The Media Once Again Heralds Trump’s New Somber “Tone”
The president appeared grim when discussing predictions of hundreds of thousands of U.S. deaths from coronavirus—before turning to familiar targets and grievances, as he tends to do.
The president appeared grim when discussing predictions of hundreds of thousands of U.S. deaths from coronavirus—before turning to familiar targets and grievances, as he tends to do.
More than six feet apart at all times, maybe celebs and the photographers who follow them are the original social distancers.
On Zoom, Skype, Houseparty, and FaceTime, friends around the world are continuing to raise glass—because when every day feels the same, any kind of transition is welcome.
He and Prince Albert of Monaco are both out of isolation after coming down with mild symptoms of COVID-19.
The new DisneyNature documentary Elephant features a very famous voiceover artist.
Showrunner Nathaniel Halpern on his eerie Amazon anthology series, which is a little bit Black Mirror, a little bit Twin Peaks—with just a dash of Netflix’s hit.
White House economists in September cautioned that a pandemic could lead to hundreds of thousands of U.S. deaths and devastate the economy—but the administration brushed it off.
The Georgia senator and her husband bought shares of a company that manufactures personal protective gear right around the time she claimed Democrats were misleading the public on the dangers of COVID-19.
A global pandemic might be a time for celebrities to stay quiet.
An impulsive promise (“His view was: I need to show people there’s a light at the end of the tunnel”) led to Fauci pushback. Poll numbers—and a friend in a coma—pushed Trump to reverse course.
Joe Biden says “it’s hard to envision” thousands of Democrats filling an arena in July as coronavirus spreads, yet President Trump insists the Republican Convention will still happen the following month.
The author’s 23rd novel Redhead By the Side of a Road follows a small life and makes it meaningful—who can’t relate these days?
Now that most people are stuck at home, time spent on streaming platforms has wildly increased.
On Tuesday's Jimmy Kimmel Live, Jackson debuted a new version of the popular children's book Go the F--k to Sleep.
Colbert hasn't been shy about showing how the Late Show gets on the air while working from home.
Hildegard Wortman makes a case for reduce, reuse, recycle.
In the absence of adequate federal support, states are having to fend for themselves to get the medical equipment they need—and the Trump administration is making a hard situation even worse.
The president is not letting the coronavirus distract him from killing the environment, people.
Twitter has cracked down on world leaders and media figures—though, notably, not Trump—for promoting untested cures, but other, more nuanced conspiracy theories are still spreading.
The relentless danger of COVID-19 forces impossible choices. Says Garcetti: “My mantra became, ‘when it feels wrong, it’s right. When it feels right, it’s too late.’”
“We are by no means out of the woods,” Fauci says. But his insistence on facts, and science, may be finally changing the trajectory of the pandemic.