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Sep 17, 2018 Vol 192 No 11

Nancy Pelosi Doesn’t Care What You Think of Her. And She Isn’t Going Anywhere

Libya’s Recent Violence Is a Reminder the Country Is Still Badly Broken

Here Are the Catholic Church Politics Behind That Letter Calling on Pope Francis to Resign
”People are especially upset with the fact that Francis is opening the church on sexuality and homosexuality,” says one longtime Vatican watcher

J.K. Simmons Remembers the Humanity of Neil Simon’s Humor

Historian Doris Kearns Goodwin Looks to Past Presidents for Lessons the World Could Use Right Now

Why Emerging Markets Are in Crisis Across the Globe

Washington Takes on the Threat of Big Tech

John McCain Was a Legend Even Before He Was a War Hero. His Legacy Is Vital in Today’s World
A remembrance from retired Admiral James Stavridis

Don’t Let the Loud Bigots Distract You. America’s Real Problem With Race Cuts Far Deeper
This hateful moment offers an opportunity for Americans to finally change our racist ways

Murphy Brown Is Back. And the Timing Couldn’t Be Better

Sierra Burgess Is a Loser Is a Sweet, Smart Rom-Com

Paul McCartney’s Boundless Curiosity Is on Display on New Album Egypt Station

Best-selling Author Beth Macy: “We Need to Treat Addiction as the Medical Problem It Is”
Sep 3, 2018 Vol 192 No 9

How We Chose the 2018 World’s Greatest Places

Trump Is in Trouble. Here’s How Much Worse It Can Get

At the U.S. Border, an Invisible Wall Already Exists

Greece Enters Post-Bailout Era, But Has Little Else to Cheer

Measles Is Returning to a Range of Places - But Not for the Same Reasons

Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu Remembers Kofi Annan

U.S. Open Champion Sloane Stephens Is Set to Defend Her Title-and Defy Her Critics

In a G-Zero World, We Need a Robust U.N. More Than Ever

The Power of Irrational, Unshakable Optimism In the ICU

What President Trump Reveals in His Allusions to Nixon and McCarthy

Peter Navarro Used To Be a Democrat. Now He’s the Mastermind Behind Trump’s Trade War

Jair Bolsonaro Loves Trump, Hates Gay People and Admires Autocrats. He Could Be Brazil’s Next President

People Are Now Taking Placebo Pills to Deal With Their Health Problems-And It’s Working

Troye Sivan Is the Perfect Pop Star for 2018

This New Novel Shines a Light on Student #MeToo Survivors

Two New Books to Help You Accept That No Parent Is Perfect

How Documentaries Became the Hottest Genre of the Summer

The Rom-Com Is Making a Comeback for All the Right Reasons

Ozark’s Jason Bateman On Being a TV Antihero
The Ozark star talks Season 2, taking the helm as a director and why he’s listening more
Aug 16, 2018 Vol 192 No 8

Crazy Rich Asians Is Going to Change Hollywood. It’s About Time

Idlib Could Be the Last Major Battlefield of the Syrian Civil War. But Assad Won’t Take It Easily

What to Know About China’s Crackdown on a Muslim Minority Group

How the Airline Worker Who Stole a Plane in Seattle Exposed a Security Risk

Turkey’s Erdogan Is in a No-Win Situation With Washington

No Matter Who Becomes Arizona’s Next Senator, Trump Has Already Won
In the contest to represent Arizona in the U.S. Senate, The President has already won

Serena Williams Opens Up About Her Complicated Comeback, Motherhood And Making Time to Be Selfish
As her comeback reaches its biggest stage, the tennis icon opens up about motivation, insecurities and life as a working mom

Glenn Close Is One Step Closer to an Oscar With The Wife

3 Essential Books for Women Who’d Rather Go It Alone

False Prophets Come Under Fire in Two Timely Summer Novels

To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before Is the Perfect Millennial Take on Boy Meets Girl

Country Music Star Miranda Lambert Says She Has ‘Made a Career Based on Telling the Truth’
The outspoken country star on the importance of women’s voices, advice from Dolly Parton and why she still carries a handgun
Aug 20, 2018 Vol 192 No 7

