
Business Traveler US
Crowd Control
Why affluent travelers are willing to pay more to escape the airport chaos
2 min |
July 2025

Business Traveler US
THE BENEFITS OF RISK-TAKING
How a Stoic philosophy can triumph in business
3 min |
July 2025

Muse Science Magazine for Kids
WHEN the SMOKE CLEARS
THE LINGERING EFFECTS OF THE RECENT PACIFIC PALISADES AND ALTADENA EATON FIRES
6 min |
Muse July 2025: The Story Behind Wildfires

Muse Science Magazine for Kids
FIRE DANGER
WHY THE RISK OF WILDFIRES KEEPS GROWING
4 min |
Muse July 2025: The Story Behind Wildfires

Muse Science Magazine for Kids
SHAN CAMMACK
WILDLIFE BIOLOGIST AND FIRE SAFETY OFFICER
3 min |
Muse July 2025: The Story Behind Wildfires

The New Yorker
THE SILENCE
A great silence opened up inside her. But that made it sound more dramatic than it was. It happened by degrees, creeping up slyly. And at times, in certain places and situations, it was expected and welcome—on a long walk, or when a person confessed something pitiful, or at a funeral or a party. In all those places, where once she'd had a lot to say—too much, honestly—now there was this silence and she became a far better listener. Not consciously, that was just one of the consequences. It wasn't a Zen silence or an enlightened silence or anything she'd worked to achieve. It was only a sort of blank. Once, on a mini-break, she'd spotted a sentence graffitied on a bridge in Paris: “The world is everything that is the case.” (It was written in English and stuck in her mind.) The silence felt like that: it spoke for itself. But it could also offend and disappoint others, the same way the world itself never seems enough for some people. It was no use on big family occasions, for example, or when one of her adult daughters called her name from another room, or if someone at work asked for her view on the news of the day. It could make other people feel awkward. But when she was alone with it, whenever it coincided with her own long-standing habit of looking upward into the branches of trees—then it didn't really bother her at all.
10+ min |
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
EASY MUSIC
How Elmore Leonard perfected his style.
10+ min |
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
IS IT THE PHONES?
The tantalizing power of the theory that screens are harming teens.
10+ min |
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
THE COMEDIAN
My father worked nights as the desk attendant at a cheap hotel downtown. It was a thankless job behind bulletproof glass, which was all he had to shield him from demented drunks and screeching prostitutes, from seven in the evening until four in the morning, the poor man.
10+ min |
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
JUBILEE
A wooden ruler with the etched faces of Henry VIII's six wives running down the middle; ticket stubs from Hampton Court and the Chamber of Horrors, where we walked ahead of our mothers, hand in hand; a few wrappers of Dairy Milk.
10+ min |
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
PRIDE AND PROVENANCE
The Met's new Rockefeller Wing daxxles—and whispers, “Finders, keepers.”
6 min |
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
THE MAGIC OF “MAFALDA”
How an Argentinean comic strip became an international phenomenon.
10+ min |
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
THE END OF THE ESSAY
What comes after A.I. has destroyed college writing?
10+ min |
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
THE STORY PART
Student days and a search for community.
10+ min |
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
BY THE BOOK
What we learn from reading the fiction touted in our début issue.
10+ min |
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

New York magazine
He Really Won. Can He Really Win? - THE GREAT UPSET
THE GREAT UPSET Zohran Mamdani beat Andrew Cuomo and the Establishment by upending how city politics was supposed to work.
7 min |
June 30 – July 13, 2025

Scoop USA Newspaper
Philadelphia City Council and healthcare leaders URGE Senate to KILL One Big Beautiful Bill
Many Congressional seats will be up for grabs in the 2026 elections, and voters in Pennsylvania and throughout the country will have the power to hold lawmakers accountable for any decisions they make that are not in the best interest of the American taxpayer.
2 min |
ScoopUSA Media, Volume 65 - Number 28

Scoop USA Newspaper
Did you miss a holiday, Mr. President?
Juneteenth came and went Thursday, but curiously, something seemed to be missing from the annual celebration: a cordial salute from the president of the United States.
2 min |
ScoopUSA Media, Volume 65 - Number 28

Scoop USA Newspaper
South Jersey Information Equity Project honors 2025 Journalism Fellows and celebrates 5th Anniversary
The South Jersey Information Equity Project (SJIEP), a pioneering initiative focused on media equity and dedicated to uplifting Black communities through inclusive coverage and storytelling, celebrated its fifth anniversary with the introduction of a new executive director and a discussion featuring journalist Trymaine Lee.
1 min |
ScoopUSA Media, Volume 65 - Number 27

Scoop USA Newspaper
When the president's peacemaking efforts invite more chaos
While the nation braced to see what would happen next in Los Angeles, on Thursday, a surprising message appeared on President Trump’s Truth Social account.
1 min |
ScoopUSA Media, Volume 65 - Number 27

New York magazine
A Refreshed Fedora
The Village standard gets a makeover to meet its new neighbors.
3 min |
June 30 – July 13, 2025

New York magazine
THE ISSUE THAT WASN’T
His stance on Israel was supposed to sink him. Instead, it maybe helped.
6 min |
June 30 – July 13, 2025

New York magazine
THE ELITE MELTDOWN
Mamdani’s win left Cuomo’s powerful backers reeling— and divided on a plan B.
5 min |
June 30 – July 13, 2025

New York magazine
WE FOUND YOUR BAG!
IT’S AT A SUPERSTORE IN ALONG WITH EVERYONE ELSE’S LOST LUGGAGE.
10+ min |
June 30 – July 13, 2025

New York magazine
'IT'S NICE TO BE RIGHT!'
The New Yorkers riding the high of his win. (And the ones who had no idea there was an election.)
7 min |
June 30 – July 13, 2025

New York magazine
FLIGHT RISK
DAYS BEFORE I’M expected to fly, a familiar anxiety starts to churn in my gut. I get moody.
10+ min |
June 30 – July 13, 2025

New York magazine
ZERO ZEN
A GREAT EXCHANGE RATE, CHAT GPT, AND KIMONO-WEARING BROS HAVE TURNED KYOTO INTO THE LOVE LIEST TOURIST TRAP ON EARTH.
10+ min |
June 30 – July 13, 2025

Scoop USA Newspaper
Charles Walter Dryden
Charles Walter Dryden was a U.S. Army Air Force officer and one of the original combat fighter pilots with the 332nd Fighter Group's 99th Fighter Squadron, a component of the Tuskegee Airmen.
2 min |
ScoopUSA Media, Volume 65 - Number 27

Scoop USA Newspaper
Black History Corner
GEMINI May 21 - JUNE 21
3 min |
ScoopUSA Media, Volume 65 - Number 27

New York magazine
Chefs Are Vying for Crunchwrap Supremacy
They're making them bigger, better, and spicier than Taco Bell ever could.
3 min |