
This HBO Miniseries Gets Rural America Right
Since the first election of President Trump, Hollywood has fretted about portraying rural and red state Americans. Some new TV series show how to get it right.
By Alan Sepinwall

Since the first election of President Trump, Hollywood has fretted about portraying rural and red state Americans. Some new TV series show how to get it right.
By Alan Sepinwall

French officials said the thieves broke into a second-floor wing of the Paris museum that houses a collection including the French crown jewels.
By Aurelien Breeden, Catherine Porter and Alex Marshall

Vice President JD Vance’s trip to a military base in California illustrated rising tensions between the federal government and Democratic leaders.
By Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Rachel Parsons

Rounds were fired on Friday across Interstate 5 as part of a test for Saturday’s event in Southern California. The state shut a section of the freeway.
By Laurel Rosenhall, John Ismay and Zolan Kanno-Youngs

People gathered at a house near the University of Cincinnati tumbled to the ground from a third-floor balcony, fire officials said. One person was in critical condition
By Francesca Regalado

Indonesia’s president says the meals are improving nutrition in the country. Critics have called for a halt to the program, saying it threatens public health.
By Muktita Suhartono

After a whirlwind six years of working with icons and curating her own festival, the singer and songwriter was alone with her work, in search of a fresh spark.
By Melena Ryzik and Chantal Anderson

The Kiss guitarist, who died on Thursday at 74, scored his only Top 20 solo hit with a cover that’s endured for decades.
By Brian Raftery

We examine the Trump administration’s tactics against Venezuela.
By David E. Sanger

In Portland, as in other cities and towns across America, art institutions have sought revivals — or even recreations.
By Ted Loos

When the person handing you your coffee at Starbucks is your husband of 17 years.
By Deborah Siegel-Acevedo

A consummate showman, he was known for playing guitars rigged with pyrotechnic effects and for his distinctive stage persona.
By Gavin Edwards

Cedric Grolet has built a dessert empire in just a few short years. Crowds are already swarming his new chocolate shop in Paris.
By Julia Moskin

Ceremonies took place on Thursday to commemorate two years since the surprise attack of Oct. 7, 2023, on southern Israel.
By Natan Odenheimer
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They’re not just for missing pets or yard sales. Fliers these days are for internet memes, self-promotion and extremely esoteric messages.
By T.M. Brown and Dolly Faibyshev

The French theater maker Caroline Guiela Nguyen brings unheard voices to the stage, like the real and imagined garment workers in her latest work, “Lacrima.”
By Laura Cappelle

Pop culture is saturated with franchises, and Swift is the master of creating them. But her marketing is beginning to overtake the music.
By Mitch Therieau

Kareem Ayas’s puzzle will not leave you feeling cold.
By Deb Amlen

Ten members of Congress wrote in a letter to the governor that a gas pipeline proposed for New York Harbor runs counter to the state’s emissions reductions goals.
By Hilary Howard and Grace Ashford

Celebrities, authors and journalists filled the Waverly Inn on Tuesday for the type of party, one guest said, that keeps New York a “home to writers.”
By Sandra E. Garcia

Adaptation is a matter of survival, and the city may have to throw every solution available at a worsening situation.
By John Surico and Nick Underwood

The president’s call for removal of the metal from childhood inoculations set off alarms. About half of shots for polio, whooping cough and other diseases would be affected.
By Christina Jewett

Circumcision is the latest example of Kennedy seizing on a hot-button issue that already has entrenched and aggressive internet partisans.
By Jessica Grose

Universities are under attack. Is Hollywood part of the problem?
By Ginia Bellafante
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As U.S. institutions reimagine their programming, some are adopting a new approach: recruiting young people to organize their shows.
By Ray Mark Rinaldi

A statistical analysis of an infamous indentation in a sidewalk suggested a 99 percent likelihood that another rodent made the mark.
By Jack Tamisiea

The church, which has more than 17 million members around the world, had been officially without a leader since Russell M. Nelson died.
By Ruth Graham

Listen to recent releases from Geese, Doja Cat, Neko Case and more.
By Lindsay Zoladz

The American Museum of Natural History has found a more appropriate space for Apex, a nearly complete dinosaur skeleton lent to it last year, when it was first assembled and put on view.
By Mark A. Stein and Daniel Terna

As a new prime minister seeks stability, three government shake-ups since last summer have already taken their toll on the French economy.
By Liz Alderman

They hoped a smaller home would save money — but the reality is proving more costly.
By Claire Wolters and Hannah Yoon

A fragile cease-fire between Israel and Hamas is stoking hopes for a surge in investment in the region, and the Middle East more broadly.
By Andrew Ross Sorkin, Bernhard Warner, Sarah Kessler, Michael J. de la Merced, Niko Gallogly and Vivienne Walt

The announcement came three days after María Corina Machado, an opposition leader, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
By Claire Moses

