試す 金 - 無料
RUNWAY DEPT.CIVIL STRUTTING
The New Yorker
|September 29, 2025
The mission: attend “Style Across the Aisle,” a Fashion Week spectacle wherein local politicians walk the runway wearing clothes mostly made by up-and-coming designers from their districts, and determine which of the models exhibits the most diva-like behavior. Which official, be they elected or appointed, is most likely to throw a phone at an assistant while screaming, “I am not wearing more khaki!”? Who, in short, is the civil-servant Naomi Campbell?
“I think there’ll be many models with diva behavior,” Joann Ariola, the City Council minority leader, said the week before the event, which benefitted Witness to Mass Incarceration, a nonprofit dedicated to fostering economic independence for formerly incarcerated people. Yet, leading up to the show, the squawks from the models sounded more like practical concerns than diva demands. Ariola herself was practicing wearing a higher heel than normal. Althea Stevens, a councilwoman from the South Bronx, told her designer, Lisne Bautista, that her full-length gown needed to be taken in because she’d lost weight. David Paterson, the seventy-one-year-old former governor of New York, who is mostly blind, worried about navigating the runway. “If they tell me to go first, I may end up anywhere,” he said. “I might walk out the building.”
このストーリーは、The New Yorker の September 29, 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
The New Yorker からのその他のストーリー
The New Yorker
THE OTHER BOOMERS
Kathryn Bigelow, the director, and Alexandra Bell, the arms-control expert, are both nuclear-attack-submarine literate. Bigelow—whose new Netflix film, “A House of Dynamite,” imagines the U.S. government’s response to an incoming intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) eighteen minutes from impact—shot part of her 2002 submarine film, entitled “K-19:
3 mins
January 12, 2026
The New Yorker
THE MUSICAL LIFE BROADWAY BABY
At Joe’s Pizza on Carmine Street, Marc Shaiman, the celebrated composer and lyricist, dropped his slice on the floor. “Ugh, it’s the Shaiman vortex,” he said. “Everything I come near breaks.”
3 mins
January 12, 2026
The New Yorker
NOTORIOUS M.T.G.
Marjorie Taylor Greene and Donald Trump break up over Epstein.
26 mins
January 12, 2026
The New Yorker
THE AMERICAN POPE
How the Chicago-born Robert Prevost became Leo XIV.
32 mins
January 12, 2026
The New Yorker
DEPT. OF RECYCLING SWIPE OUT
In 1994, when the MetroCard made Its 22, many straphangers were reluctant to say farewell to the subway token. Across the city, commuters struggled to master \"the swipe.
2 mins
January 12, 2026
The New Yorker
THE TALK OF THE TOWN
Easily missed on the back side of the November ballots that brought Zohran Mamdani to Gracie Mansion was a proposal for a new map of New York City.
4 mins
January 12, 2026
The New Yorker
POUR ONE OUT
The quest to save wine from wildfire smoke.
19 mins
January 12, 2026
The New Yorker
KICKS DEPT.ON THE LINE
On a chilly night last month, the Rockette Alumnae Association held its first black-tie charity ball, at the Edison Ballroom, in midtown.
4 mins
December 22, 2025
The New Yorker
Portraits of Everyday Life in Greenland
The thirty-six-year-old Greenlandic photographer Inuuteq Storch didn't know much about Inuit culture growing up. In school, for instance, he was taught about ancient Greek deities, but there was no talk of a native pantheon of gods
2 mins
December 22, 2025
The New Yorker
SELECTIVE MEMORY
\"Marjorie Prime\" and \"Anna Christie.\"
7 mins
December 22, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
