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Dec 21, 2015 Vol 186 No 25 & 26

The Choice

Behind TIME’s Person of the Year Cover
The magazine has a long history of asking artists to create cover portraits

The 15-Minutes-of-Famers in 2015
The people and phenomena that rose, briefly, to the top

The Teddy Awards 2015
Doers, diplomats and leaders who ignored our worst instincts

This Was the Year the Adults Gave Up
Quit your job, smoke some dope, grow a beard

Readers Respond To TIME Stories

Movies

Theater

Quotes

Music

Books

Highs & Lows
Similar themes, opposite fates

Firsts & Lasts
The most talked-about milestones

Hashtags
News stories amplified by social media

Moments
Memorable images of major (and minor) events

Make-Believe
The most influential characters in fiction

Things
Inanimate objects that drove the news

Then & Now
Checking up on TIME’s past Persons of the Year

The Decider
Who’s worthy of the title? Follow your own path to 2015’s most notable figure

Television
Dec 14, 2015 Vol 186 No 24

How J.J. Abrams Brought Back Star Wars

Modi Needs His Mojo
How the Indian leader can get his bold plans for his country back on track after a setback

After Paris, Life For Refugees in France Has Gotten Even Harder

The Fallacy of ‘Free Speech’
A new wave of campus revolts and campaign speeches is fueling a dangerous war on words

Six Steps to Building an ISIS Strategy

Why Giving Is the Best Gift This Year
And how to make your altruism count

From the Heart
Actors, comedians and other influencers share the gifts that have meant the most, from thoughtful meals cooked by their kids to an annual closet cleanout turned clothing giveaway

Review: The Big Short Knows Why Your Rent Is Too Damn High
Ryan Gosling, Steve Carrell, Brad Pitt and Christian Bale star in this movie about the financial crash

Review: Vintage Valor in In the Heart of the Sea
A whale tale that’s no fluke

Marco Vs. Ted: Inside the Rivalry Reshaping the GOP
The Forces Fueling the Rise of France’s Far Right

Review: Grimes’ Art Angels Hints at Pop’s Dark Side
Grimes learned to play the violin, ukulele and other instruments while recording her new album

The Millennial Beard: Why Boomers Need Their Younger Counterparts
And vice versa

Where Do People Still Hunt Whales?
Japan’s whaling fleet set sail on Dec. 1 in defiance of a 2014 U.N. order to cease the practice. It’s not the only place to bypass the International Whaling Commission’s 1986 ban on commercial operations.

9 Questions with Tiger Woods

Review: A ‘Hitch’ in the History of Filmmaking
Kent Jones’ new documentary Hitchcock/Truffaut looks at the director’s filmmaking

Buzzy Gifts for Book Lovers
2015’s most buzzed about reads--from runaway best sellers to cult classics in the making--prove to be particularly thoughtful and timely this holiday season. Cross the readers off your list with these last-minute picks at Amazon.

Quick Talk With Rick Ross
The rapper’s new album is Black Market

Verbatim
Nov 30, 2015 Vol 186 No 22

How to Beat ISIS

The Story from Paris紡nd Beyond

France’s Assimilation Challenge
For immigrants in France, being on the wrong side of the culture war feeds a sense of not -belonging

Can Silicon Valley Help Beat ISIS?
The Paris attacks have-revived a difficult debate about encryption

Former CIA Director: ISIS Will Strike America
The head of the UK’s domestic security agency recently warned that ISIS is planning mass casualty attacks in Britain. His concerns are well founded. We will not be far behind.

Terror’s Lineage

遷ihadi John・
ISIS executioner

The 2016 Candidates Need Thoughtful Strategies on ISIS-Soon
Few politicians in either party are willing to address the issue directly

8 Steps to Defeating ISIS
The former supreme commander of NATO says we must build a coalition and offer a plan of attack

Why the World Weeps for Paris
ISIS struck at the heart of Western culture

Madeleine Albright: ISIS Wants Us to Think Refugees Are the Enemy
The U.S. must do its part to alleviate the crisis

Marine Le Pen: How France Will Conquer the Enemies of Liberty
’Too often, we have confused hospitality with blindness’

The Hardest Question: Explaining the Paris Attacks to My Child
How to explain the inexplicable?

The 25 Best Inventions of 2015

Why Athletes Use Their Platform to Effect Change Off the Field

Charlotte Rampling
The English actor, 69, is earning rave reviews and Oscar buzz for her new movie, 45 Years, out on Dec. 23. Rampling plays a devoted wife living in the English countryside whose quiet marriage is upended by a revelation from long ago.

