Did 2018 Kill the Surprise Music Drop?
In a year where music and media strategy merged, surprise releases oversaturated the market—harming good and bad albums alike.
In a year where music and media strategy merged, surprise releases oversaturated the market—harming good and bad albums alike.
“Sometimes life just be upside-down.”
Republicans know in their hearts that the show is over, just as Democrats know—barring some calamity—that the worst is behind them. Trump Lite, hemmed in by a Democratic Congress, is the future.
The young royal is taking private ballet lessons in South London.
The president promised bipartisan legislation that would benefit all Americans. For the most part, he’s come up short.
Prince George and Princess Charlotte are in attendance, as well.
Would the ABC sitcom have maintained its momentum beyond its single, 10-episode season it aired? We’ll obviously never know—but the Conner family will almost certainly never rule the airwaves again.
Giuliani seems intent on replacing Michael Cohen as the worst lawyer in America.
Director Guy Ritchie says the inspiration is “a muscular 1970s dad.”
She might have spent Christmas Day with the Queen last year, but a full-fledged Sandringham holiday will be a whole new adventure.
The former First Lady and Jimmy Fallon pranked some very lucky guests at 30 Rock.
Thomas and Samantha Markle have dominated tabloid headlines about the Duchess of Sussex. How did the family create such a fractured, Kardashianified royal fairy tale?
The network fired Moonves for cause after investigating his alleged sexual misconduct—meaning he can kiss his hefty severance check goodbye. And the Late Show host is showing his former boss no mercy.
Madonna called the director a “trailblazer for women in Hollywood.”
Closing his (alleged) sham charity won’t stop an investigation that could turn out very badly for the president and his kids.
By embracing the conservative narrative that the F.B.I. “entrapped” Flynn, the former national security adviser’s attorneys may have screwed their client.
Partisanship and filter bubbles ruined the Internet, and the Russians took advantage. Can we ever rebuild what was broken?
Despite some management upheaval, Politico has apparently been able to avoid the financial panic that has seized many of its peers. The company says it made $113 million in 2018, the highest revenue number in its history, and roughly double its 2013 total.
The president’s capitulation suggests he will not fare well in the coming era of divided government.
The Duchess of Cambridge’s best looks.