It’s been too long a road for Williams to shy away from what she’s done. She owns it. Deservedly. Unapologetically. And it’s rooted in what she knows she and her sister have meant to the sport they both shaped and were shaped by
She helped change behavioral expectations for female athletes, and by extension women in all workplaces, by exuding power and passion—and bringing her full self—to her hard-court office
She inspired the next generation of tennis stars.
@naomiosaka, who has won 4 Grand Slams, never would have picked up a tennis racket if it weren’t for Serena Williams
It wasn’t just women who were taking cues from the Williams sisters. As an aspiring young race-car driver, @LewisHamilton tuned in to Venus’ and Serena’s matches from a public housing complex north of London
.@KELLYROWLAND gets emotional when asked to try to describe her friend’s influence on the world
Greatness is something she knows well. No tennis player, male or female, has won more major championships in the “Open Era”—the period starting in 1968 when the Grand Slam tournaments allowed professionals—than Serena Williams
In her final days as a pro tennis player, she also shed some tears. Walking away from the game you’ve spent your life mastering is complicated
But for all that Serena accomplished on the court, it’s what she has meant off the court that makes her the most consequential athlete of the 21st century, full stop
Across the U.S., there has been a sharp surge of harassment, attacks, and violent threats targeting civic and public officials and their families. @VeraMBergen investigated threats in all 50 states. Here's what we learned: ti.me/3WJpYJM
There were more than 9,600 recorded threats against members of Congress last year, a jump of nearly tenfold from 2016, according to Capitol Police records
“Local leadership is becoming a full-contact sport,” says Clarence Anthony, who served as the mayor of South Bay, Florida, for 24 years and is now the executive director for the National League of Cities, an advocacy network for thousands of municipal governments
Get ready for an impressive crop of new books this fall. Beloved authors return and exciting debuts are on the way. Here are 10 releases to look out for ⬇️ ti.me/3CzD5pb
On the Rooftop, Margaret Wilkerson Sexton (Sept. 6)
Set in the 1950s, Vivian wants her three daughters to make it big in the music world. But as the girls turn into women, they begin pursuing paths that will lead them away from music and their mother’s dreams
The Book of Goose, Yiyun Li (Sept. 20)
The deep bond between two girls with drastically divergent destinies lies at the heart of this novel, which tells a tale that twists and turns through immense fortune and devastating loss in the years following WWII
There are signs that people are now chasing the mental-health benefits of exercise even more than the physical ones, @Jamie_Ducharme reports ti.me/3bHQRuF
According to a 2022 trends report from Mindbody, the top two reasons that Americans work out are now to reduce stress and feel better mentally 🧠
That’s a striking change from even the recent pre-pandemic past; in 2019, controlling weight and looking better were top motivators for many exercisers, according to Mindbody’s report from that year 🏋🏽♀️
Photographer Annie Flanagan spent a year documenting gender-expansive young people across the U.S. as they experience adolescence at a fraught political and cultural time ti.me/3Ol7kCT
For trans and gender-expansive American adolescents, the past school year has been a paradox.
Never before have diverse gender identities and expressions been celebrated so openly and inclusively
But at the same time, these young people have experienced escalating attacks from statehouses around the country, as conservative lawmakers unleash a torrent of anti-trans legislation