A Gift Guide for the Superfan in Your Life
Rock the halls

The Hunger Games Were Rigged
That’s why they always felt so real

An Epidemic of Discontent

Students across the country have risen up in protest recently over racial inequality in a range of areas, from underrepresentation to ineffective leadership to Halloween costumes. Is all of the outrage warranted?

Michael B. Jordan Punches His Way Into a New Weight Class With Creed
After earning raves for his roles in critically acclaimed TV dramas The Wire and Friday Night Lights

Sister Souljah’s New Moment
The rapper-turned-author and namesake for an iconic political maneuver has long since moved beyond the Clintons

Toys That Aim to Help Train a New Generation of Engineers

What You Said About ・

A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Socialism
Reviewing Where to Invade Next

Pope Francis Takes His Message to Africa
What to expect from the Pontiff’s latest world journey

Sam Yagan

Medication Myths
A World Health Organization survey of about 10,000 people in 12 countries reveals widespread misconceptions about antibiotic resistance. Here are some common myths.

Can American Afford This Approach to Solving Student Loan Debt?
President Clinton tried. President Bush tried. President Obama thinks he has answer

The Holiday Movie Matrix
Looking for a good laugh, a prestige pic, something the kids will love? This handy guide to 15 more films will point you in the right direction

Alaska Airlines and Delta Are at War Over Seattle
Who wins could change the way you fly-no matter where you池e headed

This Pill Can Stop the Spread of HIV. Can Doctors Get It Into the Right Hands?

Meet the Man Who Brought Down Volkswagen
How a tiny lab busted a giant automaker預nd what it shows about the future of cheating

2015 Holiday Preview

How Terror Could Kill the European Project

The Danish Girl Reflects on Love’s Power to Transform
The film a thinly fictionalized retelling of the life of Elbe, a Danish painter

Your Kids・Financial Education Should Start Much Earlier Than You Think

舛oncussion Hits But Doesn’t Sack the NFL・

The Will Smith film does the NFL no favors. But it could have been much, much worse

Carol Creates Chemistry On and Offscreen

Aspirational Meets Enthusiastic In Coffee-Table Books for the Holidays

The Donald Trump Mean-O-Meter
The Republican presidential front runner stepped up his campaign of insults in a speech at Iowa Central Community College on Nov. 12. Here is a look at the most blistering put-downs.

Sisters Introduces Tina Fey and Amy Poehler’s Semisecret Sibling
The film is just one part of a breakout year for Paula Pell
Nov 23, 2015 Vol 186 No 21

How Do You Forgive a Murder?

The Quality of Mercy

Why the Emanuel Gunman May Not Get the Death Penalty

Burma’s Long-awaited Election Makes History
Burma’s long-awaited election makes history

Presidential Summits Alone Won’t Be Enough For China To Win Over A Wary Taiwan

Searching for Signs of a Change in Charleston

A Grieving Congregation Struggles with the Spotlight

A More Dangerous ISIS Is Now the Ultimate Terrorist Group
The organization has become stronger and more threatening

Review: The Mare Is a Story of Defiance
A girl and her horse anchor Mary Gaitskill’s new novel

Global Foods You Can’t Eat In the U.S.

Does Catalonia Have a Hope of Seceding from Spain?

Why the Migrant Issue Divides Europe
The question is more serious to the continent’s future than anything in recent memory

Russia’s Athlete-Doping Scandal

A Costume Drama at Yale
Protests reveal growing divides on American campuses

Tom Hardy Doubles the Trouble in Legend
The actor plays both plays Reggie and Ronnie Kray in the new film

Review: James White Is Set to Stun
Christopher Abbott finds power in his role as the troubled son of a dying mother

Review: By the Sea Finds a Marriage Adrift in Beauty and Grief
The film Reunites Brad and Angelina on screen

Fashion Advice From an Actual Dapper Dan
Man Made has grooming tips for the menfolk

Ugliness: A Cultural History

12 Questions With Bill Nye
Bill Nye The Science Guy follows Undeniable, his defense of evolution, with his new book, Unstoppable, a call to action on climate change

Verbatim

Which Countries Censor the Internet?
According to a new report, it’s more than you think

Allen Toussaint
New Orleans R&B giant

Saving Thanksgiving from Black Friday

What People Want from Virtual Reality

Marriage Tips from the First First Couple
Reviewing Flora Fraser’s new book The Washingtons

The Twisted Tower
Nov 16, 2015 Vol 186 No 20

Is Iran Finally Ready for Change?

