Internet
On Television
The Stories That TV Tells About Online Sex Work
“Euphoria” and “Margo’s Got Money Troubles” are wildly different but equally unrealistic.
By Inkoo Kang
Infinite Scroll
Why Albums Drop and Movies Launch
The ephemeral nature of contemporary music consumption has made it much harder to elevate an album—even a very good one—into the category of an event.
By Brady Brickner-Wood
Open Questions
Can You Reclaim Your Mind?
To feel mentally alive, you have to do more than defeat distraction.
By Joshua Rothman
Infinite Scroll
Why Video Podcasts Multiplied Beyond the Man Cave
Whether you’re a pundit, a politician, or an A-list comedian, the best media strategy these days is a D.I.Y. stage set and a microphone.
By Kyle Chayka
Fault Lines
If You Quit Social Media, Will You Read More Books?
Books are inefficient, and the internet is training us to expect optimized experiences.
By Jay Caspian Kang
Open Questions
Is “Six Seven” Really Brain Rot?
The viral phrase is easy to dismiss, but its ubiquity suggests something crucial about human nature.
By Joshua Rothman
Fault Lines
Is Gambling Really Threatening the Integrity of Sports?
After a recent N.B.A. scandal, more writers and pundits have come out against legalized betting. But the case that they’re making is weaker than it appears.
By Jay Caspian Kang
The Sporting Scene
The Many Lives of Danny Rensch
As the face of Chess.com, Rensch helped change the culture of the game—and found himself transformed in the process.
By Louisa Thomas
Infinite Scroll
Why Are Liberals Returning to Elon Musk’s X?
As social media navigates a new sectarian phase, many who fled the platform seem to be coming back.
By Kyle Chayka
Infinite Scroll
Is Ghosting Inevitable?
We bemoan the injustice of being left on read. But perhaps missed connection is just a part of being a human on the internet.
By Kyle Chayka
Critic’s Notebook
The High Femme Dystopia of Star Amerasu
In a series of comic videos set in 2099, the multitalented artist imagines our petty future.
By Lauren Michele Jackson
The Lede
Nobody Wins on “Surrounded”
The viral YouTube debate show attempts to anthropomorphize the internet, turning incendiary discourse into live-action role-play.
By Brady Brickner-Wood
Infinite Scroll
The Internet Wants to Check Your I.D.
New safety rules require users to verify their identities before gaining access to sites. This spells the end of the relative anonymity that we’ve come to expect online.
By Kyle Chayka
Fault Lines
Are the Democrats Getting Better at the Internet?
There’s never been an inherent reason why the Party’s positioning requires so much of its online content to suck.
By Jon Allsop
The Current Cinema
“Cloud” Is a Cautionary Tale of E-Commerce—and the Summer’s Best Action Movie
In Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s film, a crafty online grifter learns that digital crimes beget analog punishments.
By Justin Chang
Open Questions
What’s Happening to Reading?
For many people, A.I. may be bringing the age of traditional text to an end.
By Joshua Rothman
Page-Turner
Colum McCann’s Limp Novel of Digital Life
In “Twist,” the characterization is listless and the internet is just a series of tubes.
By Katy Waldman
The Weekend Essay
My Brain Finally Broke
Much of what we see now is fake, and the reality we face is full of horrors. More and more of the world is slipping beyond my comprehension.
By Jia Tolentino
Infinite Scroll
How the Internet Left 4chan Behind
The anonymous forum thrived when edgelord content wasn’t acceptable on more mainstream social media. Today, it can be found most anywhere.
By Kyle Chayka
Infinite Scroll
A Lesson in Creativity and Capitalism from Two Zany YouTubers
Some of the optimism of the early Internet seems to live on in the whimsical videos of James Hobson and Colin Furze.
By Cal Newport