
The New Yorker
THAT'S THE WAY LOVE GOES
“Love Island USA” reaches its conclusion.
6 min |
July 28, 2025

The New Yorker
THE FLOOD WILL COME
How to think about the formidable power of rivers.
10+ min |
July 28, 2025

The New Yorker
MASKING FOR TROUBLE
“Eddington” is a slog, but a slog with ambitions—and its director and screenwriter, Ari Aster, is savvy enough to cultivate an air of mystery about what those ambitions are.
6 min |
July 28, 2025

The New Yorker
MONEY TALKS
Howard Lutnick, Trump's tariff czar, wants the rest of the world to pay up.
10+ min |
July 28, 2025

The New Yorker
Sink or Swim
Fifty years ago, a glitchy yet terrifying animatronic shark persuaded movie audiences never to go in the water again. Luckily—for the photographer Tod Papageorge, at least—it didn't keep people off the beaches. That same year, 1975, Papageorge was making his way across the country, from New York City, where he'd become known for his 35-mm. street scenes, to Los Angeles, where he'd shoot throngs of sun-dazed, sweat-glazed beachgoers with a clunkier medium-format camera. He made four trips to L.A.'s beaches between 1975 and 1988, and a selection of the resulting black-and-white photographs—detail-rich, often dense, rapturous yet funny tableaux of stripped-down bodies engaged in sport or sprawled on the sand—will be on view at the Museum of Contemporary Art Connecticut through October 26th.
1 min |
July 28, 2025

The New Yorker
D.C. POSTCARD: LAUGHING ON THE OUTSIDE
The Washington, D.C., air clung to the skin like a damp washcloth one Saturday not long ago. But inside the Mead Theatre it was almost cold enough to see your breath. A coltish woman tightened her shawl around her shoulders and watched as her fellow federal workers—some laid off, others still clinging to their jobs like passengers on a listing ship—improvised a scene.
3 min |
July 28, 2025

The New Yorker
DEPT. OF MASKED MEN: FOUL BALL
Since President Trump took office, agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement have swarmed areas with immigrant populations, questioning people and making arrests. They’ve patrolled near schools and raided a homeless shelter. They arrested a four-year-old, two students of New York City public schools, and an Army veteran who happened to be Latino. Recently, masked and armed ICE agents descended on a baseball field in Riverside Park. They questioned a dozen or so eleven-to fourteen-year-olds who’d just finished batting practice, and left only after a confrontation with their coach, Youman Wilder, whom they threatened with arrest. He said, “I’m willing to die to make sure these kids can get home,” he recounted afterward.
3 min |
July 28, 2025

The New Yorker
THE SECRET KEEPERS
The C.I.A. is accustomed to threats—but now they're coming from above.
10+ min |
July 28, 2025

The New Yorker
THE WHISKER WARS
The social history of a peculiar American fascination.
9 min |
July 28, 2025

Horse and Rider
Bridling Bad Habits
A simple task can develop big problems when not done correctly every time.
2 min |
Summer 2025

Horse and Rider
Crossing Water
Having control of your horse's feet is key to staying safe on the trail. When your horse is unsure or spooked by an obstacle, not having that control can quickly turn into a dangerous situation.
3 min |
Summer 2025

Horse and Rider
Your Child's First Clinic
A clinic can be a great way to learn, but before you invest, consider these tips.
2 min |
Summer 2025

Horse and Rider
Down and in Danger
Does the mere mention of a downed horse give you nightmares? If not, it should. In this article we'll help you be prepared if your down horse nightmare ever becomes reality.
8 min |
Summer 2025

Horse and Rider
The Lucky Seven
Following the loss of their owner, a herd of seven horses would've faced uncertain futures without the intervention of a family friend and a local rescue.
2 min |
Summer 2025

Horse and Rider
Navigating Nerves
No matter if it's the horse or the rider that's nervous, setting up a plan for your ride is key to a successful partnership.
2 min |
Summer 2025