Spike Lee Wants BlacKkKlansman to Wake America Up

Saudi Arabia Says It Wants to Modernize-But Criticism Still Strikes a Nerve

Daniel Boulud on How Jo・ Robuchon Shaped 20th Century Haute Cuisine

Stacey Cunningham, Head of the New York Stock Exchange, Talks History as She Changes It

The Real Reason Democracies Won’t Solve Their Immigration Problems

Trump Is Piling Sanctions on Iran. Here’s How the Tactic Could Backfire

How Your Brain Tricks You Into Believing Fake News
Bots and propagandists are just part of the problem. The bigger issue is your brain

Lowering Your Blood Pressure Could Reduce Alzheimer’s Risk, New Research Shows
A breakthrough study suggests that a lifestyle change may help ward off dementia

Mitski Is Here for the Outsiders in Music

Insecure Nails Millennial Malaise in a Standout Third Season

Why The Third Hotel Is Summer’s Creepiest Lost-Love Story

Ethan Hawke Refuses to Complain About Getting Older
The Oscar-nominated actor on directing movies, the state of modern romance and why he won’t whine about getting older
Jul 26, 2018 Vol 192 No 5

Europe Made Billions from Tourists. Now It’s Turning Them Away

Local News Is a Vital Resource-But It’s Disappearing Fast

Cuba Moves Away From its Communist Past and Toward a Modern Future

Jonathan Gold Celebrated How Food Shaped Community
Epicurean Angeleno

Antoine Fuqua Remembers the Storytelling Genius of Shinobu Hashimoto
Screen storyteller

Israel’s Netanyahu Takes a Page From the Authoritarian Playbook

Trump Has Made Iran Public Enemy No.1. How Far Will He Go?
As America’s long-running regional contest with Iran heats up, Trump and Tehran are fueling the fire with rhetoric, money and guns

Why TIME Created a Special Issue on the American South

My True South: Why I Decided to Return Home
Returning home to a place I love more than I loathe

Foreday in the Morning
Previously unpublished work from Southern poets

Memories From the South: Hunting Camp

Memories From the South: Waters of the Bayou

Memories From the South: Growing Up in a ‘Sundown Town’

Memories From the South: Jogging Through Paynes Prairie

Memories From the South: Doe’s Eat Place

Memories From the South: Fried Chicken on Race Day

Duty

Previously unpublished work from Southern poets

The South Could Mend America’s Divide-If It Reckons With Its Past
A chance to reshape American life

Why the Mississippi Remains the South’s Most Vital Artery
The Mississippi remains the South’s most vital artery

How Southern Food Has Finally Embraced Its Multicultural Soul
Southern food has finally embraced its multicultural soul

An Orchard at the Bottom of a Hill
Previously unpublished work from Southern poets

Mila Kunis and Kate McKinnon Made the Buddy Comedy of Your Dreams

Privilege Takes Center Stage in Broadway’s Straight White Men

Mission: Impossible-Fallout May Be the Best Since the Original

The Bloody Brilliance of Megan Abbott

Michiko Kakutani Is Fighting for Truth in a Post-Truth Era
Jul 30, 2018 Vol 192 No 4

Trump Wanted a Summit With Putin. He Got Way More Than He Bargained For

How the First Amendment Became a Tool for Deregulation

Haiti Gives the IMF a Fresh Lesson in the Value of Subsidies to the Poor

Nancy Barbato Sinatra Was the Steadying Force Behind the Voice
The steadying force behind the Voice

How Tech Insider Chamath Palihapitiya Wants to Disrupt Silicon Valley

The E.U. Looks to China to Shield Itself From the Fallout of Trump’s Trade War

Vladimir Putin Set a Trap for Robert Mueller in His Press Conference with Donald Trump
Trump called it an ”incredible offer.” But Putin’s plan to assist the Special Counsel pulls the probe onto territory he can control

NASA Could Have People Living on the Moon in 8 Years. And That’s Just the Beginning
Facing skeptics, NASA plans a return trip, with a still greater voyage to follow

