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Aug 24, 2015 Vol 186 No 7

What It’s Like to Be a Cop in America

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar: Don’t Let Trump and Co. Distract From Black Lives Matter
Black lives should matter more than votes

A Slowing China Still Picks Security Over Innovation

The Iranian-Vote Carnival
Focus on what happens once the nuclear deal goes through

Europe’s New Border Crisis
A global migrant crisis finally strikes the continent

Guy Ritchie’s Rules for Reimagining Spy Flicks
The Man From U.N.C.L.E. debuts Friday

The Soda Industry Takes on Your Diet
Soft drink companies would rather talk about exercise than sugar

How Google Is Trying to Reinvent Itself
And maybe Silicon Valley, too

What the Toy Aisle Can Teach Us About Gender Parity
Target drops blue and pink labels

Natural Aphrodisiacs

Iraq Shakes Up Its Government

The Slide-Scraper
Visitors to London’s Olympic Park have been taking stairs and elevators up the 375-ft. (114 m) ArcelorMittal Orbit--the U.K.’s tallest sculpture--since 2012. Soon they’ll have a chance to slide down.

Sundar Pichai Google’s New CEO
In Google’s unprecedented corporate restructuring, Sundar Pichai, 43, may be the biggest winner. His appointment caps a rise from middle management to the C-suite in just a decade.

Review: Straight Outta Compton Is a Bio-pic With a Sanitized Attitude
The new movie opens on Friday

Ice Cube
The rapper, actor and former N.W.A member produced the hip-hop biopic Straight Outta Compton, starring his son O’Shea Jackson Jr. as Cube.

Grace Potter Puts the Pop in Pop-Rock
Reviewing her new album, ‘Midnight’

Review: Hamilton on Broadway
A Founding Father raps his way into musical history

Review: A Manual for Cleaning Women
A posthumous collection from Lucia Berlin

9 Questions With Claire McCaskill
As her memoir Plenty Ladylike hits shelves, Missouri’s Democratic Senator discusses Ferguson, Iran and making peace with the Clintons

A New Phone Bill

Changing Times
North Korea will turn back the clock by half an hour on Aug. 15 to create a Pyongyang time zone. State media said the move would defy the ”wicked Japanese imperialists” who imposed the current system. It’s just one of several recent experiments with regional time zones.

The View From Behind the Badge

Give Us the Ballot

Autism Is Not a Disorder-It’s an Opportunity

The Knives Come Out for Donald Trump, but He’s Not Going Anywhere

Milestones

Video Games in the Age of Cell Phones
There’s a science to why you’re hooked, and these guys have cracked it.

Frank Gifford
Football Giant and sportscaster

School Start Times
The majority of American schools begin too early in the day, a new CDC study says, leaving students groggy and grumpy. Here’s what you need to know before back-to-school season.
Aug 17, 2015 Vol 186 No 6

Why Virtual Reality Is About to Change the World

Welcome to the Jungle
The migrant crisis finally hits the heart of Europe

Why Good Border Fences Don’t Always Make Good Neighbors
Rather than building walls, politicians need to address root causes

See the Legal Side of Lion Hunting
Cecil’s killing has overshadowed a different kind of big game hunting

The Koch Brothers Reboot for 2016
To elect a Republican, the power brokers have retooled with more money, better strategy and a new plan for victory

Jon Stewart’s Term as Voice of Reason Comes to an End
The Daily Show host says goodbye after 16 years on the air

A Daily Dozen of Jon Stewart’s Best Moments

Meryl’s Bad Movie Moms Are a 詮lash’ of Inspiration
In her latest, Streep plays an MIA rocker mother

Review: Louis de Berni鑽es’s The Dust That Falls From Dreams
The guns of August-and what came after

The 糎aze・and Means of Parenting
How a new crowd-sourced traffic app changed my summer

10 Questions With Anthony Bourdain
At work on a global food hall in New York and a new season of his television show, the chef and author dishes on the way we eat now

Should Prostitution Be Legal?
Amnesty International is poised to vote on a measure some hope would protect sex workers

The Long Journey From North Korea to Freedom
New memoirs describe life during one of the greatest disasters-and most secret-the world has ever known

President Obama Takes the Lead on Climate Change
But he needs the world to follow

Do You Want a President You Can Drink a Beer With?
The most likable, talented, trusted candidate does not always win

Fetal Tissue Is Critical to Scientific Progress

Combat-Ready Kitchen

The Hybrid Airplane
Dutch carrier KLM and Delft University of Technology recently unveiled concepts for the Advanced Hybrid Engine Aircraft Development (AHEAD), a sleek aircraft designed to streamline the flying experience. Here’s how it works.