The story of the man most likely to be the next mayor of New York City — and the promise and peril his ascent poses for the Democratic Party.
By Astead W. Herndon
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José Daniel Ferrer said long periods in solitary confinement left him feeling buried alive. Secretary of State Marco Rubio welcomed his arrival in Miami.
By David C. Adams

With her husband, Dan, she ran four theaters in Manhattan and a company that distributed foreign and independent classics.
By Sam Roberts

A bungalow in Los Angeles, a midcentury modern home in Santa Rosa and a Craftsman in San Diego.
By Angela Serratore

What does it mean to be a “good” Muslim in America?
By Meher Ahmad

A group of financiers is trying to convince the public to invest heavily in private equity and crypto — a risky gambit with some real 1920s vibes.
By Andrew Ross Sorkin

A system that began on Sunday requires the collection of biometric information from visitors crossing borders. It will eventually replace the stamps in your passport.
By Christine Chung

Collaborating with the choreographer Jamar Roberts for the New York City Ballet fashion gala, Iris van Herpen created costumes that merged fantasy and form.
By Roslyn Sulcas and Nina Westervelt

Cristian Macelaru has started his tenure as the music director of the storied Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra.
By Jeremy Reynolds

The actress, whose death at 79 was confirmed on Saturday, was known for both her dramatic heft and her comedic gifts. Here are some of the highlights.
By Derrick Bryson Taylor

She brought an unconventional personality to scores of roles on television and in movies ranging from zany comedies like “Sleeper” to piercing dramas like “The Godfather.”
By Anita Gates
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Friday’s layoffs swept up scientists involved in responding to disease outbreaks and running an influential journal. Officials said the mistaken dismissals were being rescinded.
By Apoorva Mandavilli and Sheryl Gay Stolberg

“Elbows Up!” is a collection of essays by prominent Canadians like Margaret Atwood that seeks to make something positive out of Canada’s identity angst.
By Matina Stevis-Gridneff

Millions of Americans depend on Obamacare. Here's where they live.
By Elena Shao and Margot Sanger-Katz

Maternal sacrifice is in vogue politically. The new movie “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You” shows where it can lead.
By Amanda Hess

“Spunk,” a fable weaving together music and movement, is getting its first full staging since being rediscovered in 1997.
By Salamishah Tillet

Anjula Acharia, who hosts the “All That Glitters” ball, has chai with her fiancé before a day full of hairstyling, makeup and diamonds.
By Alisha Haridasani Gupta

China is building a network of ultrahigh-voltage power lines to carry solar and wind energy hundreds and even thousands of miles as few citizens dare to protest.
By Keith Bradsher and Gilles Sabrié

This was featured in live coverage.
By Pooja Salhotra

A self-taught composer and interpreter, she led an unconventional and itinerant life devoted to spreading Chilean folkloric music.
By María Sánchez Díez

Ms. James, a Democrat and New York’s attorney general, is a longtime nemesis of President Trump, She is charged with committing bank fraud to obtain favorable loan terms.
By Hurubie Meko
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He wrote some of the band’s signature songs, including “Ride My See-Saw” and “I’m Just a Singer (in a Rock and Roll Band).”
By Alex Williams and Christine Hauser

Venezuela’s autocrat had proposed allocating his country’s oil wealth and other natural resources to the U.S. and ending deals with American adversaries to appease President Trump.
By Anatoly Kurmanaev, Julian E. Barnes and Julie Turkewitz

How a turbocharged upstart brand came to threaten Red Bull and Monster’s dominance.
By Molly Young

The mighty ship, immortalized in song by Gordon Lightfoot, sank 50 years ago on Lake Superior. Our reporter spent a week on a Great Lakes freighter that survived the storm.
By Jennifer Schuessler and Erinn Springer

A visit to The New York Times’s Kyiv bureau stayed with an editor based in Manhattan. So too did the air alert app that is widely used to warn civilians of Russian military activity.
By Marc Lacey

Some at the central bank don’t feel the need to cut rates further this year; others are worried about the jobs market. That complicates the job of Jay Powell, its chair.
By Andrew Ross Sorkin, Bernhard Warner, Sarah Kessler, Michael J. de la Merced, Niko Gallogly and Ian Mount
The big fund-raising round was the latest sign of investor fervor for artificial intelligence companies despite concerns that the boom is overheated.
By Michael J. de la Merced

The prize committee said the Hungarian writer’s work “reaffirms the power of art.”
By Alex Marshall and Alexandra Alter

In Lu Yang’s art, the deliriousness comes from the collision of cutting-edge technology with centuries-old ideas of the highest order.
By Martha Schwendener

Freddie Cheng offers solvers a digital puzzle.
By Deb Amlen
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The theft of the beloved dinosaur statue upset residents of a Los Angeles neighborhood that was damaged by wildfires earlier this year. Then she was returned with an apology.
By Aishvarya Kavi

A new state law creates the first legal definition of the foods, and may prompt changes in other states.
By Alice Callahan

