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Entertainment: Part 269
- Everything to Know About the Bridgerton Books Behind Netflix’s Buzzy New Period Drama
- Pixar’s Soul Ponders Big Metaphysical Questions, But It’s Best When It Comes Down to Earth
- The 20 Best Anime Series to Watch on Netflix Right Now
- Breaking Up With Netflix and Other Futile New Year’s Resolutions
- Here Are the 10 New Books You Should Read in January
- How the Ratatouille Musical Went From TikTok Sensation to All-Star Broadway Production
- Here’s What’s New on Amazon Prime in January 2021
- Here’s Everything New on Netflix in January 2021—And What’s Leaving
- Donald Trump’s Presidency Was Supposed to Be Great for Art. It Wasn’t
- NBC’s Mr. Mayor Is a Fascinating Mix of Ted Danson’s Charm and Tina Fey’s Pith
- In Pretend It’s a City, Martin Scorsese Shares the Pleasure of Fran Lebowitz’s Company
- What to Know About Britney Spears, Her Conservatorship and the #FreeBritney Movement
- Pieces of a Woman Features a Superb Performance From Vanessa Kirby, If You Can Bear to Watch It
- In Herself, a Young Dublin Mother Builds a House to Find Her Way Home
- Sen. Josh Hawley’s Canceled Book Underscores Long-Simmering Tensions Around Trump-Era Book Deals
- The Bachelor Finally Cast a Black Man. But Racism in the Franchise Has Overshadowed His Season
- The Hollywood Escape Economy Is Just Around the Corner
- The Dissident Brings a Human Touch to the Story of Murdered Journalist Jamal Khashoggi
- Sex and the City Is Nothing Without Samantha Jones
- How America’s ‘First Female Cryptanalyst’ Cracked the Code of Nazi Spies in World War II—and Never Lived to See the Credit
- Angie Thomas’ New Prequel to The Hate U Give Challenges the Cult of Masculinity
- In These Tumultuous Times, Sea Shanty TikToks Have Suddenly Become a Port in the Storm
- Everything You Need to Know Before Watching WandaVision
- WandaVision Deserves the Hype. But It Penalizes Casual Marvel Viewers With Confusion
- We Could Use a Pandemic-Era Romantic Comedy, But Locked Down Isn’t It
- Promising Young Woman Starts with a Cathartic Blast. Then It Gets Bogged Down With Cynicism
- 11 Funny Audiobooks to Lighten the Mood This Dreary Winter
- One Night in Miami Blends Fact and Fiction to Bring Civil Rights-Era Luminaries to Life
- All the Marvel Clues You Missed in WandaVision’s First Two Episodes
- Wandavision Offers Hope That Originality Can Survive the Era of the Ever-Expanding Franchise
- Inauguration Musical Performances Are Tricky. But Lady Gaga, Jennifer Lopez and Garth Brooks Did Exactly What We Needed Them to Do
- Joe Biden’s Inaugural Events Made a Spectacle of Normalcy. Is That What America Needs Now?
- ‘My Wine Bills Have Gone Down.’ How Joan Didion Is Weathering the Pandemic
- ‘Someone Needs to Take a Stand Like That.’ The Creator of Kamala Harris’ Inauguration Night Dress on Supporting Black Designers
- The White Tiger Is a Complex Crime Drama with a Dazzling Performance at Its Center
- The Best Result of the Streaming Boom? America Finally Loves Foreign-Language TV
- 6 Rookie K-Pop Groups to Watch in 2021
- ‘I Never Learned Anything by Talking.’ Watch Larry King on the Art of the Interview and a Shifting Media Landscape
- Why You Don’t Feel as Fulfilled From Your Job as You Think You Should
- The True Story Behind the New Netflix Film Penguin Bloom
- ‘Death is a Turning Point’: Search Party‘s Creators Discuss Season 4 and the Shocking Finale Twist
- ‘I Can Be Someone I Didn’t Have.’ Actor Simu Liu on Asian Representation and His Marvel Future
- TWICE Delivers Uplifting Performance of ‘DEPEND ON YOU’ at TIME100 Talks
- The 15 Most Anticipated Korean Dramas of 2021
- The Long Song Is a Brilliant Tale of Slavery’s End in Jamaica, Frustratingly Told
- The Dig Is Just the Movie to Relieve Midwinter Cabin Fever
- Black Art Is in High Demand. But Telling Our Stories Comes at a Cost
- Cicely Tyson Didn’t Just Open Doors—She Opened Whole Worlds
- The 5 Best New Shows Our TV Critic Watched in January 2021
- Here’s What’s New on Amazon Prime in February 2021
- Here’s Everything New on Netflix in February 2021—And What’s Leaving
- ‘Would You Kill God Too?’ W.J. Lofton’s New Poem, Commissioned by Ava DuVernay, Puts a Spotlight on Breonna Taylor’s Killers