Offbeat Power Players
After years of turmoil, U.S. hydropower production is poised to grow by more than 5% in 2016, according to new data. But globally, the renewable energy resource is getting some unexpected competition.

Janeane Garofalo
The veteran comedian stars in Wet Hot American Summer: First Day of Camp, an eight-episode series now streaming on Netflix that is a prequel to the 2001 film with a cult following.

Howard Jones

IVF pioneer

Mullah Mohammad Omar

Taliban chief

Review: Robyn’s Tribute to Dance Floors of Decades Past

The singer’s 僧ini-album’ Love Is Free is out Aug. 7
Aug 3, 2015 Vol 5 No 186

Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and the American Game of Thrones

Singapore’s Next Story
The Southeast Asian city-state’s model worked for 50 years. What comes now?

The Next It Foods
Researchers from Oregon State University recently patented a new strain of dulse (the nutrient-packed seaweed) that tastes like bacon when it’s fried. But it’s not the only crop with a shot at cultural domination.

Noteworthy Advances in Alzheimer’s Research

The New, Simpler CPR Saves Lives

A $100 Million Quest to Make Contact With E.T.-Maybe

How They Raised Their Millions

China’s Disruptors

Hillary and Jeb Bring Out Big Ideas as a Populist Circus Hijacks the Campaign
The two candidates raise thoughtful points on issues like jobs

How a Good Government Can Beat Bad Debt
It’s not the size of the debt that counts. It’s the ability to manage it

El Salvador’s Kill Zone
Warring gangs have turned the country into one of the world’s deadliest places

How Nigeria is Bringing the Fight to Boko Haram

E.L. Doctorow
Great American novelist

Review: Southpaw’s Terrific Punch
Jake Gyllenhaal stars in the new boxing movie

The On-demand Economy Takes Workers for a Ride
Companies like Uber are changing the modern workplace

The Rise of the ‘Good Divorce’
Maybe it’s time to stop making fun of ’conscious uncoupling’

How to Name a Crater on Pluto

Solar-Powered Palm Trees
United Arab Emirates--based media firm D Idea has developed a creative way to make hot, crowded public spaces more pleasant for Dubai’s rapidly growing population. Here’s how its Smart Palm works.

Tech Titans in Turmoil

Competition and Common Ground

A Brief History of Interstellar Broadcasts
The Breakthrough Message isn’t humanity’s first effort to craft a greeting for alien life. Here’s a look at what we’ve already sent.

Soundtrack for Summer’s Open Roads
Ashley Monroe releases her second album, The Blade

Quick Talk With Rachel McAdams
The actress on True Detective

Cara Delevingne Sparks Paper Towns
The Instagram ‘It’ girl lights up the John Green adaptation

Caitlyn Jenner and Jazz Jennings Reveal Remarkable Women Living Amid the Mundane
Reviewing two new TV shows that deal with transgender issues

One Draft, Two Draft, Old Draft … New Dr. Seuss Book
What Pet Should I Get? is the writer’s first original book since his death in 1991

10 Questions with Bret Baier

The host of Fox News’ Special Report discusses Donald Trump, confused dogs and preparing for a crowded GOP presidential debate

Verbatim

How Trauma Can Change You-For the Better
The silver lining of suffering: part of the healing process might bring about positive change
Jul 27, 2015 Vol 186 No 4

Iran Trades Nuclear Standoff for Regional Power

Why the Iran Deal Is a Risk Worth Taking

10 Questions with Carli Lloyd
Carli Lloyd The U.S. soccer star talks about her historic World Cup hat trick, handling instant fame and the future of her sport (listen up, FIFA)

Mexico’s Humiliating Jailbreak
El Chapo’s escape puts the country back in a place it tried to leave behind

Satoru Iwata
Nintendo chief

Colin Quinn
In Trainwreck, the new Judd Apatow--directed comedy starring Amy Schumer, Quinn plays Schumer’s father as a foulmouthed, bigoted philanderer with multiple sclerosis.

