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Entertainment: Part 266
- Lawsuit Accuses Former Fox News Anchor Ed Henry of Rape
- With Imagination and Empathy, Radioactive Illuminates the Life of Marie Curie
- Here’s Where All Your Favorite Shows Are Streaming
- The Story Behind Netflix’s Fear City And How the Mafia Took Control of New York
- Luster Captures the Discomfort of the Third Wheel in an Open Marriage
- A Novel Set in a 1918 Flu Pandemic Maternity Ward Offers a Stark Warning for the Present
- Pop Culture Is Obsessed With Charles Manson. But a New Docuseries Argues That It Never Understood Him
- America’s Travel Guru Rick Steves Talks About Staying in One Place, What America Is Getting Wrong, and Dreaming of Escargots
- ”Racism’ Did Not Seem Sufficient.’ Author Isabel Wilkerson on the American Caste System
- ‘Aren’t We Living the American Experiment?’ Yo-Yo Ma Discusses Music, Growth and Comfort
- Wellness Shows Are the New Makeover Shows. But Are They Any Better for the Soul?
- Disney Delays Release of New Mulan, Star Wars and Avatar Movies Amid COVID-19
- The Kissing Booth 2 Is Hardly Perfect. But It Will Take You Back to the Rapture of First Love, If You Let It
- The Promise—and Pitfalls—of Netflix’s New Reality Dating Show for Autistic People
- Netflix’s Indian Matchmaking Is Bringing Painful Conversations to the Fore. But Is It More Helpful or Harmful?
- Let’s Break Down Taylor Swift’s Tender New Album Folklore
- Muppets Now on Disney+ Is No Muppet Show, But It’s Still Perfect 2020 Comfort TV
- ‘Elevator Pitch’ Illustrates Accessibility Issues on NYC’s Subway, Step-by-Painful-Step
- Here Are the 2020 Emmy Nominations
- Limited Series Are Now the Best Thing on TV—And 7 More Takeaways From the 2020 Emmy Nominations
- Netflix’s Searing Docuseries Immigration Nation Is the Most Important TV Show You’ll See in 2020
- Everything to Know About K-Pop Group SEVENTEEN
- Here’s Everything New on Netflix in August 2020—And What’s Leaving
- Here’s What’s New on Amazon Prime in August 2020
- The 5 Best New TV Shows Our Critic Watched in July 2020
- Here Are the 12 New Books You Should Read in August
- Ron Howard’s Rebuilding Paradise Chronicles the Aftermath of Tragedy With Cautious Optimism
- The Crossword Revolution Is Upon Us
- Immigration Nation Filmmakers Break Down the Netflix Docuseries’ Most Powerful Moments
- A Fashion Historian Unpacks the Symbolism of Beyoncé’s ‘Black Is King’ Costumes
- Martin Margiela: In His Own Words Explores the Revolutionary Designer’s Secrets—Without Ever Showing His Face
- Meet Dancer Papi Ojo, the Breakout Star of Beyonce’s Black Is King
- The 15 Best Friends Episodes to Stream on HBO Max
- Ryan Reynolds ‘Unreservedly Sorry’ for Getting Married at South Carolina Plantation
- Disney Wants You to Pay $30 to Watch Mulan From Home. What Does This Mean for Other Upcoming Blockbusters?
- Seth Rogen, an Absurd Premise and a Vatful of Brine Make for a Delightful American Pickle
- What Happened When a Harvard Scholar Decided the Story Was More Important Than the Truth
- Migrations Is a Heartbreaking Portrait of a World at Risk of Losing Animals
- Author Angie Thomas on How Books Are Transforming the Next Generation: ‘They’re Realizing Their Power’
- ‘I Want to Do What I Can.’ Lili Reinhart on Recognizing Privilege and Making Change
- Singer-Songwriter Lauv on Turning to Music and Coping in Quarantine
- Keedron Bryant’s Anthem for Justice Has Led to a ‘Dream Come True’
- How Music Could Become a Crucial Part of Your Sleep Hygiene
- She Dies Tomorrow Is a Horror-Comedy for Our Current Age of Anxiety
- The Tuscan Landscape Deserves Top Billing in Liam Neeson Father-Son Drama Made in Italy
- Watch an Exclusive Clip From a New Documentary About Maria Ressa’s Fight for Press Freedom in the Philippines
- HBO’s Lovecraft Country Is a Stunning Dissection of America’s Racist History—and an Absolutely Wild Ride
- A New Wave of Horror Films About Women’s Deepest Anxieties Is Perfect Viewing for Our Summer of Discontent
- A New HBO Documentary Tells the Story of a Young Black Man Killed in Brooklyn 31 Years Ago. Activists Lament How Little Has Changed Since Then
- I Thought Anonymity Was a Shield After My Sexual Assault. But Coming Forward Brought Me Back to Myself
- We’re Still Living in the World That Inspired Animal Farm—75 Years Later
- Michelle Yeoh on Why Marvel’s First Asian-Led Superhero Movie, Shang-Chi, Is So Important
- Red Velvet – IRENE & SEULGI Makes ‘Monster’ Appearance at TIME100 Talks
- Taiwan Just Had Its First 10,000-Person Arena Concert Since the Pandemic Began. Here’s What It Was Like to Be There
- Midnight Sun Can’t Correct Twilight’s Flaws. But It’s a Much Better Book
- ‘The Photography, the Poetry, the Fashion.’ Hans Ulrich Obrist Remembers the Multi-Dimensional Spirit of Artist Luchita Hurtado
- Veep Creator Armando Iannucci Says These Times Call for Charles Dickens
- Kenya Barris In Conversation With Tyler, The Creator: ‘Why Can’t We Tell Our Stories?’
