Entrepreneur US
Get the Best Out of Your Team
Your “hardest workers” might also be your biggest problem. To measure success properly, use the playbook.
2 min |
January - February 2026
Entrepreneur US
DIARY of a Franchisee
Raul Larez owns two Batteries Plus franchises, but still has plenty of time for family. We asked him to keep a diary of one average day—so you can see what his life is like.
4 min |
January - February 2026
Women's Health US
Fitness Forever
Ready to future-proof your workouts? These award-worthy devices, sneakers, dumbbells, leggings, wearables, and more keep fitness fun, fresh, and a sustainable part of our lives.
6 min |
Winter 2026
Women's Health US
Meet the New Aging Experts
You may not expect to have blood drawn or hormone levels tested during a Botox appointment, but the holistic approach to noninvasive treatments offered by functional medicine doctors is changing the way we think about skin.
6 min |
Winter 2026
Women's Health US
Get Thicker Hair
Finding the root cause of shedding can take some digging. These expert-backed solutions will help.
1 min |
Winter 2026
Women's Health US
Why Your Hot Flashes Can Be Heart Clues
Plus, six other critical yet overlooked facts about our bodies that all women should know.
9 min |
Winter 2026
Women's Health US
Power Pairing Plan
These health-boosting and muscle-building recipes will transform your body—and your time in the kitchen.
4 min |
Winter 2026
Entrepreneur US
Rejection Is the Best Sales Channel
Did someone say no? Listen closely, because that two-letter word might hold the key to your future success.
3 min |
January - February 2026
The Atlantic
WHAT JEFFREY EPSTEIN DIDN'T UNDERSTAND ABOUT LOLITA
Everything.
5 min |
February 2026
The Atlantic
I'm Not From the Government but I'm Here to Help
The Trump administration is trying to eliminate federal services? Fine. I'll do everything myself.
10+ min |
February 2026
The Atlantic
The New History of Fighting Slavery
What we learn by tracing rebellions from Africa to the Americas
10 min |
February 2026
Women's Health US
zen and the art of shredding
After two consecutive gold-medal runs at the Olympics, snowboarder Chloe Kim was burnt out on...everything. Here's how she got back on track and ready to rip it at the 2026 Milano Cortina Games.
7 min |
Winter 2026
Entrepreneur US
'Know Your Strengths and Focus on That'
How do you build one of the fastest-growing brands inside Unilever? Just ask Liquid I.V. CEO Mike Keech, who is now driving $1 billion in retail sales.
4 min |
January - February 2026
Women's Health US
finisher
A cardio queen no more, Jennifer Aniston, 56, is all in on resistance training now.
1 min |
Winter 2026
Women's Health US
The Calorie Counting Conundrum
No matter how much the convo around weight changes with the times, one practice remains cemented in our brains and behaviors. Can we ever shake it?
10+ min |
Winter 2026
The Atlantic
Sense of an Ending
Julian Barnes says goodbye to the novel
9 min |
February 2026
Entrepreneur US
How to BUILD (and Market) a Franchise for Very Little Money
Want to turn a tiny hometown business into a franchise with hundreds of locations? The cofounder of L&L Hawaiian Barbecue, shares his story—and his secrets.
10+ min |
January - February 2026
Entrepreneur US
The Marketing Genius Behind the Best Brands
It's not just about smart messaging. It's about a keen understanding of human psychology. Here's what Guinness, Kraft, Dyson, Apple, and Pringles get right—and how to become a better marketer.
10+ min |
January - February 2026
Entrepreneur US
FRANCHISE 500 TOP 10: Meet the Leaders of the Franchise 500
Meet the Leaders of the Franchise 500®
10+ min |
January - February 2026
Entrepreneur US
Raise Prices or Cut Staff? What About Neither?
When times are tough, franchises don't have to make major sacrifices. They just need to rethink value.
8 min |
January - February 2026
Women's Health US
Stronger Together
Let's be real: No couple reaches their 10-, 15-, or 50-year anniversary without a lot of blood, sweat, tears, and protein smoothies. But the dedicated, loving, and downright adorable duos who do make it? They have one thing in common: They've figured out a shared strength (or two) that cements them for the long haul.
9 min |
Winter 2026
Entrepreneur US
Old Business, New Profits
How do you modernize an older business without sacrificing what made it unique?
2 min |
January - February 2026
Women's Health US
Crashing Out Is the New Burnout
But you don't have to do either. Learn how to take control of your mental health, sans memes.
6 min |
Winter 2026
Entrepreneur US
WHAT TO DO WHEN PEOPLE ARE PISSED
Pacaso is a billion-dollar startup that sells a unique kind of vacation home. So how do you respond when neighbors start protesting, and cities try to ban you? You learn to engage.
10+ min |
January - February 2026
The New Yorker
D.C. POSTCARD WATCH YOUR STEP
A complaint for negligence, recently filed in the District of Columbia, describes what it calls “The Longstanding Hole in the Sidewalk in front of the IRS building.” The document offers a capsule history of the six-inch-deep, eight-inch-wide circular void in the tax agency’s sidewalk. Around September of 2011, the hole was filled with cement. By the summer of 2015, the cement had been removed. Orange cones subsequently appeared around the hole. That November, D.C.’s Department of Transportation determined that the hole needed to be filled, “contingent upon funding and weather.” A month later, the department referred the hole-filling job to the feds. Cones remained around the hole, off and on, through 2017. Years passed. The cones disappeared, along with Presidential Administrations and the Bed Bath & Beyond franchise. The hole in the sidewalk remained.
2 min |
January 19, 2026
The New Yorker
BOOTS ON THE GROUND
There aren't many moments in Donald Trump's political career that could be called highlights.
4 min |
January 19, 2026
The New Yorker
SUBWAY VIGILANTE
Revisiting the New York shooting that defined an era
10+ min |
January 19, 2026
The New Yorker
CONTAGION
A Broadway revival of Tracy Letts's “Bug.”
6 min |
January 19, 2026
The New Yorker
CONQUESTS
\"Magellan\" and \"The Testament of Ann Lee.\"
6 min |
January 19, 2026
The New Yorker
THE PICTURES PERIOD CORRECT
When Miyako Bellizzi was designing the costumes for “Marty Supreme,” the new Josh Safdie movie, she spent a lot of time thinking about Timothée Chalamet’s underwear. His character, Marty, a Ping-Pong champ from the Lower East Side, might have worn a one-piece union suit, the conventional male undergarment of 1952, when the movie is set. But boxers and briefs were just coming into style, and although most of Marty’s shabby wardrobe was likely a few years old, Bellizzi opted to put him in the newfangled undies. She explained her logic: “It’s kind of like how our grandmothers aren’t wearing thongs, but we are.” (She added, “And, to be honest, the union suit is not the greatest look, right?”)
3 min |
