Here’s what you need to know at the end of the day. Dean Baquet, executive editor of The New York Times, joined White House correspondents Maggie Haberman and Peter Baker in a conversation moderated by Jim Rutenberg, a media columnist, on the president's relationship with the media, the role of Twitter and more. The worst wildfires to tear through California in nearly a century show no sign of letting up. Thick plumes of smoke now envelop much of the Bay Area. In 1933, a 47-acre blaze killed 29 people in Los Angeles. The men fighting the fire were largely unprepared for the task. Californians had to make quick decisions as flames approached their homes. What did they take with them? Tweets that partly blamed Puerto Rico for the crisis set off alarms on the island and sent the president’s aides scrambling to reassure its residents. Three weeks after Hurricane Maria, much of Puerto Rico still lacks safe tap water, and bottling plants are crippled, leaving residents to scramble after scarce supplies from the mainland. The relief package is the second installment of aid passed by lawmakers to respond to this year’s hurricanes, and much more money will still be needed. American tech companies positioned themselves as entities that brought positive change by connecting people and spreading information. Perceptions are shifting. Amid a big-tech backlash, the Silicon Valley giant announced funding over five years to nonprofits that help prepare workers for the digital economy. In the Bronx, which lost more residents to drug overdoses last year than any other New York City borough, the heroin epidemic has latched on to a vulnerable population. The rise of the far-right could destroy the liberal societies that we know and love. It’s only three weeks since the island was devastated by hurricanes, but the president can’t be bothered with it anymore. A new White House executive order could significantly damage the health insurance market and harm millions of people. Three and a half million American citizens are being abandoned. I was taught that my learning disabilities meant I was a problem, not a student. The agreement allows the Palestinian Authority to run Gaza, potentially ending a 10-year standoff, but leaves thorny issues unresolved. The reports — related to an episode in London in the 1980s and in New York in 2004 — are preliminary, but point to the breadth of the legal challenges Harvey Weinstein could face. Isa Hackett, of “The Man in the High Castle,” goes public with her story of lewd propositions she says Roy Price made toward her in 2015. His vast fortune shaped Los Angeles, from its arts and medical worlds to its reinvigorated downtown. An American woman, her Canadian husband and three children were freed in a dramatic raid after being held for five years by a Taliban faction, the Haqqani network. Men have long complained about how condoms fit. Now a manufacturer is selling condoms in 60 sizes, in combinations of 10 lengths and nine circumferences. A study by the city’s Independent Budget Office estimated weekday subway delays resulted in $307 million of lost work time in a 12-month period. Ai Weiwei has endured frequent gripes that his activism has got the better of his art. That gripe is unfounded. Ron Chernow’s “Grant” gives us a Ulysses S. Grant for our times. In a hybrid of concert and autobiography, Bruce Springsteen delivers a major statement about his life’s work — but also a major revision of it. Unlike an elopement, a microwedding retains some of the structure of a traditional wedding, except on a smaller scale. The singer and songwriter, who isn’t afraid to brush up against the country music establishment, is releasing a new album that draws on her lifetime of struggle. Reginald Hudlin’s movie about the crusading lawyer and Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall smartly keeps the focus tight. Best villains? Cliffhangers? Social relevance? Clothes? Two Times journalists square off over Ewing Oil, Denver Carrington, and the characters that inspired two recent reboots. The cookbook author and television host always has three iPads, workout gear and, of course, food (including her own hard-boiled eggs). Where recent TV has fetishized serial killers as fascinating geniuses, the new Netflix series focuses on the quest to figure them out. Humans have long shared a genetic palette for skin pigmentation, slightly tweaked by evolution, scientists report. The feathers of birds preserved in natural history museum collections record changes to historical air quality across America’s Rust Belt, a new study finds. More Recent Articles |
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