Bringing the Good Fight Home
The work has just begun for the next greatest generation of war vets

What the Legal Battle Over Trump University Reveals About Its Founder
Inside the litigation

Why Turkey Went Back to Erdogan
Inside the surprise election result

How Jeb Bush’s Trouble Began During His Dad’s Presidency
The candidate is bedeviled by a party drawn to extremes

Why It’s Easier Than Ever to Get Great Advice
If you know where to look

Apple Has Already Improved the Apple TV in a Big Way
Apps are now sorted into categories, which makes them easier to find.

The Damage of China’s One-Child Policy May Already Be Done
The country faces a major aging crisis

How to Breathe Better to Relieve Stress
New exercises can help keep you calm

Charlie Brown’s New Look Feels Like Old Times in The Peanuts Movie
Snoopy is back-in 3-D

Spotlight Gives a Chilling Peek Beneath Soiled White Collars
The new film goes inside the Boston Globe investigation of abuse in the Catholic Church

Spectre Shows It Doesn’t Pay to Bet Against Bond
A review of 007’s latest adventure

Ellie Goulding’s Delirium Is a Fever Dream on a Dance Floor
The pop singer’s new album is out Nov. 6

Tim McGraw Stays Country Strong
His 14th album is Damn Country Music

Michel Houellebecq’s Submission Portrays a 21st Century French Revolution
The controversial novel by is now available in English

The World According to John Irving
Reviewing his new novel Avenue of Mysteries

What It’s Like to Give Your Dog a Personality Test
And what you learn about yourself

10 Questions With Shonda Rhimes
The president of Thursday night-Grey’s Anatomy, Scandal, How to Get Away With Murder-doesn’t believe in glass ceilings

Designers as Entrepreneurs

The Gucci Effect

The A・hti Foundation in Beirut

The Iconic Look of Chivas
Nov 9, 2015 Vol 186 No 19

Red Meat, Hot Dogs and the War on Delicious

A GOP Identity Crisis Eases the Path for Hillary Clinton
But she will need a backbone

The E.U. Is Challenged from Within
The real contest will be in Europe’s three biggest countries: the U.K., France and Germany

Review: Bob Dylan’s The Cutting Edge Bootleg Series
Outtakes from his most fertile era are the ballads of a spin man

10 Questions With Drew Barrymore
The actor, producer and entrepreneur discusses her Hollywood childhood, working less and her new book Wildflower

The 30 Most Influential Teens of 2015

Why (Almost) Everyone Is Embracing the Digital Doctor
Healthcare is coming soon to a screen near you

Halo 5 Is (a Lot) More of the Same
Reviewing the new game

How E-Mail Killer Slack Will Change the Future of Work
Slack’s slick messaging software has convinced companies of all sizes they can move past the inbox. But is what comes next better-or worse?

Here’s Why Xi Jinping’s ‘Chinese Dream’ Differs Radically From the American Dream
One emphasizes the centrality of the state in improving people’s lives-the other mostly leaves the state out of the equation

Quick Talk With Tyler Oakley
The Internet personality is the author of a new book, Binge

The Challenges Facing Argentina’s Next President

Women Flip the Script on Hollywood
Sandra Bullock and her A-list sisters are hunting down the best new roles-the ones written for men

I Invent The Holiday You’ve Always Missed
Without knowing you were missing it

Our Brand Is Crisis Wages Political War With an All-Too-Easy Message
Reviewing the new Sandra Bullock film

The World’s Quietest Place

The Cardboard Car
At a recent design show, Lexus debuted a working version of its IS sedan made almost entirely of cardboard. Here’s how it came about.

Maureen O’Hara
A Hollywood classic

Pacific

Clowns Turned Politicians
Satirist Jimmy Morales was elected President of Guatemala on Oct. 25 on an anticorruption platform, despite having no experience in politics. He’s far from the first joker to actually get ahead in government.