Ivan Duque is Colombia’s Youngest President-Elect Ever. Now He Has to Fix the Divided Country
Iv疣 Duque won his country’s presidency by running against the peace deal he now has to fix

A New Stephen King Show Proves His Scariest Villain Has Been There All Along

Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again Is Both Atrocious and Amazing

Blindspotting Takes a Hard Look at Race and Gentrification
Jul 23, 2018 Vol 192 No 3

For the Trump Administration, Reuniting Migrant Families Proves Easier Said Than Done

Landmark Peace Declaration Ends ‘State of War’ Between Ethiopia and Eritrea

Tab Hunter Was a Model Of Kindness in Hollywood

Lei Jun Wants to Be China’s Answer to Steve Jobs. But Trump’s Trade War Is Getting In His Way

Iconic Parisian Bistros Are Under Threat. Can They Be Saved?
After the 2015 Paris attacks, bistros became a symbol of the city’s resilience. Now, they’re disappearing

When It Comes to Breastfeeding, This Is Why Women Never Feel Like They’re Right
’We’re overwhelmed and paralyzed by the debates about what’s best’

The United Kingdom’s ‘Brexit Dream’ has Become a Waking Nightmare

How Brett Kavanaugh Could Change the Supreme Court-and America
How Brett Kavanaugh could change America

It’s Naive to Think a Conservative Supreme Court Wouldn’t Target Roe v. Wade
Roe is already a shell of itself

Brett Kavanaugh Will Right the Course of the Supreme Court
’His legal opinions are unusually accessible. He is a magnanimous soul.’

Democracy Isn’t Perfect, But It Will Still Prevail
Mass migration, terrorism and economic woes are fueling authoritarians around the world. NATO’s former Supreme Allied Commander on why government of, by and for the people will win again

How One Industrial City Is Fighting to Go Green

How Bo Burnham Turns Anxiety Into a Work of Art

Dwayne Johnson Scales New Heights in Skyscraper

HBO’s Robin Williams Doc Peeks Inside the Late Star’s Mind

Why Ottessa Moshfegh Is One of the Best Novelists of the Summer

‘I Knew Everything About Him.’ An Obama White House Staffer on What It Was Like to Work For the Former President

To Understand Russia, Read A Terrible Country

The World’s Best Female Chef on Catering the Royal Wedding, Defending British Cuisine and Training the Next Generation
The Northern Irish chef on being named Best Female Chef, underrated British cuisine and catering Meghan and Harry’s wedding
Jun 28, 2018 Vol 192 No 2

Is the End of Saudi Arabia’s Driving Ban a Rebrand or a Revolution?

Land Conflict Has Long Been a Problem in Nigeria. Here’s How Climate Change Is Making It Worse

What Does the Supreme Court’s Ruling on the Travel Ban Really Say?

Melania Trump Is Redefining One of the World’s Weirdest Jobs

Remembering Conservative Thinker Charles Krauthammer, 68

Why Turkish President Erdogan Is Not as All-Powerful as He Seems

With Justice Kennedy Gone, It’s Trump’s Court Now
The unpredictable Anthony Kennedy’s retirement presages a more conservative era on the Supreme Court

21 Americans With Opposing Views on Guns Sat Down to Talk to Each Other. Here’s What They Discovered

Life in the Most Polluted Capital in the World

The Doctor Who Discovered Lead in Flint’s Water on What Went Wrong and How to Fix It

The pediatrician who revealed that Flint had lead in its water has a new book about what went wrong and how to fix it
Jul 2, 2018 Vol 192 No 1

Thailand’s Leader Promised to Restore Democracy. Instead He’s Tightening His Grip

A Reckoning After Trump’s Border Separation Policy: What Kind of Country Are We?
Trump’s brutal gambit at the border reflects a President uncomfortable with ideals

Trump Backed Down, But the Crisis at the Border Is Far From Over

A Jailed Kurdish Kingmaker Could Decide Turkey’s Future

Venus Williams Is Still in the Game-On and Off the Court

At Home and in Europe, Angela Merkel Is in Trouble

Vaping Is the New Smoking. Is That a Good Thing?