America’s Newest National Monuments
Following a proclamation signed July 10, President Obama has protected more U.S. land than any of his predecessors.

Can Float Therapy Really Treat Stress?
A strange new treatment method is put to the test

Dump Cosby, Dump the Confederacy, but Don’t Dump the Reruns
What to do when a TV show’s legacy changes

No, China Is Not in an Economic Meltdown

Omar Sharif
Hollywood icon

Why Science Is Winning the Vaccine Wars

The Triangle Tower

Review: Ant-Man Is a Good Thing in a Small Package
Paul Rudd makes for a winning superhero

I’ll Never Bake Pies, and Other Life Lessons From a Renovation
Shopping ‘Holidays’

The GOP’s New Better Halves

Pluto Gets Its Moment in the Spotlight

What Could Greece Sell Off?

The Truth About Freezing Your Eggs
More women are counting on egg freezing to prolong their fertility. But is science really on their side?

Review: Gustave Caillebotte at the National Gallery
A new view of a wide-angle Impressionist

Women in Government

Fanaticus

Go Set a Watchman Review: Atticus Finch’s Racism Makes Scout, and Us, Grow Up
Atticus Finch’s bigotry is placed in the context of a painful story of maturation

Kenya’s Startup Stars
On a trip to the birthplace of his father later this month, President Obama will see a country transformed by a new spirit of entrepreneurialism

How to Beat Your Smartphone Addiction
Jul 20, 2015 Vol 186 No 3

Greece Tempts the Fates

Dubai’s Kingdom Tower Looks to Set a Record
Meet the architect behind the planet’s tallest towers

The Path to Pluto
A NASA space probe is nearing one of the solar’s system’s final frontiers after a 9-year journey

Tunisia’s Jihadist Pipeline
ISIS recruiters are finding volunteers in the birthplace of the Arab Spring

How Elizabeth Warren’s Populist Fury is Remaking Democratic Politics
And what it means for Hillary Clinton’s campaign

My Bank Wants to Know My Favorite Color
And ‘I don’t have one’ isn’t an option

10 Questions With Ronda Rousey
The mixed-martial-arts champion and author of a new memoir talks about her judo-champion mom, post-Olympics depression and getting into acting

Review: The Third Time’s the Charm for Miguel
His new album borrows from many genres

Review: Rectify Tells a Freed Convict’s Tale With Conviction
Season 3 begins July 9 on Sundance

Denis Leary Delivers Rock of the Aged
His new FX comedy is more dad-band than comeback tour

Quick Talk With Philip Glass
The composer talks about a new memoir and an upcoming film score

Review: Trainwreck Slides Just Outside Amy Schumer’s Sweet Spot
The Comedy Central star’s new movie hits theaters

Review: Ayn Rand’s Ideal
Her deadly, unpublished early novel illuminates-and unsettles

How to Waste Less Food
Tips to get the most use out of your fridge

Why Video Games Need More Female Heroes
Teenagers don’t want what we think they do

The L3D cube
Brooklyn and Hong Kong--based tech firm Looking Glass raised more than $250,000 on Kickstarter to build its L3D cube, a first-of-its-kind, wi-fi-enabled LED fixture. Here’s how it works.

The Reason for Flowers, Explained
A new book details our obsession-and dependence-on floriculture

Why Millennials Can’t Afford to Be Colorblind
’Not seeing race’ allows young people to avoid dealing with the racial rancor that still surrounds us

Why Golf Needs Jordan Spieth
Tiger who?

