Jodie Comer, TV's Favorite Assassin, Puts Her Killer Skin to Work
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A daily digest of things to discuss over drinks
March 31, 2020
They've been booted from campus, kicked off work-study programs, and had their classes transferred online. Now, student activists are mobilizing to save their futures.
We might be stuck inside, but you can at least set your mind free by taking a trip into one of these far-flung movies.
Anxiety. Aggression. Penis envy. Freud would undoubtedly have a field day.
What will happen to all the faces? The injectable set usually requires regular maintenance, but what if one month of sheltering in place turns into two (or even three or four)?
The fact that New York and America coped—and survived—the Great Depression is the urgent subtext of this moment.
In a new memoir with recipes, Alice Waters's daughter recalls meals made and travels taken. The book's title, Always Home, has gained new poignancy in this age of isolation—as has her wellness routine, shared here with Vanity Fair.
For many decades, suicide was the unquestioned final chapter of Vincent van Gogh's legend. But in their 2011 book, Pulitzer Prize–winning biographers Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith offered a far more plausible scenario—that Van Gogh was killed—only to find themselves under attack. With another van Gogh mystery afoot, revisit the authors who took their case a step further, with the help of a leading forensic expert, back in 2014.
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