The Past Comes Back to Haunt Us in The Witches
Reviewing Stacy Schiff’s new book on Salem in 1692

Is the Ferguson Effect For Real?
President Obama and the FBI director square off

A Resurgent Russia Is Active In Syria and Beyond
How the U.S. is reacting

The House of the Spirits-Evil Ones
Reviewing the Cloud Atlas author’s new book

How the Government Created Your Cell Phone

Review: A Colorful Journey to Brooklyn
Saoirse Ronan stars in the new film

Paul Ryan’s New Republican Playbook
What he’ll have to do next

A Survey Shows How Frank Stella Knocked Abstraction Flat, Then Sent It Flying

A Strange New Way to Solve Crimes
The bacteria growing in and on the human body is so unique-and so revealing-that scientists believe germs will soon help catch bad guys
Nov 2, 2015 Vol 186 No 18

Inside the Quest for Fusion, Clean Energy’s Holy Grail

A New Prime Minister Could Fix the Troubled U.S.-Canada Relationship

Meet the Real Sicarios Who Created a Blood Bath Across the Americas
They raised drug murders to a new level of violence and organization

China’s Other Women
Under Mao, China promoted socialist equality for women, but the market-reform era has left many commodified in a country where mistress can be a career choice

Travel Insurance Is No Longer Just for the Over-Prepared
Aggregation is changing the business

Carly Fiorina’s Convenient Truths
Why the GOP’s top saleswoman thinks she can win the White House

The Daughter Dress Code
You only get to make the rules for a little while

Inside Nepal’s Bloody Fuel Crisis
Youtube Millionaires

Mammogram Guidance Gets an Overhaul-Again
Walmart’s Woes Suggest a Bumpy Road for the American and Global Economies
The company is in a particularly tough spot, but it speaks to broader trends

Women Flip the Script on Hollywood
Sandra Bullock and her A-list sisters are hunting down the best new roles-the ones written for men

Meet Marilynne Robinson, Humanist in Chief
Reviewing her new book of essays, The Givenness of Things

Review: Bill Murray’s Rock the Kasbah
The actor stars as a has-been manager in Afghanistan

Review: An Uneven Vote in Suffragette
The film is both earnest and costumey

Joanna Newsom’s Deep Dive
Reviewing the harpist’s new album ‘Divers’

Carrie Underwood Returns to Her Roots on Storyteller
Reviewing the country star’s new album

Review: Paul Murray’s The Mark and the Void
What’s so funny about the financial crisis? A lot

Renaissance Woman Carrie Brownstein Writes of Her Life in Rock
Her new memoir is Hunger Makes Me a Modern Girl

Review: Becoming Nicole Shows a Family in Transition
Identical twins in all but one way

Quick Talk With Sarah Silverman
The comedian stars in I Smile Back

Pop Chart

9 Questions With Ted Koppel
The former Nightline anchor warns against a massive cyberattack and discusses the end of neutral news as his book Lights Out hits shelves

Joe Biden Decides to Sit Out the Race
The Vice President says “the window…has closed”

The Rise of Islamist Terror in Bangladesh

Why It’s Easier Than Ever to Get Great Advice
If you know where to look

Why Some Restaurants Have Declared War on Tipping
Danny Meyer’s Union Square Hospitality Group will cease the practice by the end of 2016

Why the Government Is Investigating Fantasy Sports
A Metal That’s (Almost) Lighter Than Air

Presidential Pranksters
The Federal Election Commission (FEC) has received over 1,200 presidential-candidate registrations this year, three times as many as in 2012. Most of the applicants aren’t serious--many aren’t even human. But some are still winning, in their own silly ways.

Healthiest Halloween Candy

What Happens When Drugs Aren’t Illegal?
A leaked U.N. report recommending that countries decriminalize narcotics for personal use brought the war on drugs into the global spotlight, even though it was later shelved. Countries that have loosened drug restrictions can boast some successes.

Nonsense

Milestones

Verbatim

What You Said About …
Oct 26, 2015 Vol 186 No 17

Putin’s Syria Gamble

The Ideas Weren’t the Freshest, But the Democratic Debate Was a Clear Win for Hillary Clinton
”Ah, sanity. Thy name is, occasionally, Hillary Clinton”

How Clintonomics Created Carly Fiorina
And how they hamper Hillary Clinton

What’s Eating Jeb Bush?
Inside the campaign that can’t catch a break

Why Hollywood Is Bullish on Bull Riding
The talent agency that reps Rihanna and The Rock is betting serious money that 1,500-lb. beasts and the daredevils who ride them are the future of entertainment

Director Cary Fukunaga Tamed Beasts to Tell a Crucial African Story
Inside his new film

Steven Spielberg’s Bridge to the Cold War
Reviewing Bridge of Spies

The Truth About a Network Anchor Dropped Overboard
Cate Blanchett and Robert Redford star in the new film

Brie Larson Finds a Room of Her Own
The actress stars in a movie adaptation of the Emma Donoghue novel

The Founding of America Is All About Us in 2 New Books
Reviewing War of Two and Lafayette in the Somewhat United States