Ex-ICE Director: The Trump Administration’s Zero-Tolerance Immigration Policy Is a Costly Distraction

Ben Rhodes: Amidst the Trump Administration’s Cruelty, America’s Story Must Win Out

Federal Judge: Why Americans Do Not Have the Legal High Ground on Immigration

I Was Detained in a U.S. Internment Camp. Here’s Why America’s Current Tragedies Have the Same Causes

Why the U.S. Should Prosecute Illegal Immigration as it Does Other Laws

Your Morning Cup of Coffee Is in Danger. Can the Industry Adapt in Time?
An industry unites to fight for endangered farms

Glow Fades But Stays Fun in Its Second Season

Spectacle of Jurassic World Leaves the Dinosaurs Behind

This Woman Went to Art School in Her 60s, Proving It’s Never Too Late to Pivot
Jun 25, 2018 Vol 191 No 24

This Is What Trump’s Impulsive Diplomacy Looks Like

Parents Are Facing a Nightmare at the U.S. Border

Clinging to Power Amid Violent Protests, Nicaragua’s President Faces a Crisis Point

What Does the Supreme Court’s Ohio Decision Mean for Voting Rights?

The Power Of David Douglas Duncan’s Photography

Kim Jong Un Is Showing the World Just How Much Power He Has

Ending War Games With South Korea Isn’t a ‘Stunning Concession.’ It’s the Best Thing to Come Out of the Summit So Far
War games are just a practice run for the mass murder of civilians, writes the head of a Nobel Peace Prize-winning anti-nuclear campaign.

‘It’s a Sea Change’ for Democratic Women in the Primaries
Why female candidates are dominating the 2018 Democratic primaries

Sarah Jessica Parker Is the Latest Celebrity to Start Her Own Book Imprint

Why Queer Eye Is More Vital Than Ever in Season Two

How Incredibles 2 Shows What It Means to Be Human

Hearts Beat Loud Is a Musical Tribute to a Father-Daughter Bond

Christina Aguilera Is Hitting the Reset Button on Her New Album Liberation
表紙
目次
3 | Conversation
4 | For the Record
5 | Mental health and Kate Spade’s suicide
8 | Phnom Penh gets a train to the plane
12 | TIME with . . . actor Jim Parsons
14 | Guatemala under the volcano
16 | Ian Bremmer on the limits of bullying U.S. allies
17 | The Supreme Court rules for Colorado baker in a same-sex wedding case
19 | Korea expert Victor Cha on the Trump-Kim summit
20 | President Trump’s campaign to discredit the special counsel is putting America’s principles on trial
26 | Plus:Neal Katyal on the legitimacy of the Russia probe
27 | Jack Goldsmith on the sweeping powers of the presidency
28 | Male Birth Control
34 | Iceland, the smallest country to qualify for soccer’s top tournament, is on a larger mission
40 | Plus:Son Heung-min carries South Korea’s hopes
43 | Hereditary and the boom in artful horror movies
46 | Q&A with its star Toni Collette
46 | Cate Blanchett, Mindy Kaling and Anne Hathaway dish about Ocean’s 8
50 | Kanye’s Ye, filled with contradictions
52 | 8 Questions for Obama confidante Ben Rhodes
Jun 11, 2018 Vol 191 No 22

TIME Special Report: The Drone Age

Experts Say Drones Pose a National Security Threat - and We Aren’t Ready
Officials say they’re in a race against time

How Drones Are Revolutionizing the Way Film and Television Is Made
’It takes us out of our body in a certain way, kind of giving us an overlaid perspective’

Roseanne Barr Meets the New World

Ivan Duque Is Colombia’s Right Wing Answer to Macron, and He’s Poised to Win the Presidency

Did the Trump Administration Lose Immigrant Children?

