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Distress Signal

Time

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December 08, 2025

WHAT THE L.A. FIRES REVEAL ABOUT AMERICA'S BLEAK CLIMATE FUTURE

- BY JUSTIN WORLAND, LESLIE DICKSTEIN

Distress Signal

LOOKING BACK, MY ELEMENTARY-school experience felt almost bucolic. My classmates and I ran around Saint Mark’s School’s 5½-acre campus carefree. With classrooms opening to the outdoors, we sat outside for lunch in the shadow of the San Gabriel Mountains and feared being sent to the administration building, a two-story house converted into offices. The smell of burning forest was a recognizable, if not frequent, occurrence. Teachers would cancel recess, lunch was moved inside from the patio—an annoyance no more ominous than a rainy day.

When I visited in February, just a month after the Eaton Fire had ripped through the town of Altadena, Calif., the campus had been transformed. For the most part, the buildings were gone. A chimney from the old house remained standing. A stairwell that once led from the ground floor of the “Art Barn” to offices upstairs had become a stairwell from nowhere to nowhere. And somehow amid the rubble sat the same blue and yellow tables where I hung out nearly three decades prior.

In September, I visited Saint Mark’s again. The campus had been cleared of debris—the result of a cleanup effort that the state touts as the fastest in history—and the site now looks like a giant dirt patch, waiting for construction to begin. In the interim, the school relocated to a corner of a high school two miles southeast. It’s at once a hopeful and devastating site. Modular trailers have been placed on the edge of campus. Children are playing on a hastily constructed play set. Amid the faculty walking around, I spot a few familiar faces who greet me with hugs and nostalgia. And the blue and yellow tables have been moved to a patio at the center of campus. “When we opened this facility, the kids cried; they were like, ‘Those are our tables,’” Jennifer Tolbert, the head of school, told me as we walked on the new campus.

Time からのその他のストーリー

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The journalist and the jinx in a suburban standoff

CLAIRE DANES GETS A LOT OF ATTENTION for her “cry face.” It is, indeed, a sight to behold. Engulfed by waves of sorrow, her chin vibrates, her eyes scrunch, the corners of her mouth turn down as though tugged by invisible weights.

time to read

4 mins

December 08, 2025

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Time

LIVING IN PUBLIC

“The camera eats first.” A decade ago, that phrase was a joke about influencers and their avocado toast. Now it's shorthand for how every corner of life—dinners, cleaning, milestones, even grief—can be packaged for public consumption. We live in a world where intimacy has become inventory, where the difference between living and posting is often just a matter of lighting.

time to read

3 mins

December 08, 2025

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Time

5 migraine symptoms that aren't headaches

NEARLY 40 MILLION people in the U.S. suffer from migraines, making the painful disorder one of the most common that neurologists treat. It's also among the most confusing. Because of the many ways it can show up, it can take more than a decade to receive an accurate diagnosis.

time to read

2 mins

December 08, 2025

Time

Time

Distress Signal

WHAT THE L.A. FIRES REVEAL ABOUT AMERICA'S BLEAK CLIMATE FUTURE

time to read

13 mins

December 08, 2025

Time

The food pyramid may be back on the menu

EARLY PUBLIC NUTRITION ADVICE CAME AS A WARNING. Wilbur O. Atwater, a chemist and renowned nutritionist, wrote in an 1902 edition of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) digest, Farmers' Bulletin, that \"Unless care is exercised in selecting food, a diet may result which is one-sided or badly balanced—that is, one in which either protein or fuel ingredients (carbohydrate and fat) are provided in excess ... The evils of overeating may not be felt at once, but sooner or later they are sure to appear.\"

time to read

2 mins

December 08, 2025

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Time

Where top U.S. leaders earn their stripes

AS THE INDUSTRIES AND COMPANIES driving the American economy change, new generations of leaders are rotated in to take the helm.

time to read

3 mins

December 08, 2025

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Time

The Risk Report

THREE YEARS AND NINE MONTHS after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the war grinds on. There's been plenty of news and noise of late. Yet as we approach the end of 2025, there's no sign of resolution on the horizon.

time to read

2 mins

December 08, 2025

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Time

JON CHU'S AMERICAN DREAM

The Wicked: For Good director on trying to change the world, one blockbuster at a time

time to read

6 mins

December 08, 2025

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Ken Burns'

The filmmaker on his 12-hour documentary The American Revolution, the importance of undertow, and what's next

time to read

2 mins

December 08, 2025

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Time

A seductive Dangerous Liaisons remix, with feminist intentions

There are no heroes in Les Liaisons Dangereuses, Pierre Choderlos de Laclos' 1782 novel of end-stage French aristocratic decadence. Its chief villain is Marquise Isabelle de Merteuil, a master manipulator who exploits her former lover the Vicomte de Valmont's resurgent desire for her with a wager that dooms them both. As a teenage Fiona Apple dryly noted: “It's a sad, sad world when a girl will break a boy just because she can.”

time to read

1 mins

December 08, 2025

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