- ‘The World Always Outwits Human Ingenuity.’ How the Energetic Cover of Colson Whitehead’s Upcoming Novel Harlem Shuffle Hints at the Heist Within
- Here Are the 14 New Books You Should Read in February
- Netflix’s Undeniably Cheesy Gal-Pal Drama Firefly Lane Pairs Well With a Glass of Wine
- What to Know About the Book Behind Netflix’s Firefly Lane
- ‘My Story in All Its Messy Glory.’ Michelle Obama Is Releasing a New Edition of Becoming for Young Readers
- How the Creators of HBO’s The Lady and the Dale Told a Sensitive Story About a Complicated Trans Trailblazer
- T.J. Osborne Is Ready to Tell His Story
- The 11 Weirdest Golden Globe Nominations—And What Should Have Been Nominated Instead
- Rebecca Hall’s Passing Is a Complex, Moving Story About Racial Identity—and a Sundance Standout
- The Sparks Brothers, a Sundance Delight, Tells the Grand Story of This Enduringly Enigmatic Art-Pop Duo
- Ibram X. Kendi: This Is the Black Renaissance
- How Black Musical Artists Revolutionized the Sound of Protest in 2016
- Hollywood So Often Gets Black History Wrong. Black Filmmakers Are Setting the Record Straight
- The 25 Defining Works of the Black Renaissance
- What HBO’s Fake Famous Doesn’t Understand About Young People and Influencer Culture
- The Story Behind TIME’s Amanda Gorman Cover
- ‘Unity With Purpose.’ Amanda Gorman and Michelle Obama Discuss Art, Identity and Optimism
- ‘We Know Our Stories Matter.’ Brit Bennett, Jasmine Guillory and Jacqueline Woodson Discuss the Importance of Fiction
- The Renaissance Is Black
- Bachelor Stars Are Promoting a Birth Control App on Instagram That Experts Say Uses One of the Least Effective Contraceptive Methods
- Zendaya Dazzles in the Otherwise Dull Malcolm & Marie
- In France’s Official Oscar Entry Two of Us, Two Women’s Love Story Plays Like a Thriller
- ‘We Have a Right to Speak.’ Watch Brit Bennett, Jasmine Guillory and Jacqueline Woodson Discuss the Shift of Power Toward Black Women Writers
- ‘We All Have to Create Our Own Universe.’ Producer and Artist Zackary Drucker on Telling Nuanced Trans Stories
- How a Foulmouthed Bigot Named Archie Bunker Charmed—and Changed—America
- The New Class of Comfort TV: 16 Shows to Watch When You Run Out of Friends and The Office
- CBS’ Silence of the Lambs Sequel Clarice Robs a Unique Franchise of Its Personality
- How The Black Panther Party Inspired a New Generation of Activists
- In Starz’s Enchanting The Luminaries, Fate and Free Will Battle Amid New Zealand’s Gold Rush
- Remembering Chick Corea, An Endlessly Inquisitive Jazz Pioneer
- The Best Teen Rom-Coms to Watch After You Finish the To All the Boys Trilogy
- Judas and the Black Messiah Tells a Tragic, Real-Life Story of Revolution and Betrayal
- Minari and the Real Korean-American Immigrants Who Have Farmed U.S. Soil for More Than a Century
- A Love Letter For All the Days After Valentine’s Day
- What to Know About Nomadland and the Real-Life Community Behind the Movie
- How the New British Drama It’s a Sin Is Telling the History of the 1980s AIDS Crisis—and Sparking Change in the Present
- Teaching Black History Has Become a Flashpoint. Three New Docuseries Refuse to Sugarcoat Their Narratives
- HBO Max’s Bold, Witty and Wrenching AIDS Drama It’s a Sin Is the First Must-See Show of 2021
- The Ghost of Noël Coward Is Nowhere to Be Found in the Dull Blithe Spirit
- We Need More Female Villains Onscreen—But Not the Kind We Get in I Care a Lot
- Watch a Special Event Celebrating the 2021 TIME100 Next
- A Conversation with Filmmaker Adam Curtis on Power, Technology and How Ideas Get Into People’s Heads
- Punky Brewster Is Just the Latest Proof That Today’s Kids Deserve Better Than ‘80s and ‘90s Reboots
- Everything to Know About Demon Slayer: The Manga, TV Series and Record-Breaking Film
- Sia’s Golden Globe-Nominated Music Isn’t Just Offensive. It’s Also Bad Art—and the Distinction Matters
- Billie Eilish: The World’s a Little Blurry Is a Mostly Fascinating Portrait of an Apocalyptic Teen Pop Star
- Here Are the 14 New Books You Should Read in March
- The Ballroom Scene Has Long Offered Radical Freedoms For Black and Brown Queer People. Today, That Matters More Than Ever