Review: Jane Smiley’s Golden Age Comes to an End
The author wraps up her Last Hundred Years Trilogy

Quick Talk With Amanda Peet
The actress talks about her new children’s book

Review: Rembrandt and Vermeer at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston
A show of Dutch masters shines light on the ordinary

A Scan of My Very Attractive Brain
My brain may be handsome, but it has a few things to learn about tribal loyalties

10 Questions With Orhan Pamuk
The Nobel laureate discusses his new novel, his love for his hometown of Istanbul and Turkey’s response to a devastating terrorist attack

China’s Growing Deadly Addiction

The Nobel Peace Prize
A Tunisian quartet

Breast Cancer’s Race Problem

Sticky Fingers

Violence Beats Politics As a Third Intifadeh Looms In Israel

What a Daily Glass of Wine Does Over Time

Green Piece

Animal Athletes of the World

Dell Builds a $67 Billion Empire

We Count Pitches to Save Arms. It’s Time to Track Hits to Save Lives

Not All Screen Time Is a No-No for Infants

Hollywood’s Gender Gap

The Perils Pulling Turkey Apart

The ‘Reasonable Nut Job Caucus’

Why a More Isolated Saudi Arabia Is Looking Weaker

Foolproof

Pop Chart

Verbatim

Milestones

What You Said About …

Meet the Black Mambas, the Scourge of South African Poachers
The mostly female unit protect rhinos armed with pepper spray and walkie-talkies

Bearing Witness to the Victims of Yemen’s ‘Forgotten War’
A coalition of Arab countries led by Saudi Arabia launched a campaign of airstrikes on Yemen

Fatal Speech
Secular voices are targeted for death in Bangladesh
Oct 19, 2015 Vol 186 No 15

Meet the Smugglers Bringing Migrants to Greece

George W. Bush: Better Health Care in Africa Must Go Beyond HIV
For the U.S., it’s a cause that advances our interests and our ideals

Photographing the Exodus
From the wine-dark waters of the Aegean Sea to the back roads of the Balkans, documenting the dangerous passage

The Smartphone Is the Refugee’s Best Friend
How migrants use mobiles to survive

The Lost Boys of Europe
Teenage refugees are strangers in a strange land

The Things Migrants Carry
What do you bring with you to begin life anew?

Germans Open Their Homes to Refugees
The country is offering open arms to migrants

Europe’s Big Gamble on Immigration
Migrants could be the key to a stronger economy

Immigration Divides Europe
The migrant crisis tests the limits of E.U. cooperation

How the Arab Spring and Civil Wars Led to Europe’s Refugee Crisis
Migrants have been plotting their escape

Iran Could Be a Surprising American Ally as Chaos Grows in Syria
The Persians are no picnic, obviously, but they do play nicer than the Saudis in several ways

Bridge of Spies Paints History in Black and White
Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks on their new film

Peter Pan’s Backstory Is a Mess of Moviesplaining
Reviewing Joe Wright’s Pan

Steve Jobs Muddies Man and Myth
Reviewing the Michael Fassbender biopic

Crimson Peak Arms the Damsel With a Knife
Mia Wasikowska stars in Guillermo del Toro’s new film

Victoria Is a Single Shot of Adrenaline
Reviewing Sebastian Schipper’s new film

Lives Come Undone in The Clasp
A new novel from Sloane Crosley

R.L. Stine Finally Has a Movie After 400 Million Books Sold
The Goosebumps author opens up about a new adaptation

Selena Gomez
The actor and pop singer made some big changes for her new album, Revival, out Oct. 9. It’s the 23-year-old’s first full-length release since she left the Disney-owned label where she got her start, with edgier beats that reveal Gomez’s willingness to experiment.

How Fetty Wap Became a Hip-Hop Sensation

10 Questions With Ben Bernanke
The former Federal Reserve chair on the U.S. recovery, killing bad banks and his new book about the 2008 meltdown, The Courage to Act

The Way Ahead for Gun Control
A familiar tragedy calls for unfamiliar solutions

GOP Rule Change Could Make the Presidential Race Messy
The fight between Republicans could continue into the spring

The Great Ad-Blocker Battle
Our attention is just a pawn in the great game of Silicon Valley

A New Legal ‘Market’ Lets You Gamble on Politics
PredictIt users make bets about, for instance, whether Joe Biden will enter the race

6 Ways to Prepare for a (Much) Longer Retirement
How to make sure your money lasts

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani Struggles After One Year In Office

What Will the Trans-Pacific Partnership Do?

