Jennifer Lopez’s Versace Shoes Double as a Pair of Jeans
Killing two birds with one stone.
Killing two birds with one stone.
Mark Warner’s manifesto is the first shot in Washington’s war against Silicon Valley. Will Zuck, Dorsey, and Brin take them seriously, or will both sides hit the mattresses?
Longtime favorites Joe Kahn and James Bennet must now contend with a new competitor—Cliff Levy, who has been chosen to lead New York coverage.
After nearly five decades, a few of the theater’s most notable patrons—from Ethan Hawke to Natasha Lyonne—and longtime staffers reflect on its inimitable staying power, and their efforts to see it stand another 50 years.
Queer Eye, The Great British Baking Show, Nailed It!, Making It, and especially Terrace House make the case—but even unscripted comfort food is underpinned by something ugly.
Inside the West Wing, Giuliani’s recent wacko media appearances have attracted the wrong kind of notice. “Trump thinks he’s saying too much,” one Republican close to the White House told me.
Glenn Close establishes herself as an Oscar contender in The Wife, and TV “It girl” Carrie Coon joins USA’s The Sinner.
If Congress won’t approve it, they’ll go through the Treasury, dammit.
The actress calmly rescued the spider while her children screamed in terror.
The company has apparently figured out a way to slash its monthly costs by 60 percent—after widespread outages had naysayers writing its obituary.
The reality-television star stumbles ever so slightly while talking politics with Jimmy Kimmel.
The president just promised to meet with Iranian leadership with “no preconditions.” But there are signs he’s already been played by North Korea after making the same offer to Kim.
The president just promised to meet with Iranian leadership with “no preconditions.” But there are signs he’s already been played by North Korea after making the same offer to Kim.
The symbol was seen for the first time on . . . Australian morning television!?
To celebrate the first anniversary of Rainbow, Kesha will release a documentary on August 10.
At the premiere of his fiery new film BlacKkKlansman, Lee and his cast had harsh words for the president.
Truly diverse representation is still tough to find on-screen, according to a new U.S.C. Annenberg study. Could those much-talked-about inclusion riders tip the scales?
The Late Show host got serious about the allegations of sexual misconduct against his boss, CBS Chairman Les Moonves: “Make no mistake, Les Moonves is my guy. . . But accountability is meaningless unless it’s for everybody.”
There are a few candidates, but after Monday night, we can practically see the billboards.
The president is running his re-election campaign precisely the way he governs—playing three opposing power centers off each other, and listening mainly to his own instincts. It’s going to get ugly, and soon. “We’re going to call them out,” says Steve Bannon. “Kirsten Gillibrand, show us what you got. Elizabeth Warren? Kamala Harris? Howard Schultz? He’s going to cut through these guys like a scythe through grass.”
The drama’s fourth season—based upon Drums of Autumn—premieres in November on Starz.
Three cheers for good and “easy to win” trade wars!
It’s time to bring to a screeching halt to the notion that the Democrats need a bloviator of their own to take on Trump.
Boris Johnson, Michael Gove, and Jacob Rees-Mogg are the latest “blunt instruments” to be targeted for recruitment as part of Bannon’s populist revolution.