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HOW OTHER THINGS END

The New Yorker

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September 22, 2025

This is how the text exchange ends. Not with a bang but a whimper. -T. S. Eliot

- REUVEN PERLMAN

This is how the text exchange ends.

Not with an explicit farewell but with a two-day pause followed by a thumbs-up-emoji reaction.

This is how the career ends.

Not with a retirement party and a gold watch but with a second career in the gig economy.

This is how doing laundry ends.

Not with crisp, clean bedding but with your sheet coming out of the dryer balled up in your duvet cover, still soaking wet.

This is how dinner in your thirties ends.

Not with a satisfying dessert but with a single square of dark chocolate snapped off a seventy-five-percent-cacao bar from Whole Foods. O.K., maybe two squares ... What the heck—it's Friday.

This is how the smartphone era ends.

Not with a cultural rethink of the role that technology plays in our lives but with scrolling past a video of Jonathan Haidt musing about the harm of narrative-free content to watch a clip of a broccoli-haired teenager punching his grandpa in the back while Hozier sings, “I take my whiskey neat.”

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DEPT. OF ETCHING

One recent weekday morning, the British painter Peter Doig arrived at a bonded warehouse—a cavernous brick building—about a mile south of the River Thames, but not subject to the import taxes of the United Kingdom.

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SUBWAY VIGILANTE

Revisiting the New York shooting that defined an era

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MOM AND DAD: THE PERFORMANCE REVIEW

Mom, Dad, thanks for being on time this year. Dad, I can see by your T-shirt that it was a challenge. So you've already exceeded expectations.

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3 mins

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Patrick Radden Keefe on Truman Capote's “In Cold Blood”

In 1972, on “The Tonight Show,” Johnny Carson asked Truman Capote about capital punishment. Capote had written, in unsettling detail, about the hanging of two killers, Dale Hickock and Perry Smith. Carson said, of the death penalty, “As long as the people don't have to see it, they seem to be all for it”; if executions occurred “in the public square,” Americans might stop doing them. Capote wasn't so sure. His hands laced together professorially, he murmured, in his baby-talk drawl, “Human nature is so peculiar that, really, millions of people would watch it and get some sort of vicarious sensation.”

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3 mins

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BOOTS ON THE GROUND

There aren't many moments in Donald Trump's political career that could be called highlights.

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4 mins

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CALL OF THE WILD

When calamity strikes in America's busiest national park, who comes to the rescue?

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UNDER THREAT

The Danes were America's most loyal ally. Now they feel targeted—and terrified.

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22 mins

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CONTAGION

A Broadway revival of Tracy Letts's “Bug.”

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6 mins

January 19, 2026

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The New Yorker

ANNALS OF TECHNOLOGY: HEY THERE!

How WhatsApp took over the global conversation.

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25 mins

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M.I.P. IN CHAINS

Whatever else you think about invading a country and capturing its President, there's no getting around the inconvenience of imprisoning Nicolás Maduro in New York City.

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7 mins

January 19, 2026

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