Exercise Pills May One Day Be a Reality
It sounds too good to be true, and for now, it is. But since 2004, scientists have been trying to bottle the benefits of working out, and two new papers suggest they’re a little bit closer.

Anatomy of a Hillary Clinton Impression

Reclaiming Conversation

Laws of Attraction

El Faro
U.S. cargo ship

The War on Plastic Bags

A Modern Exodus
VOL. 186, NO. 14 | 2015

Cover Story
First, Do No Harm
Inside the debate over when to operate on breast-cancer patients-and when to wait
By Siobhan O’Connor 22

A Laughing Matter
Young Arabs use comedy to counter the propaganda of the extremist group ISIS
By Naina Bajekal 30

The Doctor Is In
How celebrated brain surgeon Ben Carson, a political novice of deep faith, vaulted near the top of the Republican heap
By Philip Elliott and Tessa Berenson 34

Ambition and the Working Woman
A new poll by TIME and Real Simple asks how women and men define success and ambition.
Hint: not the same
By Kristin van Ogtrop 38

4 | Conversation
6 | Verbatim

The Brief
News from the U.S. and around the world
7 | Russian warplanes bomb Syria
9 | Can the hajj be made safer?
10 | Ian Bremmer on how the Volkswagen scandal will affect Germany
11 | What the resignation of House Speaker John Boehner means for his party
12 | MacArthur winners announced
13 | The on-demand fix-it industry is up and running
14 | NASA confirms there is water on Mars

The View
Ideas, opinion,innovations
17 | A new argument about the roots of the Rockefeller drug laws
18 | How to win customers and influence online behavior
20 | How long does it take for a TV show to get its hooks into you?
20 | Don’t call them Lego-they’re bigger than that
20 | The drunk history of the United States
29 | Are Russians happier than Americans?

Time Off
What to watch, read,see and do
43 | Janet Jackson’s new album Unbreakable
45 | Robert Zemeckis’daredevil movie The Walk
45 | A climate-change film from Naomi Klein
46 | Everybody loves TV foodie Phil Rosenthal
47 | Quick Talk with actor Justin Theroux
48 | Kid-lit reboot: Missy Piggle-Wiggle and the Whatever Cure
49 | The apotheosis of the weekend warrior
51 | Joel Stein turns to memoirist Mary Karr for help in dramatizing the undramatizable
52 | 10 Questions with evangelical leader Rob Schenck

On the cover:
Photograph by Peter Hapak for TIME
Oct 5, 2015 Vol 186 No 13

Pope Francis Meets America

Next Generation Leaders

Reigniting the Abortion Debate
How an anonymous spy with a video camera infiltrated Planned Parenthood

The Curves Ahead for Car Makers
A diesel deception at Volkswagen

The U.S. War Against ISIS Is Going Nowhere
Our strategy needs to be changed or dropped

The Fires That Aren’t Worth Fighting
By putting out small wildfires, we help create big ones

Resurrection Science
Get Better Health Care

The Martian Celebrates the Gutsy Ambition That We’ve Denied the Real NASA
Reviewing Ridley Scott’s new film

A Star Crosses Hollywood Boundaries at the Border
Emily Blunt stars in Sicario

FDR’s Final Year, and What Could Have Been
Reviewing Jay Winik’s new book

Love May Be Time’s Fool in Fates and Furies
Reviewing Lauren Groff’s new novel

Quick Talk With Ken Jeong
The actor stars in a new show, Dr. Ken

7 Questions With Nancy Meyers
The Intern writer-director on the state of the rom-com, women bosses and how she (may have) inspired Amy Schumer’s signature skit

The Sibling Equation
Learning to parent all over again after one child leaves home

The Synth-Pop Evangelists of CHVRCHES
The Glaswegian stars are back with Every Open Eye

Lana Del Rey’s Cinematic Honeymoon Isn’t So Sweet
Reviewing the singer’s new album
Sep 28, 2015 Vol 186 No 12

Pope Francis and the New Roman Empire

Failed State
Chaos in Libya has created a dangerous highway for migrants

Multicultural New Zealand Has Melded Spirit And Skill To Create The Perfect Rugby Squad

The Gospel of Bernie
The man who brought fire back to the Democratic Party

Labour’s New Leader Shakes U.K. Politics

Meet the Doctors Fighting to Grant Patients the Right to Die
Trained to preserve life, but seeking to allow some to end theirs on their own terms

Elena Ferrante May Be the Finest Author You’ve Never Heard Of
The anonymous Italian author is becoming an icon