Milestones

Misty Copeland
Principal dancer

A Conversation With the Dalai Lama
The spiritual leader of Tibet, also known as Tenzin Gyatso, chatted with TIME on the morning of his 80th birthday

2 Markets for Thrill Seekers to Watch
Shanghai and Puerto Rico make waves

The Only People Donald Trump’s Campaign Is Good For
Democrats benefit from his blunders

The Economic Toll of Terrorism
Jul 6, 2015・Vol 186 No 1

The Old Answer to Humanity’s Newest Problem: Data

I. Questions We Didn’t Know Had Answers

The History of Human Innovation
Translated into the world’s newest language

This Is the Safest Place to Sit on a Plane
Where you should sit next time you get onboard

Which Team Has the Best Home-Field Advantage?
The team is perfectly average on the road but has a killer record at home. Here are the factors that help give home teams an edge

What’s the Most Effective Workout?
All exercise is good for you. Use this chart to decide which type is best for your fitness needs

This Is the Best Beach in the U.S.
U.S. Coastlines receive some 62 million visitors annually

Why Did ‘Frenemy’ Stick?
Academics are unraveling the mystery behind the success--and failure--of blended words

What Ever Happened to Spring?
It’s getting shorter in some areas and longer in others. Here’s where Spring has been hit hardest

Is World Peace Possible?
Three public figures weigh in

II. Who Is Exceptional?

The Most Exceptional Actor: Meryl Streep
Known for expertly tackling diverse and difficult roles, the 66-year-old still sets the performance bar in Hollywood

The Most Exceptional Optimist: the Dalai Lama
The international icon of peace emerged from the humblest of origins

The Most Exceptional Capitalist: Warren Buffett
The 84-year-old investor keeps a low profile but is on the highest pedestal in the business world

The Most Exceptional Athlete: Serena Williams
Williams, 33, has trained since the age of 3 and is the no. 1 women’s tennis player in the world

The Most Exceptional Writer: Toni Morrison
She received the nobel prize in 1993 and is now the only living American nobel laureate for literature

The Most Exceptional Musician: Midori Goto
She has sold out music halls since the age of 11. Now 43, she is focused on music education and philanthropy

III. Questions We Should Be Asking

This Is the Best Job in America
Finding a growing career path is one thing, but finding one that won’t stress you out is another

Why Don’t We Have a Cure for the Common Cold?
Even though the common cold is the primary reason American adults miss work and kids miss school, there’s still no cure. Here’s why

What Are My Health Risk Factors?
Most people live past age 65, at which point the top cause of death is heart disease, followed by cancer, according to a tally of all 2.6 million deaths in the U.S. in 2013

Am I Hurting the Planet?
Probably, if you look at the surprising carbon footprint of routine daily activities

What Could America’s $18 Trillion Debt Buy?
A lot. All together, these blocks of expenses are just about equal to $18.2 trillion

What Should I Order at Fast-Food Chains?
Some surprisingly healthy choices that aren’t salad

How Does Art Work?
Three public figures weigh In

IV. What Defines Us
The ways that we learn, heal and even worship are evolving

V. Questions We Didn’t Know We Had

What Makes a Song The Song of the Summer?
There’s no easy formula, but commercial success, viral potential and a long lead time help make memorable hits for the hotter months

What Should Hollywood Remake Next?
The average remake comes out 26 years after the original. These 10 Movies are ripe for remaking, but are they a good bet?

What’s the World’s Deadliest Creature?
Sorry Sharks, mosquitoes have you beat. Here are totals ranked by number of human deaths per year

How Much Competitive Eaters Really Eat
Since 1916, competitive eaters have gorged themselves for Nathan’s annual hot dog contest. Here are some other binge-eating contests and records

Meet the U.S. President Responsible for the Most Tourism
It’s not Teddy Roosevelt

How to Win Jeopardy
You have to study. But since confirmed contestants typically get only four to five weeks to cram before competing, you can’t study everything. start here

What U.S. States Are Not Known For
Most states have at least one major claim to fame. Here’s a closer look at some lesser-known local superlatives

Are We Alone in the Universe?
Three public figures weigh in

What’s Your Ultimate Summer Read?

