When does a model own her own image? @emrata writes on Richard Prince’s “Instagram Paintings,” which included a nude photograph of her body in profile that was taken for the cover of a magazine nym.ag/3mnbDjZ
.@emrata writes on photographer Jonathan Leder, who against her wishes has released multiple books of Polaroids he'd taken of her as part of a magazine shoot in 2012 nym.ag/3mnbDjZ
Read Emily Ratajkowski's essay on buying herself back nym.ag/3mnbDjZ
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The accusation that Israel has committed war crimes in Gaza — likely hundreds, maybe even thousands — has become all but undeniable. Even Israel’s supporters, those who defended or withstood this publicly broadcast nightmare for 19 months, have reached some semblance of a limit.
For our latest cover story, @suzyhans examines how the war in Gaza has upended decades of humanitarian law: nymag.com/intelligencer/…
In its annihilative force and ambition, the Israeli campaign is unique among modern conflicts. The term war crime is not adequate for what’s happening in Gaza, in that it suggests there is a war happening and there are some crimes in it. Gaza is different. nymag.com/intelligencer/…
The number of war crimes is virtually incalculable, the war not really a war but rather the ceaseless pummeling of one side by the other. “If what we are seeing in the Gaza Strip is the future of war,” Pierre Krähenbühl of the Red Cross said in April, “we should all be very concerned, terrified.”nymag.com/intelligencer/…
In April, Pete Hegseth fired three of his most senior advisors at the Pentagon—Dan Caldwell, Darin Selnick, and Colin Carroll—without explanation. Now, all three speak in depth about what happened inside Hegseth’s chaotic Department of Defense.
According to multiple sources, the firings stemmed from a meltdown triggered by Hegseth’s chief of staff, Joe Kasper, who believed he was the subject of an Inspector General investigation for drug use, leading to Caldwell, Selnik, and Caroll eventually being escorted out of the Pentagon — an institution they had helped Hegseth staff and lead. Kasper was soon reassigned to “special projects” and then pushed out of the Department of Defense altogether. nymag.com/intelligencer/…
In the drama of Hegseth’s January confirmation hearing, it was easy to get distracted by the financial settlement for a sexual assault allegation, by accounts of heavy drinking on the job, by claims of misogyny from both his mother and former sister-in-law, by the fact that Hegseth, while married with three children, had fathered a fourth with a married Fox News producer – during which pregnancy he also slept with the woman who later accused him of assault – and thereby miss more basic questions about his managerial experience.
For our latest cover story, @KerryHowley went deep into the wellness-obsessed world of Andrew Huberman, talking with former girlfriends who reveal a darker side to the neuroscientist-turned-podcast host: manipulative behavior, deceit, and numerous affairs trib.al/4xfCfq3
For the past three years, Dr. Andrew Huberman, a neuroscientist who hosts one of the most popular podcasts on the planet, has told a story about himself to millions of listeners. trib.al/4xfCfq3
There was a little boy, and the boy’s family was happy, until one day, the boy’s family fell apart. The boy was sent away. He foundered, he found therapy, he found science, he found exercise. And he became strong. trib.al/4xfCfq3
Under Eric Adams, St. Brigid has been transformed into a “reticketing center”: a place where migrants can be processed into a new shelter after their stays run out. Hundreds line up daily to wait.
For our latest cover story, we talked to migrants in line: trib.al/8D8CLf1
St. Brigid quietly turned into what City Hall describes as a “reticketing center,” the first in the city: a place where migrants can be processed into a new shelter after their stay in a shelter runs out. trib.al/8D8CLf1
The lines became longer as the year ended, and by mid-January, as temperatures dropped into the 20s, it was more of a throng. trib.al/8D8CLf1
"I had my health. I had a job. And then, abruptly, I didn't," @tomscocca writes. The writer and editor writes about his journey that began with a mysterious swelling in his joints, then low blood-oxygen levels, and then an alarming muscle weakness. trib.al/sx4sSdI
Scocca's deteriorating condition unraveled into a never-ending medical mystery, bringing his career and financial well-being down with it. trib.al/sx4sSdI
"On some level, I believed the swelling would go down and the oxygen would go up as soon as I collected a few consecutive pay stubs from a normal, salaried job." Was it all related?" trib.al/sx4sSdI
At workplaces and in restaurants, on university campuses and in playgrounds, over Instagram and along lampposts, the war in Gaza has shifted something in the psyche of New York.
Read our latest cover story on @intelligencer: trib.al/6EzLLKZ
Family members are confronting the vast distance between one another’s sense of justice. Friend-group chats that were once warm and boisterous are turning bitter and quiet. trib.al/6EzLLKZ
Some of our largest cultural institutions have been riven by accusations of intolerance and censorship. trib.al/6EzLLKZ