Review: Everest’s Peak Experience Underrates the Mountain
Jake Gyllenhaal stars in the new film

Tennis Balls and Trash Give Pablo Picasso Another Dimension
The master’s sculptures arrive at MoMA

Review: Holmes Is Where the Heart Is
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar releases Mycroft Holmes

What the 2016 Candidates Are Selling on Their Websites
As the witty merch goes, so goes the nation

11 Questions With Aberash Bekele
The subject of Angelina Jolie’s new movie talks about her life as a child bride who killed her would-be husband

The Ultimate Air Purifier
Designer Daan Roosegaarde’s ”smog vacuum cleaner” aims to reduce Rotterdam’s growing air pollution.

Chilled

The Migrant Crisis Is a Major Test for European Identity-and Unity

Global Warming’s Comeback
It may not have always felt like it, but global warming slowed in the decade before 2010. Temperatures rose just 0.09°F, down from 0.2°F average growth in each of the six previous decades. Now a new study by the U.K’s Met Office says the ”hiatus” has ended and predicts the next two years will be the hottest on record.

Assessing the Pope at High Altitude

Why Colleges Need Helicopter Parents
Sometimes, backing off is not what a kid needs

Australia’s Game of Thrones

Great 20th Century Migrations
With an estimated 1 in every 122 people on earth now displaced according to the U.N., there are currently more people fleeing violence or persecution than at any other time since World War II. Here’s how the world dealt with previous mass movements of people.

Good Leaders Don’t Have to Be ’Good’

The Syrian Refugee Who Wants to Swim to Salvation in Europe
Sep 21, 2015 Vol 186 No 11

A Show of China’s Military Force Serves as Drumroll for U.S. Visit

In Search of Refuge
More than a quarter million migrants have reached the Greek islands by boat so far this year on their way to claim asylum in Western Europe

A Wave of the World’s Displaced Crashes on Europe’s Shores
Migrants arrive from the Middle East, Africa and South Asia

Meet Hillary Clinton’s Bulldog
Once a part of the ’vast right-wing conspiracy’ to destroy the Clintons, David Brock now savages the media from inside Hillaryland

Why Latinos-and Other Americans-Are Fearful of Donald Trump’s Crazy Talk
His coarse talk is empowering his supporters to speak their minds

Bionic Eyes, Stem Cells and Gene Therapy: 3 Cutting Edge Cures for Blindness
In a race to cure blindness, three advances come closer to reality

Quick Talk With Tobey Maguire
The actor stars in the Bobby Fischer biopic Pawn Sacrifice

Sex and the Single Boomer in Fear of Dying
Reviewing Erica Jong’s latest book

Review: Beirut Treads Lightly on No No No
The group’s new album floats

Review: Miley Cyrus Gets Introspective on Dead Petz
The singer released a surprise album

Review: Time Out of Mind Heads Below the Poverty Line
Richard Gere plays a homeless man in his latest movie

Review: FX’s The Bastard Executioner
A bloody new drama about a dark knight

This New Sport Is Golf Without the Clubs
Players aim to put soccer balls into cups in the fewest kicks possible

10 Questions With Bren・Brown
The best-selling author and professor of social work discusses the difference between guilt and shame and explains the best way to fail

The Fight in Kentucky Is About Public Duty-Not Personal Belief
And politicians aren’t helping

This Year’s Emmys Could Make History
Television’s top honor carries even more weight for nominees who could set records--both laudable and dubious--at the Sept. 20 event.

Inside the Fight for Control of San Francisco’s Most Famous Street

The Etiquette of Home Security Cameras
They may be cool, but there are many things I just don’t want to see

Ben Carson’s Campaign Rules
Ben Carson recently challenged Donald Trump for the top spot in the Republican race in Iowa, but he’s taken a notably unconventional road to get there. Forget TV ads, big fundraisers and hectic schedules. Here’s a look at the former neurosurgeon’s playbook for his unusual maiden campaign.

