Love Is Blind Leads Us Into the Dark
Netflix’s dating show sensation is grimly fascinating. Maybe don’t watch it.
Netflix’s dating show sensation is grimly fascinating. Maybe don’t watch it.
In equally terrifying news, Trump’s always-wrong economic adviser, Larry Kudlow, has been added to the response team.
The famed and recently imprisoned New York gallerist had planned to be “the Martha Stewart of the art world”—that is, back and better than ever after a 30-month prison stint.
The Massachusetts senator and 2020 hopeful thinks $10 billion would be better spent on public health and science than “a monument to hate and division” at the U.S.-Mexico border.
Buttigieg and Klobuchar, out of money, drop out; Bloomberg and Biden join forces; Sanders gets crushed in Florida, etc., on March 17. Then get ready for a convention to rival ’68.
Where else can you watch Martha Stewart recall meeting Snoop Dogg? “Four hours with marijuana smoke spiraling up between us!” she jokes.
A new trailer for Nia DaCosta's Candyman, co-written by Peele, leaves the door open for a familiar face to return.
The Wendy and Lucy director on First Cow, a saga of milk thieves in the Old West.
The erratic comedian doubles as Saturday Night Live’s most reliable recurring character. No wonder he might have grown tired of playing along.
If you must say it, say it in the notes app.
Bernie Sanders’ rivals—and many superdelegates—appear unwilling to give him the nomination if he can't win a majority of delegates.
The showrunner was removed earlier this year and now Duff has taken a shot at the company.
With a whitening Democratic electorate and black voters not noticeably fired up (Obama’s 2008 campaign is a distant memory), the vaunted firewall could be wobbly. But Biden’s supporters aren’t worried: “The white vote here is a stop-Bernie vote,” says one.
The director, who pleaded guilty to unlawful sex with a minor in 1977, said protests against him would amount to a “public lynching.”
Apparently this all ties back to the Russia investigation.
The musician-actor, cast as a “terrifying cold killer” in the next James Bond film, joins the fragrance campaign for this homage to CK One.
By dropping “royal” and the duties that HRH entails, the couple has changed the face of the monarchy.
The vice president’s track record on science and public health doesn’t inspire much confidence.
The Canadian fashion executive said he would step down as chairman of Nygard International on Tuesday after becoming the target of the most high-profile sex trafficking probe since Jeffrey Epstein.
Who needs heat in the dead of winter anyway?
As Trumpworld parties at the real CPAC, Bill Kristol, Rick Wilson, and the rest are putting on the “Summit on Principled Conservatism,” where they’ll game out their future—if it exists.
The network’s suspension of veteran correspondent David Wright has delighted right-wingers and alarmed journalists. “Patently absurd,” says one Times scribe.
The actor is suing the parent company of the Sun newspapers and, back in the U.S., his ex-wife Amber Heard—who is the subject of some of the text messages presented to the court Wednesday.
He’s still a senior royal until March 31, but at an Edinburgh event on Wednesday, Prince Harry expressed enthusiasm towards being treated like a commoner.
Trump, goaded by Tucker Carlson, is building the drama before pulling the trigger, while Mulvaney, Cipollone, and Kushner argue against—could Barr resign? (And will coronavirus spoil Trump’s campaign close-up?)