The judge found that ICE had violated a 2022 consent agreement and demanded agents have probable cause for their arrests.
By Mattathias Schwartz

A festival at the Joyce Theater leaves out the Age of Aquarius work that made this choreographer popular, presenting surprisingly old-fashioned ballet instead.
By Brian Seibert

An Israeli American student said he was assaulted during a protest. Two years later, Republicans continue to raise the episode in their campaign to force schools to punish the student protesters.
By Stephanie Saul

The wife of Senator Edward Kennedy for a quarter of a century, she both basked and struggled in the reflected glare of a political family always in the spotlight.
By Katharine Q. Seelye

The Broadway League and unions representing actors, stage managers and musicians are trying to negotiate new contracts, but workers are increasingly frustrated.
By Michael Paulson

Critics initially panned it, but public love for the musical with songs like “One Day More” and “On My Own” has kept it going strong for four decades — and counting.
By Alex Marshall

For hundreds of years, people who have lived near Seneca Lake in upstate New York have reported hearing loud booms coming from the water. No one is exactly sure why.
By David Andreatta and Liam Kennedy

Five young people spearheading efforts around the world to bolster and restore democratic principles share what they have learned — and what needs to change.
By Shivani Vora
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Elon Musk’s electric car company said the new versions would start at around $37,000 and $40,000, prices that bring its cars closer to comparable gasoline vehicles.
By Jack Ewing

The government shutdown fight has spotlighted a debate between Republicans and Democrats about whether and how much the government should subsidize health care.
By Margot Sanger-Katz

The conservative Christian law firm and advocacy group has been involved in a number of recent cases, including challenges to abortion access and gay and transgender rights.
By Abbie VanSickle

A state law limits what can happen to a Confederate statue after it is removed. Valor Memorial, a private park, has become a destination for some.
By Anna Venarchik

John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret and John M. Martinis were recognized for work that made behaviors of the subatomic realm observable at a larger scale.
By Katrina Miller and Ali Watkins

After all, there is “an enemy within.”
By Thomas B. Edsall

President Trump on Tuesday hosted Prime Minister Mark Carney of Canada, who has been seeking relief from U.S. tariffs.
By Ian Austen

Here are five lessons for cities in the president’s sights, like Chicago and Memphis, drawn from the one city targeted by Mr. Trump in his first term, Portland, Ore.
By Anna Griffin

The somber milestone comes with peace talks underway, hostages from the Hamas-led attack still in Gaza, more than 67,000 Palestinians dead and Israel more isolated than ever.
By David M. Halbfinger

Hoping to help grid operators adapt to changes buffeting the power markets, TotalEnergies is assembling a portfolio of battery farms and natural-gas-fired power plants.
By Stanley Reed
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The Treasury Department said that a 2020 collectible coinage law allows a living person to appear on U.S. currency.
By Alan Rappeport

She was known as the brash principal on the show, a dark comedy set at a high school that debuted in 2016.
By Johnny Diaz

It is not clear what is behind the move by Michael Ellis, a Trump loyalist. A legal ethics specialist said it could raise conflict-of-interest issues.
By Charlie Savage, Eric Schmitt and Adam Goldman

As the president cancels projects in Democratic-run states, he is cutting money that benefits his own party’s lawmakers in some of the most competitive House districts.
By Catie Edmondson

The state-based military force is made up mainly of part-time soldiers and organized by state. It can be activated by the state governor or by the president.
By Alyce McFadden and Anushka Patil

A rhythm guitarist and bassist, he was a “rock” for a band whose fiery lead players, Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page, had no shortage of ego.
By Alex Williams

Think you know the landmarks, legends and lore of the city that never stops reinventing itself? See how well you measure up.

The explorer’s journey to Antarctica was likely doomed before it began.
By Sara Novak

A prolific British writer and keen observer, she sold millions of copies of her juicy, sometimes racy “Rutshire Chronicles” series.
By Claire Moses

A ranch in Tujunga, a bungalow in Oakland and a hillside house in Silverado.
By Angela Serratore
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Costco members will pay $499 a month out of pocket, the same price offered at CVS and Walmart, and on the manufacturer’s direct-to-consumer website.
By Adeel Hassan

Hailed as one of the 50 most important women in science, she found ways to study rare radioactive isotopes and advanced the understanding of nuclear fission.
By Delthia Ricks

Some underground attractions are closed, and many outdoor sites have reduced their services.
By Chris Hippensteel

Nicaragua’s authoritarian government has begun holding dissidents without revealing their whereabouts or acknowledging their detention. Two have turned up dead.
By Frances Robles

In the autofictional “Death and the Gardener,” the Bulgarian writer Georgi Gospodinov remembers an ordinary man ennobled by a love of the land.
By Alexandra Jacobs

Three museums designed by David Adjaye are opening this fall, but some institutions are downplaying his involvement.
By Alex Marshall
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