- Pharrell and Jay-Z’s New Song ‘Entrepreneur’ Is a Celebration of Black Ambition
- Learning to Love and to Lie in Elena Ferrante’s The Lying Life of Adults
- Democrats Needed the Virtual DNC to Connect With Viewers. Here’s What the Broadcast Got Right—and Wrong
- Chemical Hearts Captures the Joy and Agony—and the Lasting Scars—of Teenage Romance
- HBO’s NXIVM Docuseries The Vow Reveals the Heartbreaking Truth Behind the ‘Sex Cult’ Headlines
- HBO Max’s Sharp Harley Quinn Series Reimagines the Character. Will the New Suicide Squad Follow its Lead?
- I May Destroy You’s Extraordinary Finale Makes Good on the Show’s Cryptic Title
- The 31 Most Anticipated TV Shows of Fall 2020
- An Undocumented Trans Woman Seeks Belonging in Brooklyn in the Lustrous Lingua Franca
- ‘These Are Stolen Lands Built By Swollen Hands.’ Pharrell Williams on Re-Writing America’s Past and Future
- Video Games May Be Key to Keeping World War II Memory Alive. Here Are 5 WWII Games Worth Playing, According to a Historian
- Bill & Ted Face the Music Is the Dose of Time-Travel Lunacy We Need Now
- Dev Patel Is a Dickensian Hero for All in The Personal History of David Copperfield
- Hilary Swank Is a Woman Trying to Have It All—in Outer Space—in Netflix’s Disappointing Away
- Showtime’s Love Fraud Is the Feel-Good True Crime Caper of the Summer
- The Best TikTok Dances of 2020 So Far
- Chadwick Boseman, Who Died at 43, Brought Joy and Taught Us About Ourselves. All While Quietly Fighting for His Life
- Tweet Confirming Chadwick Boseman’s Death Is Now the Most ‘Liked’ of All Time
- These Are the Best and Worst Moments From the 2020 MTV VMAs
- Here’s What’s New on Amazon Prime in September 2020
- Here’s Everything New on Netflix in September 2020—And What’s Leaving
- The 6 Best New TV Shows Our Critic Watched in August 2020
- What’s 2020’s Song of the Summer—If There Even Is One?
- 17 Great Movies You May Have Missed This Summer
- ‘Civil Disobedience Has to Become the New Norm.’ Jane Fonda on the Fight Against Climate Change
- 24 Essential Works of Black Cinema Recommended by Black Directors
- I’m Thinking of Ending Things May Be Based on a Novel, But It’s All About Charlie Kaufman
- Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1 + 2, a Nostalgia Trip With Plenty of Growth, Is Right at Home in 2020
- The 42 Most Anticipated Books of Fall 2020
- The Live-Action Mulan Is Gorgeous to Look At, Yet Fails to Soar as It Should
- The Controversial Origins of the Story Behind Mulan
- ‘This Film Is Sounding an Alarm.’ What Cuties Director Maïmouna Doucouré Wants Critics to Know About Her New Film
- The 27 Most Anticipated Movies of Fall 2020
- Poet Claudia Rankine on Just Us and Unearthing the Raw Truths of Anti-Black Racism
- A ‘Publicity Stunt’ or a ‘Huge Step’? Hollywood Is Divided on the Oscars’ New Diversity Rules
- TV’s 10 Best Teen Dramas of All Time, Ranked
- Unpregnant Is a Spirited Comedy About a Woman’s Right to Choose
- I’m a Muslim Iranian-American With a Sept. 11 Birthday. Here’s How I’ve Come to Terms With My Identity
- Sigrid Nunez’s New Novel Paints a Beautiful Portrait of Pain and Loss
- Frances McDormand Anchors Nomadland, a Quietly Powerful Vision of What America Ought to Be
- Netflix’s Reed Hastings on Rejecting Brilliant Jerks, the Power of Big Vacations, and Spending $15 Billion on Content
- Luca Guadagnino’s HBO Drama We Are Who We Are Is Heady, Gorgeous—and Strangely Inert