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New York Magazine

July 20 - August 2, 2020
Magazine

In the Apr. 15–28 issue: Olivia Nuzzi on “wonder boy” Pete Buttigieg. Plus: Art & Design, by Wendy Goodman; the half-billion dollar “Leonardo”; Natasha Lyonne, Annette Bening, and more.

Comments

The Top Line : Josh Barro • Getting Nowhere Economic indicators that recently looked promising are stalling once again.

Tribes: The Block Party That Doesn’t Stop

Lauren Underwood • Adventures in remote legislating with the first-term congresswoman from Illinois.

Cityscape : Justin Davidson • Could New York Be More Like Paris? Should we?

AMERICAN DEATH CULT

WHAT THE SCIENCE SAYS • Sober, simple, expert advice for managing the risks of COVID-19.

A PLAGUE IS AN APOCALYPSE BUT IT CAN BRING A NEW WORLD • THE MEANING OF THIS ONE IS IN OUR HANDS.

SLEEPING WITH ANDY WARHOL • IN 1962, A YOUNG POET NAMED JOHN GIORNO MET THE POP ART GOD, WHO IN TURN MADE HIM HIS FIRST SUPERSTAR. FOR A LITTLE WHILE, THEY WERE IN LOVE.

Shonda Rhimes Tweeted About This Tea • In the following days, Brooklyn Tea got hundreds of orders, hired six new employees, and created a night shift to keep up with demand. On the next pages, ten local Black business owners on what the past few months have been like.

The Riis Park Beach Bazaar • The lifeguards, law students, and Hula-Hoopers enjoying a recent Thursday on the boardwalk.

The Family Tugboat • Lyndsay Caleo Karol and Fitzhugh Karol’s getaway boat, Lucy, sleeps eight and is moored at Brooklyn Bridge Park.

Cheffy Chippy • First-rate fish and chips get a temporary new home at Dame Summer Club.

Sides

One Park, 12 Picnics

Who’s Afraid of Ziwe Fumudoh? • For guests who dare to appear on the comedian’s Instagram Live show, the question is not if you are racist, but how.

The Kanye Cycle • The danger in believing the rapper is serious about anything.

Still Not Ready to Make Nice • The Chicks—it’s just the Chicks, please—release a new album, Gaslighter, and take stock of their triumphs, their trials, and the songs they’re most sick of playing.

Hasan Minhaj Isn’t Having It • The Patriot Act host on facing his own community’s hypocrisy.

Lockdown Throwdown • For months, the Verzuz Instagram Live battles have featured great musicians in (mostly) friendly combat. We ranked them—the best, the worst, and the absolutely doomed.

Nazi Hunting on the High Seas • With Greyhound, Tom Hanks delivers the ultimate Dad Movie.

A Bittersweet Debut • Pop Smoke’s first album drops, just months after his murder.

Something’s Rotten • A Korean zombie series set in the 16th century feels like a nightmare of now.

To Do • Twenty-five things to see, hear, watch, and read from home.

THE 60-SECOND BOOK EXCERPT: Luster

THE APPROVAL MATRIX • Our deliberately oversimplified guide to who falls where on our taste hierarchies.


Expand title description text
Frequency: Every other week Pages: 84 Publisher: New York Media, LLC Edition: July 20 - August 2, 2020

OverDrive Magazine

  • Release date: July 20, 2020

Formats

OverDrive Magazine

subjects

News & Politics

Languages

English

In the Apr. 15–28 issue: Olivia Nuzzi on “wonder boy” Pete Buttigieg. Plus: Art & Design, by Wendy Goodman; the half-billion dollar “Leonardo”; Natasha Lyonne, Annette Bening, and more.

Comments

The Top Line : Josh Barro • Getting Nowhere Economic indicators that recently looked promising are stalling once again.

Tribes: The Block Party That Doesn’t Stop

Lauren Underwood • Adventures in remote legislating with the first-term congresswoman from Illinois.

Cityscape : Justin Davidson • Could New York Be More Like Paris? Should we?

AMERICAN DEATH CULT

WHAT THE SCIENCE SAYS • Sober, simple, expert advice for managing the risks of COVID-19.

A PLAGUE IS AN APOCALYPSE BUT IT CAN BRING A NEW WORLD • THE MEANING OF THIS ONE IS IN OUR HANDS.

SLEEPING WITH ANDY WARHOL • IN 1962, A YOUNG POET NAMED JOHN GIORNO MET THE POP ART GOD, WHO IN TURN MADE HIM HIS FIRST SUPERSTAR. FOR A LITTLE WHILE, THEY WERE IN LOVE.

Shonda Rhimes Tweeted About This Tea • In the following days, Brooklyn Tea got hundreds of orders, hired six new employees, and created a night shift to keep up with demand. On the next pages, ten local Black business owners on what the past few months have been like.

The Riis Park Beach Bazaar • The lifeguards, law students, and Hula-Hoopers enjoying a recent Thursday on the boardwalk.

The Family Tugboat • Lyndsay Caleo Karol and Fitzhugh Karol’s getaway boat, Lucy, sleeps eight and is moored at Brooklyn Bridge Park.

Cheffy Chippy • First-rate fish and chips get a temporary new home at Dame Summer Club.

Sides

One Park, 12 Picnics

Who’s Afraid of Ziwe Fumudoh? • For guests who dare to appear on the comedian’s Instagram Live show, the question is not if you are racist, but how.

The Kanye Cycle • The danger in believing the rapper is serious about anything.

Still Not Ready to Make Nice • The Chicks—it’s just the Chicks, please—release a new album, Gaslighter, and take stock of their triumphs, their trials, and the songs they’re most sick of playing.

Hasan Minhaj Isn’t Having It • The Patriot Act host on facing his own community’s hypocrisy.

Lockdown Throwdown • For months, the Verzuz Instagram Live battles have featured great musicians in (mostly) friendly combat. We ranked them—the best, the worst, and the absolutely doomed.

Nazi Hunting on the High Seas • With Greyhound, Tom Hanks delivers the ultimate Dad Movie.

A Bittersweet Debut • Pop Smoke’s first album drops, just months after his murder.

Something’s Rotten • A Korean zombie series set in the 16th century feels like a nightmare of now.

To Do • Twenty-five things to see, hear, watch, and read from home.

THE 60-SECOND BOOK EXCERPT: Luster

THE APPROVAL MATRIX • Our deliberately oversimplified guide to who falls where on our taste hierarchies.


Expand title description text