Demi Lovato is opening up about her queerness, her near fatal overdose and her journey to living her truth in a new documentary.
“I’m ready to feel like myself,” she said. “I’m finally being honest with myself.” nyti.ms/2NrXvtd
Demi Lovato, the 28-year-old singer, songwriter, actress and activist, is unblinking about her struggles in a new, four-episode docuseries, “Dancing With the Devil.” Her new album, “Dancing With the Devil … The Art of Starting Over,” is due in April.
Lockdown, like the recovery time following her overdose, has forced Demi Lovato to take a breath. “I’m finally being honest with myself,” she said. nyti.ms/3eLJMbL
If you are dealing with mental health or substance abuse problems, call SAMHSA’s National Helpline in the United States at 1-800-662-4357 (HELP). You can also find resources at findtreatment.gov.
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Democrats and Republicans live apart from each other, even in the same city, right down to the neighborhood, raising questions about how closely lifestyle preferences have become aligned with politics and how neighbors may influence one another. nyti.ms/3lr4i2O
Nearly all American voters live in communities where they are less likely to encounter people with opposing politics. New research shows that, over the past decade, this partisan segregation has been growing more pronounced. nyti.ms/3lr4i2O
These maps show Democrats and Republicans can live in very different places, even within the same city, in ways that are not fully explained by racial segregation or simple urban/rural divides that are evident in aggregated election results. nyti.ms/3lr4i2O
Sarah Everard’s death has launched a national reckoning in the U.K. But for those closest to her, the grief is personal.“I feel angry about it as well,” one friend said. “But my main anger is that it happened to her.”
Holly Morgan, who described her friendship with Sarah Everard as “love at first sight,” said it has been hard to comprehend the national uproar her friend’s death has caused, but the immediate outpouring of love had been heartwarming.
We asked scientists, public health experts and health advocates to tell us what they’ve learned from the mistakes, missed chances and oversights in handling Covid-19. nyti.ms/2ODboFs
Experts say the coronavirus pandemic has shown the need to put science first, and to invest in data that can help inform public health decisions. nyti.ms/2ODboFs
Coordinated efforts across the U.S. can help create consistent standards for state and local officials, public health experts say. And they advise a coordinated federal response may help cut down on differing guidelines and mixed messages. nyti.ms/2ODboFs
The use of Agent Orange in the neutral nation of Laos by the U.S. during the Vietnam War remains one of the conflict’s last untold stories.
The extent to which the U.S. military broke international agreements has never been fully documented, until now. nyti.ms/30LalWv
An exclusive report in @NYTmag reveals how the U.S. deployed Agent Orange secretly, illegally and in large amounts during the war. At least 600,000 gallons of herbicides, deployed by the U.S., rained down on Laos.
In 2017, a group called the War Legacies Project began visiting the villages of ethnic minorities whose homes straddle the Laos-Vietnam border. It was the first time anyone had tried to assess the present-day impact of the defoliant on these groups. nytimes.com/2021/03/16/mag…
It takes hours of flying across Canada to reach Yellowknife, a small city on the northern shore of Great Slave Lake. The region is as remote as it is pristine, but travelers are drawn there from around the world to see the Northern Lights. nyti.ms/38Ak9GT
As 2020 began, residents were expecting another record-breaking year for tourists. Then came the pandemic. nyti.ms/3exuRlw
For millennia, the Northwest Territories have been home to Indigenous peoples of many cultures and languages. Their traditions and histories are preserved and passed down by elders, who are among the most vulnerable to the virus. nyti.ms/3exuRlw
The stimulus bill President Biden signed on Thursday includes a larger increase in direct payments to families than any other pandemic relief bill passed yet. By some estimates, the bill could cut child poverty in half this year.
The coming stimulus payments are larger for adults than in the first two rounds — $1,400 per adult, compared with $1,200 per adult in a bill passed in March 2020 and $600 per adult in December.
Here's how the aid will flow to families with no children. nyti.ms/2OmheLo
Families with children will benefit the most. The aid will come via a big increase in stimulus payments per child, and a larger child tax credit that will benefit the lowest-income families in particular. nyti.ms/2OmheLo