guns and how she had visited the church on a test run this summer during a Sunday Mass.
Benny Johnson, a right-wing podcaster, has enjoyed rare access and promotion from the Trump administration.
Moscow is hosting a big summer festival as Russia continues its war in Ukraine. Katrin Bennhold, a senior international reporter for The New York Times, talks with Ivan Nechepurenko, a Times reporter in Russia, about the spectacle and what it says about Russian public opinion more than three and a half years into the war.
Helen Mirren, Pierce Brosnan, Ben Kingsley, Celia Imrie and director Chris Columbus on their new adaptation, first-day jitters and their shared love of “Home Alone.”
For many displaced by Hurricane Katrina, distance did not diminish their bond with the city they left behind, even as they built new lives.
“The Hamptons is basically in group therapy about the mayoral race.”
Israel was able to track the movements of key Iranian figures and assassinate them during the 12-day war this spring by following the cellphones carried by members of their security forces.
Fox’s Saturday broadcasts of Saratoga horse races have averaged 501,000 viewers, more than the National Hockey League’s regular season on TNT or college basketball’s on Fox/FS1.
The looming energy crisis in Anchorage offers a lesson in the downsides of relying on fossil fuels.
A festival known as Summer in Moscow showcases the city’s transformation into an ultramodern metropolis. But the feast can’t last forever.
Black women have been among the groups most affected by President Trump’s federal work force cuts this year. Erica L. Green explains why this is happening and what it could mean for the larger economy.
New York depends on private labs to test cannabis products’ potency and check for contaminants. Some industry experts say the tests are not reliable.
The U.S. said Samsung and SK Hynix can no longer ship American equipment to their production facilities in China without government licenses.
The student-led demonstrations are against President Prabowo Subianto’s economic policies and fatal police brutality.
President Trump’s repeated claims about having “solved” the India-Pakistan war infuriated Prime Minister Narendra Modi of India. And that was only the beginning.
A series of World War II dramas about China’s fight against Japan is drawing audiences to their feet, and, in some cases, to tears. Some say it helps deflect public discontent.
Afghanistan was on a timid recovery path. But four years after the Taliban retook power, it has been badly hit by aid cuts and an inflow of two million Afghans forced out of Iran and Pakistan.
Afghanistan was on a timid recovery path. But four years after the Taliban retook power, it has been badly hit by aid cuts and an inflow of two million Afghans forced out of Iran and Pakistan.
For 40 years, the Rev. Gyoro Nagase has overseen a temple to peace in a popular park in Battersea, his ever-present drum by his side.
The layoffs set up a potential battle with a federal judge who blocked previous efforts by Kari Lake, a fierce Trump ally, to restructure the agency.
Judge Jia M. Cobb rejected what she called “a truly startling argument” from the government that it could use a fast-track procedure to remove people arrested far from the southern border.