The beloved weekly magazine encompassing journalism, fiction, poetry and cartoons, is celebrating its centenary. New Yorker ...
On its 100th anniversary, Matthew Ricketson considers The New Yorker’s remarkable journalism and vital role in our chaotic, ...
The Brandywine Museum’s exhibition of Barbara Shermund’s cartoons aligns with the New Yorker magazine’s 100th anniversary.
and a caveman cartoon by George Booth—to celebrate The New Yorker’s centennial. On his third studio album, “Horror,” the genre-spanning musician deconstructs old fears and finds ways to su ...
and a caveman cartoon by George Booth—to celebrate The New Yorker’s centennial. On his third studio album, “Horror,” the genre-spanning musician deconstructs old fears and finds ways to su ...
The magazine has gained a cult following, partly by branding itself as a beacon of intellectualism. Here’s how it has changed, and stayed the same, over 100 years.
he laughed. The New Yorker is known for its reporting, and for its idiosyncrasies. Each issue also includes cartoons, a short story, and a few poems. The front cover features not a photograph ...
He entered the world in 1926, the year after The New Yorker was founded, and enlivened its pages for more than fifty years. One quality shared by my favorite cartoons, and always by Booth’s ...
In its pages, Borges, Camus, Hemingway, and Tom Wolfe have written. Its covers and cartoons are works of art. It dedicates months to the riskiest investigations. And it even has its own spelling rules ...
cartoons,and covers,” said Curry. New Yorker editor David Remnick said, “To be the subject of someone else’s reporting is, to say the least, unusual and even a little unnerving, for us.