’Survival of the Fittest’ Is a Sham

What’s Driving the Pope’s New Decrees

Folding Bikes
The Kickstarter-funded Helix, from Toronto’s Peter Boutakis, aims to upend the stigma of folding bikes that force riders to trade sturdiness for portability. Here’s how it works.
Sep 7, 2015 Vol 186 No 9

The Fight Against Blood Diamonds Continues

Stephen Colbert’s Night Vision
If anyone can put the edge back in late night, it’s him

The Price and Promise of Hillary Clinton’s Wobbly Summer
The Clintons have always been a high-wire act

Meet YouTube’s View Master
YouTube is the ultimate destination for kids on the Internet-and Susan Wojcicki plans to keep them hooked

Doctors on Life Support
Doctors are stressed, burned out, depressed, and when they suffer, so do their patients. Inside the movement to save the mental health of America’s doctors

Inside Vladimir Putin’s Circle
The dangerous rise of Kremlin hard-liners

Ted Cruz: Right Turns Only
The candidate’s radical plan to win the White House

Best of Fall Arts

The Man Who Would Be Jobs
Michael Fassbender stars in a new biopic

A Founder of the Treasury Cashes in on Broadway
The new musical Hamilton has taken New York by storm

Ellen Page Comes Out a Fighter in Freeheld
The actress stars in a new movie about marriage equality

Inside the World of Ballet’s Tormented Swans
Flesh and Bone debuts on Starz

The Best of Fall Art
From Dutch treats and far-flung Pop to Picasso in 3-D

The Weeknd Gets Down and Dirty Atop the Charts
A new album, Beauty Behind the Madness, is out Aug. 28

Hosting My Own Podcast Taught Me a Lot About Myself
Including how to cry

9 Questions With Mindy Kaling
The creator and star of The Mindy Project talks about her new book, Why Not Me?, her dream guest star and the importance of two minutes

What Hasn’t Been Fixed Since the Last Market Crash?
A rout carries echoes of 2008

It’s a Deadly Summer for U.S. Cities
Inside the troubling numbers

Joe Biden Weighs One More Shot at the Job He Always Wanted
Will he or won’t he?

How to Prevent the Next Hurricane Katrina
Billions have been spent. It’s not enough.

Scott Walker Fights Back by Campaigning More Like Donald Trump
The candidate has become one of Trump’s many targets

8 Ideas Making Schools Better for Kids
Reforms from start-time to recess

The High Stakes of Hillary Clinton’s Email Scandal
Predicting the likely fallout

The Empire City Burns Bright In a Major Debut Novel

Peculiar Patents

Sky Pool

Why the Dating Game Is Rigged–Against Women

What You Said About ・・・

Why Are Flight Prices So Low?
Airfare prices dipped 5.6% from June to July, the biggest monthly drop since 1995, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Consumer Price Index. Three factors are driving the decline:

A Voice to Say, This Land Is My Land

America’s Drone Danger

Why We Work
Aug 31, 2015 Vol 186 No 8

Why Donald Trump Is Winning
Inside Preparations for the Pope’s Visit
The man who saved an archdiocese now prepares for the Pope’s visit

The China Decade
It’s been a rough summer for Beijing. But China is still poised to dominate-at least in the short term

The Aviator
Tony Fernandes is building a budget airline that can knit together Southeast Asia

Review: Jonathan Franzen’s Purity Examines Wealth and Identity

Review: Carly Rae Jepsen’s Emo付ion Brings a Grownup Note to Giddy Pop
The ”Call Me Maybe” singer gets sexy on her new album

Grandma Hits the Road With Vintage Style
Lily Tomlin stars in the new film

Hillary Clinton’s Stalled Bandwagon Exposes a Deeper Problem for Democrats
The email controversy continues

Mr. Robot: The Antidote to True Detective Blues
Reviewing the new USA show

Quick Talk With Patrick Stewart
The actor stars in the new series Blunt Talk

Review: It’s Overcast Season at Beach House
The group is out with a new album, Depression

’Escape Rooms’ Are Video Games Come to Life
The new pastime is like a Rubik’s cube that locks the door behind you

That Ageless Look
In Hollywood, it’s the ultimate prize. In real life, not so much

10 Questions With Beverly Johnson
The veteran supermodel reflects on her career and on coming forward about Bill Cosby

Modern Science Has a Publish-or-Perish Problem
Flaws are popping up in the peer review process

New Gear Helps You Monitor Your Home
Even when you’re not there

Planetary Clones

How Cities Save Water

Where Black Lives Matter Goes from Here

Thailand Reels After a Deadly Bombing

The Jewels of Chinese ’Duplitecture’
China revealed an ”oil bubble” statue in the northwest town of Karamay on Aug. 11 that is almost identical to Chicago’s reflective, beanlike sculpture Cloud Gate by Anish Kapoor. The Windy City’s 2006 artwork is in good company; China has been creating knockoff monuments for years

Why Brazil Is Turning Against Its President

It Takes Much More Than Money to Fix Broken Schools

The Conservative Heart

Sky Ladder

Julian Bond

Civil rights leader
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