Why Europe Can’t Leave Greece Adrift
Even though the country got itself into its huge debt mess

How a 25-Year-Old Blogger Took Down Apple

If President Obama Can Say It, You Can Too
Policing language prevents us from badly-needed discourse, as President Obama made clear this week

My Very Own ‘She Shed’
I’ll take a little more vodka and a little less gingerbread trim

Summer’s Best Cookbooks
This season’s offerings bring tasty treats

3-D-Printed Bridge
Dutch firm MX3D recently partnered with software giant Autodesk to build a machine that can ”print” bridges in midair. Its first test will be over an Amsterdam canal in 2017. Here’s how it will work.

The Art of Turning Data Into Answers

Mapping a Nation of Books
Transport yourself across the country with 7 location-based yarns

Girls Can Tackle Football, Too
Let girls in the end zone to ensure equality

Debating the Confederate Flag
Sorrow, symbols and the meaning of a battle flag once the war is past

Who Should Be on the $10 Bill?

GOP Candidates Woo Latinos
The 2016 contenders take a ‘Sí se puede’ approach

James Salter
Novelist

Brian Williams’ Demotion Sends a Mixed Message
He’s not credible enough to anchor one NBC network, but he’s fine for another?

Pot Has Become Easier to Study
Not a moment too soon

Energy Drinks Have Doctors Worried
But business is booming

How to Make Binge Watching Better for You
Hulu just added all nine seasons of Seinfeld, meaning its fans will likely be spending a lot of time sitting (and eating) in front of a TV or computer screen--which, for obvious health reasons, is less than ideal.

When Parents Publicly Shame Their Kids
A strange new sensation has hit the Internet

India’s Publicist in Chief

Meet the New Lab-Made Foods
Get ready for pink pineapples

Three New Books Tackle American Presidents
The forces that drove three historic men

Besieged By ISIS

Syrian government troops hold out against the militant group in the city of Deir ez-Zor

Putinism
Jun 29, 2015・Vol 185 No 24

The Next President Of Taiwan’

Putin’s Secret Army
The Russian President turned Chechen enemies into his closest allies-but he may be losing control

Nip. Tuck. Or Else.
Why you’ll be getting cosmetic procedures even if you may not really want to

Serena Williams, Halfway to History
Finally at ease, she could win the first Grand Slam in over 25 years

Surprisingly Healthy Snack Foods
Munchies to improve your wellness

The U.S. is Fighting on Two Fronts: the Real World and the Virtual One
A strike in Yemen and a setback in the cyber world

The U.S. Needs a Global Strategy Like China’s
The competition for influence continues

Two Political Dynasties Relaunch with Pomp, Policy and Real Potential

Gaming’s Biggest Confab Puts the Spotlight on Tech
E3 has grown far beyond its origins

How to Change Careers
Switching gears is all the rage-but what else could I possibly do?

Three Bright Lights in American Infrastructure
How innovations are improving our daily lives

Is the Iran Nuclear Deal Good for the U.S.?
It buys needed time

No, the Iran Nuclear Deal Will Not Be Good for the U.S.
Iran will get too much

Inside Out’s Trippy Ride Through a Strange Land
Spoiler: The brain

In The Unfortunates, the Fall of a High-Society Dynasty
A family takes a tumble in Sophie McManus’s debut novel

A Lesser True Detective Arrives Far From Carcosa
The show’s second season is still hard-boiled, but going stale

10 Questions With Larry Kramer
The AIDS activist, playwright and author is still pushing hard for gay rights and an HIV cure as HBO debuts a documentary about his life

Review: Dope Injects Urban Struggle With John Hughes Heart
Rick Famuyiwa’s festival hit has charm to spare

Quick Talk With Christian Slater
In USA’s new drama Mr. Robot (TV premiere June 24; the first episode is streaming online now), Slater, 45, plays the mysterious head of a computer-hacking collective.

What Criminals Can Teach Us About Creativity
Creativity comes from scarcity

Remembering John Carroll, Journalism Legend
Newspaperman

What Happens if Greece Leaves the Euro Zone?