Jesse Eisenberg on the Relentless Work Ethic of Philip Roth

Kerry Kennedy: What My Father, RFK, Means Today

Harvey Weinstein’s Arrest Is Just the Opening Scene
#MeToo was just the prelude

Former Intelligence Chiefs Explain How President Trump Sows Distrust to His Advantage
Two former intelligence chiefs chart the collapse of faith in government and warn of the dangers of Trumpism

Working Out Is Hard. Streaming Just Might Make It Easier
Streaming workouts are giving traditional gyms a run for their money
表紙
目次
2 | Conversation
4 | For the Record
5 | The haunting pattern of school shootings
7 | The European Union’s strict new privacy law
8 | Will the summit between North Korea and the U.S. happen?
9 | Ebola spreads in the Democratic Republic of Congo
9 | FDA allows first drug for migraines
10 | TIME with . . . U.S. spy chief Dan Coats
15 | How protectionism limits global growth
17 | Ian Bremmer on Italy’s odd-couple leaders
17 | Writer Michael Pollan on the benefits of psychedelic drugs
18| How Britain Celebrated By Kate Samuelson
24 | The Revolutionary Royal By Daisy Goodwin
28 | A New Kind of History By Afua Hirsch
32 | Regal Family Tree By Kate Samuelson
33 | The Dress By Cady Lang
34 | Meghan by the Book By Tina Brown
35 | Who Needs the Royals? By Graham Smith
36 | Taking On Texas Inside Beto O’Rourke’s bid to unseat Ted Cruz By Nash Jenkins
40 | Campus Revival A pivotal moment for historically black colleges By Maya Rhodan
45 | Summer Reading: 25 new page-turners
46 | Rachel Cusk, author of Kudos
47 | The best novels for book clubs
48 | The latest short stories
49 | Six historical reads
50 | Movies: Solo: A Star Wars Story
52 | 7 Questions for Jeremy Irons
May 17, 2018 Vol 191 No 20

Next Generation Leaders

How Baby Boomers Broke America

Ireland Weighs Repealing Abortion Ban in Landmark Referendum

Remembering Tom Wolfe, the Writer Who Made Reality Remarkable
A writer who made reality remarkable

Mazie Hirono Is the Only Immigrant in the Senate. She’s Ready to Take on Trump

The Risks and Rewards of the Supreme Court’s Sports Gambling Decision

NAFTA Is On Life Support. Will Trump Be the One to Pull the Plug?

The Icons of Book Club on Sex, Sexism and Life After 70

On Chesil Beach Is a Moving Tale of Love Without Lust

Ethan Hawke Endures an Existential Crisis Worth Watching in First Reformed

Courtney Barnett Proves She’s Indie Rock’s Shining Light on Tell Me How You Really Feel

Pulitzer Prize-Winning Playwright Lynn Nottage on Her New Play, the Browning of America and Animal Rights
May 10, 2018 Vol 191 No 19

Where the Legend of El Chapo Was Born

Can Bad Men Change? What It’s Like Inside Sex Offender Therapy
Three days in treatment with 16 convicted men

Armenia’s Prime Minister Has Resigned After Days of Protests. Here’s What to Know About the Country’s ‘Peaceful Revolution’
Here’s what to know about the country’s surprise ”peaceful revolution”

Warren Buffett Speaks to CEOs Going Political

Sex and the City’s Cynthia Nixon Says She’s a ‘Candidate of This Time.’ How the Actor Is Carving Her Role in Politics

A New Netflix Series Tells the Story of the Philippines’ Drug War. But Its Critics Are Condemning Amo as Propaganda
Thousands of suspected drug dealers and users have been killed since President Rodrigo Duterte took office

How Talks with North Korea Convinced Trump to Scrap the Iran Deal

Gabrielle Union: How We Can Fix Hollywood’s Representation Problem

Michael Cohen’s ‘Essential Consultants’ Business Is a Big Problem for Donald Trump
Millions went in, but for what?

It’ll Never Be the Right Time for Famous Sexual Predators to Make Their Comebacks

Zora Neale Hurston’s Long-Unpublished Barracoon Finds Its Place After Decades of Delay

Benedict Cumberbatch Soulfully Portrays a Fallen Aristocrat in Patrick Melrose

Disobedience Is Much More Than a Forbidden-Love Story

Juliette Binoche Glows in Bittersweet Let the Sunshine In

Charlie Puth Finds a Mature New Sound on Sophomore Album Voicenotes

Francis Ford Coppola on Art, Immigration and Going to School with Donald Trump
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