The publication’s recent shift toward social issues, identity, and activism is giving its readers what they want.
In celebrating actresses shot without makeup, the artistic institution is jumping on a bandwagon rather than taking a brave stand.
Exposure to suffering through media can wear us down, but we shouldn’t give in to despair.
“If I weren’t a better person … I swear, I would worry about our lovely nation,” she once told me.
They wanted to see tears. She didn’t provide them, but that didn’t make much difference.
Since the candidate first began climbing in the polls more than a year ago, writers have imagined what his presidency might look like.
Jeffrey Goldberg, a national correspondent for the magazine, succeeds James Bennet as its 14th top editor.
He didn’t “disappear” from his debate-moderation duties—he simply recognized what a two-person conversation is all about.
The network will reportedly pay the former anchor $20 million and has apologized. Meanwhile, Greta Van Susteren, the longtime anchor, is leaving immediately.
The news-gossip website that was bought this week by Univision announced Thursday it will cease operations next week.
The Gawker founder, still reeling from the damages awarded to Hulk Hogan, called it “a bitter day.”
The Fox News chairman’s departure from the network he helped create followed allegations of sexual harassment by Gretchen Carlson, a former host.
Pavel Sheremet, a prominent reporter, was targeted Wednesday by a car bomb.
Even in an era when politicians are increasingly able to be stingy about granting media access, the presumptive Republican nominee’s tactics stick out.
Critics claim the ratings-hungry media is responsible for the rise of his brash, telegenic campaign. History suggests that’s not true.
Gannett, which publishes USA Today, is offering about $815 million for Tribune Publishing, which owns the Chicago Tribune and the Los Angeles Times.
The former Canadian radio star faces another trial after his acquittal Thursday in a sexual-assault case.
A portrait of the Los Angeles Times’s food writer, Jonathan Gold, explores how humans connect through food.
Watching people watching things is a time-honored human tradition. It has also led to a quintessentially modern genre.
The Internet is allowing a return to age-old, communal forms of mourning. That makes some people uncomfortable.