Chris Hughes, the Facebook co-founder who bought the venerable magazine in 2012, says it’s up for sale again.
The Denver Broncos quarterback is dismissing as “garbage” claims made in an Al Jazeera documentary that he was supplied with human growth hormone in 2011.
Ursula Gauthier, a French journalist, is being accused of inciting “the outrage of the Chinese people” with an article on Beijing’s relationship with Uighurs.
Because the hand that frocks Tom Brady is the hand that rules the world.
ESPN has abruptly shut down the website, which delivered some of the web’s best writing on pop culture and sports for four years.
Conde Nast says it bought the eclectic music-reviews site for its "Millennial males." What?
A new TV project helmed by the Oscar-winning director Steven Soderbergh could let audiences decide what happens next.
The case against your dad’s favorite social-media platform being used to “connect” with younger women
And man created a literary genre composed entirely of humblebrags, and the world wept.
The education company wants to focus on its core business.
Highlights from seven days of reading about entertainment
Fresh from the industry’s creative revolution in the 1960s, the art director George Lois helped make some of the greatest advertisements of the modern era.
In an attempt to reach African American customers, many U.S. businesses began integrating their commercials—often by relying on fraught stereotypes.
The woman once known as Bruce Jenner is embracing her role as a public figure. But it’s impossible to forget that hers is a personal struggle, too.
The process behind our unusual April 2005 cover story
From Amys Schumer and Poehler to Grace Helbig and Tavi Gevinson, the Internet has spurred an unprecedented movement of women mentoring teens with compassion, humor, and honesty.
How a fake newspaper is turning into a real media empire
Are men really getting schlumpier, or are people just finding better ways to talk about it?