Horse and Rider
BACK UP TO MOVE FORWARD IN THE SORTING PEN
Logan Wolfe’s drills have you start backward to move forward with precision, collection, and body control in the sorting pen.
7 min |
Summer 2025

Horse and Rider
Performance Mares
Evaluate and place these performance mares. Then see how your choices compare to our expert judge's.
3 min |
Summer 2025

The New Yorker
Stephen Colbert on Kenneth Tynan's "Fifteen Years of the Salto Mortale"
When Mr. Remnick asked me to write a seven-hundred-and-twenty-five-word Take on Kenneth Tynan’s 1978 Profile of Johnny Carson, I said, “My honor, cher David.” (New Yorker editors love when you use foreign words. They’re weak for anything italicized. Anything.) “I write a late-night show. I eat seven hundred words for breakfast.” In actuality, I host a late-night show and have a low-glycemic smoothie for breakfast. My doctor says the words were clogging my carotid, and, after reading “Fifteen Years of the Salto Mortale,” I need a statin.
3 min |
July 28, 2025

The New Yorker
MAKE IT NEW: SHED LIFE
The golden age of the shed—New York City’s outdoor-dining boom, circa summer, 2020—produced some impressive structures. At Carbone, the fancy Italian place, people ate rigatoni in a cabin made of navy-blue wood siding with red velvet curtains.
3 min |
July 28, 2025

The New Yorker
THE TALK OF THE TOWN
COMMENT - THE EPSTEIN PROBLEM
4 min |
July 28, 2025

The New Yorker
GOINGS ON
What we're watching, listening to, and doing this week.
3 min |
July 28, 2025

The New Yorker
THE CASE FOR LUNCH
Notes on an underappreciated meal.
10+ min |
July 28, 2025

The New Yorker
JERSEY BOY
The sleazy, vaguely unsettling sounds of Mk.gee.
5 min |
July 28, 2025

Scoop USA Newspaper
Department of State introduces redesigned, user-friendly provisional ballot envelopes
Continuing the Shapiro Administration's commitment to strengthening our democracy and keeping our elections safe and secure, Secretary of the Commonwealth Al Schmidt announced that the Department of State has redesigned the provisional ballot envelopes that counties use in an effort to improve legibility and make the envelope more user-friendly.
2 min |
ScoopDigital, Vol. 6, No. 24

Scoop USA Newspaper
PA House approves Cephas bill to protect older homeowners
This week, the PA House of Representatives passed legislation sponsored by state Rep. Morgan Cephas, D-Phila., to protect homeowners from unknowingly losing their home and generational wealth. Senior citizens and other homeowners on a fixed income often refinance their homes utilizing a reverse mortgage based on the benefit of an immediate financial gain without fully understanding the long-term outcome of the agreement.
1 min |
ScoopDigital, Vol. 6, No. 24

Scoop USA Newspaper
Trump's magnet of malevolence
The conventional explanation for why Trump's second term is far more extreme than his first (which was extreme enough) is that the guardrails are now gone.
2 min |
ScoopDigital, Vol. 6, No. 24

Scoop USA Newspaper
Is the Jeffrey Epstein scandal finally behind us? Don't bet on it
When a reporter asked Attorney General Pam Bondi about the Jeffrey Epstein investigation on Tuesday, President Trump could not contain himself a moment longer.
4 min |
ScoopDigital, Vol. 6, No. 24

Scoop USA Newspaper
Praise and Worship
A father with two sons
1 min |
ScoopDigital, Vol. 6, No. 24

Techlife News
GOOGLE TO INVEST $25 BILLION IN DATA CENTERS AND AI INFRASTRUCTURE ACROSS LARGEST U.S. ELECTRIC GRID
Google has committed to investing $25 billion in data centers and AI infrastructure across the PJM Interconnection, the nation's largest electric grid, over the next two years.
2 min |
Techlife News #716

Techlife News
TRUMP ANNOUNCES AGREEMENT TO END HOUSE FLOOR REVOLT OVER CRYPTO BILLS
Former President Donald Trump has announced that a deal has been reached to end the House floor revolt triggered by disagreements over proposed cryptocurrency legislation.
4 min |