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TIME Magazine
MAKING IT WORSE
On his first day back in office, President Trump ordered a 90-day freeze on almost all U.S. foreign aid.
3 min |
February 24, 2025
TIME Magazine
CAVALCADE OF COMEDY
As Saturday Night Live celebrates its 50th season, alumni look back on the people, moments, and humor that shaped their time at an American institution
10+ min |
February 24, 2025
TIME Magazine
Mindy Kaling The writer, producer, and showrunner on the status of Legally Blonde 3, cooking with Meghan Markle, and her new Netflix comedy, Running Point
The family in Running Point has shades of Succession. Was that show on your mind?
2 min |
February 24, 2025
TIME Magazine
Building for disaster resilience
ON JAN. 7, ARCHITECT GREG CHASEN RUSHED TO HIS childhood home in Pacific Palisades, a well-off Los Angeles neighborhood tucked between the mountains and the Pacific Ocean, to remove any flammables and turn on the sprinklers.
5 min |
February 24, 2025
TIME Magazine
The (real) problem with fake plants
WHEN THE GERMAN PHILOSOPHER IMMANUEL KANT puzzled over why nature looks beautiful to us, he considered the case of replicas.
3 min |
February 24, 2025
TIME Magazine
Health Matters
THE FLU IS ALWAYS A NASTY FOEand it's particularly vicious this year.
3 min |
February 24, 2025
TIME Magazine
5 ways to stand up for yourself at doctor's visits
STEPH FOWLER CAN TICK OFF A LONG list of conditions that doctors initially chalked up to mental health: endometriosis, a stomach infection, insomnia, and more.
3 min |
February 24, 2025
TIME Magazine
Insecurity is the new inequality
DONALD TRUMP'S SECOND PRESIDENTIAL TERM HAS already been accompanied by a cascade of unnerving political and natural events-from the U.S.'s leaving the World Health Organization and the Paris Climate Accords, to the nighttime firings of inspectors general and pardons of the Jan. 6 rioters, to the raids targeting immigrants in a number of cities and the wildfires roaring through swaths of Los Angeles.
5 min |
February 24, 2025
TIME Magazine
Why aren't companies held accountable for data breaches?
IT IS BECOMING INCREASINGLY COMMON TO RECEIVE an email or phone call informing you that your personal information was stolen in a data breach.
3 min |
February 24, 2025
TIME Magazine
A THOUSAND CUTS
THE STANDOFF AT 1300 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE was not much of a spectacle.
9 min |
February 24, 2025
TIME Magazine
TIME the Closers
25 BLACK LEADERS WORKING TO END RACIAL INEQUALITY
10+ min |
February 24, 2025
TIME Magazine
More young adults are getting cancer.Researchers are racing to understand why
Dr. Frank Frizelle has operated on countless patients in his career as a colorectal surgeon. But there’s one case that stayed with him.
10+ min |
February 24, 2025
TIME Magazine
DeepSeek's hidden warning for AI safety
THE RELEASE OF DEEPSEEK R1 STUNNED WALL STREET and Silicon Valley in January, spooking investors and impressing tech leaders.
4 min |
February 24, 2025
TIME Magazine
The Summer of Scam that never ended
EARLY IN THE NEW NETFLIX SERIES APPLE CIDER VINEgar, its star, Kaitlyn Dever, breaks the fourth wall.
8 min |
February 24, 2025
TIME Magazine
Album of the Year
Beyoncé's moment-finally
2 min |
February 24, 2025
TIME Magazine
Not until they're home
MY ONLY SON, HERSH, WAS KIDnapped from a music festival on Oct. 7, 2023, after having his dominant forearm and hand blown off.
2 min |
February 10, 2025
TIME Magazine
In the LAND of the LOTUS EATERS
On the scorching set of HBO's red-hot satire
10+ min |
February 10, 2025
TIME Magazine
How can health officials rebuild the public's trust in science and health institutions?
We have to ask ourselves how we can do better so people don't feel judged. When we have a relationship with the public, they come to know people in institutions and how they make decisions. It doesn't guarantee that people will trust them, but it increases the chances significantly.
2 min |
February 10, 2025
TIME Magazine
A new film confronts Brazil's dark past
WHEN CELEBRATED BRAZILIAN AUTHOR MARCELO PAIVA started writing his 2015 memoir Ainda Estou Aqui (I'm Still Here), he wanted to record his family history as his mother was losing her memory.
5 min |
February 10, 2025
TIME Magazine
THE PRICE OF DISASTER
The insurance market in California sends warning signs nationally
3 min |
February 10, 2025
TIME Magazine
NO PLACE LIKE HOME
On his new album, Bad Bunny eschews the trappings of pop in favor of the music, history, and struggles of Puerto Rico
6 min |
February 10, 2025
TIME Magazine
THE ROILED OPPOSITION
Democrats can't agree on what to do next
4 min |
February 10, 2025
TIME Magazine
UKRAINE IN THE BALANCE
Biden's foreign policy win was Zelensky's loss
4 min |
February 10, 2025
TIME Magazine
The problem with medical credit cards
DAVID ZHAO SIGNED UP FOR A MEDICAL CREDIT CARD while supine in a dentist's chair. In December 2018, the consumer lawyer from Los Angeles went for a routine appointment at Western Dental in San Mateo, in the suburbs of San Francisco. Zhao was told by the dentist that his gums were receding. He needed a special mouth guard or he'd have to have surgery, he recalls being told.
5 min |
February 10, 2025
TIME Magazine
It's time for the Oscars to take horror seriously
WHEN DEMI MOORE WON THE GOLDEN GLOBE for her turn in Coralie Fargeat's body-horror hit The Substance on Jan. 5, she shared in her acceptance speech that it was the first real award she'd received in her more than 45 years in Hollywood.
3 min |
February 10, 2025
TIME Magazine
AGAINST THE ODDS
THE LAW PROFESSOR WHO TOOKON BIG TOBACCO HAS SET HISSIGHTS ON SPORTS BETTING
10+ min |
February 10, 2025
TIME Magazine
Cecile Richards - Lifelong activist
In 2014 I found myself sitting across from Cecile Richards at a D.C. eatery.
1 min |
February 10, 2025
TIME Magazine
No one wins this war
AFTER 15 MONTHS OF AGONY, THE Gaza cease-fire comes as a colossal relief not just for Palestinians and Israelis, but also for the wider Middle East. True, the deal is narrow in size and scope. It covers a physical space scarcely bigger than Martha's Vineyard. The actual terms of the first phase of the cease-fire agreement extend no further than a pause in fighting, an exchange of some hostages, and a partial Israeli withdrawal. Given recent precedent, the fragility of Israel's ruling coalition and the yawning gap between the belligerents, this deal is just as likely to collapse, or simply to lapse, as to foster a longer-term peace. Still, even a temporary lowering of the regional heart rate allows for useful reflection.
2 min |
February 10, 2025
TIME Magazine
ACTING FAST
A survey of some of Trump's first actions in office
3 min |
February 10, 2025
TIME Magazine
Iran's shaky regime
IT'S BEEN A DISASTROUS few months for Iran and its ability to threaten its regional rivals and enemies.
3 min |