Two World Trade Center
After years of turmoil, new plans for Two World Trade Center were unveiled. Here’s what’s most compelling about the tower, designed by Danish architect Bjarke Ingels and expected to open in 2020.

U.S. Shark Attacks
Beachgoers were spooked after a 12-year-old girl and a 16-year-old boy were attacked by a shark while swimming in waist-deep water off the coast of Oak Island, N.C. It was ”like a scene out of Jaws,” said one eyewitness. But how common--and dangerous--are these attacks? We analyzed recent data.

John Kasich
Despite a crowded field and a late start, the Republican governor of Ohio is forging ahead with his second presidential campaign. (His first was in 2000.) Kasich, a former investment banker and top congressional budget writer, spoke with TIME at a recent event in Utah
Jun 22, 2015・Vol 185 No 23

The Other Side of the Great Firewall

A New Look for TIME

Besieged By ISIS
Syrian government troops hold out against the militant group in the city of Deir ez-Zor

Aziz Ansari on Love in the Age of Like
Human beings have never had as many romantic options as they do now. Will that doom love or save it?

A Welcome Victory for Democracy in Turkey

Let’s Prepare for Africa’s Population Surge Now-Or Face the Consequences

Happy Father’s Day to My Ex-Husband
Really.

Jurassic World Offers a Reptilian Reckoning to a Culture that’s Bored to Death

The U.S. Wades Deeper Into its War on ISIS

The Surprising Role of Hospitals in Outbreaks

NASA’s ’Flying Saucer’
After years of development and several postponements, the Low-Density Supersonic Decelerator--designed to help NASA develop Mars-landing technology--had its crucial second test flight over Hawaii on June 8. Here’s how it fared.

America’s Egg Shortage, By the Numbers
For the first time since 2002, the USDA will allow commercial bakers and processed-food producers to import pasteurized egg products from Europe--specifically, the Netherlands (which meets high food-safety standards). It’s welcome news amid the food crisis.

10 Questions With Bob Baffert
American Pharoah’s Hall of Fame trainer led the bay colt to the first Triple Crown win since 1978. Baffert talks about his horse, his hair and his biggest influence

A Vision of Lost Sheep in The Wolfpack

A Jailbreak Shows Prisons Are Only as Strong as the People Who Staff Them

How to Raise an Adult

Paul Dano
In the Brian Wilson biopic Love and Mercy, in theaters now, Dano (Little Miss Sunshine, There Will Be Blood) plays the troubled Beach Boys songwriter as a young man, while John Cusack handles his middle years.

Manolo-Shod Monkey Still on Bushnell’s Back

Déjà Vu All Over Again

Top Sunscreens Are Put to the Test

The Problem With TV’s Golden Age
Now, you don’t have time to watch it

Carly Fiorina’s Tireless Drive
The presidential candidate is getting a second look

Weekday Warriors

Pop Chart

Apple’s Next Trick: Upending Streaming Music

Verbatim

Jonathan Strange Makes Alternative History Magic

Why it’s Risky to Be Risk-Averse

How Rand Paul Has Already Changed the 2016 Race
The candidate has proven chatty and thoughtful












































vol. 185, no. 22 | 2015

4 Conversation

BRIEFING

5 Verbatim

6 LightBox
The observatory at
One World Trade
Center opens

8 World
FIFA’s Sepp Blatter
resigns; a ferry
disaster in China;
Turkey’s elections;
Ian Bremmer on the
Iran deal

12 United States
Cities are seeing a rise
in crime

13 Small Business
Marketers find the
value in facial analysis

14 Tech
Big tech companies
seek to innovate with
new office designs

15 Health
Snoring isn’t the
only symptom of
sleep apnea

16 Milestones
Farewell to Beau
Biden; Dennis Hastert
indicted

COMMENTARY

17 Viewpoint
Martin Feldstein on
the long-term trouble
with low interest
rates

FEATURES

18 Refugees Adrift
The Rohingya fleeing persecution in Burma
by boat are finding themselves unwanted
elsewhere in Asia by Hannah Beech

23 Lifting the Curtain
FIFA graft probes and Switzerland’s effort to
reform its secrecy laws by Simon Shuster

24 Fear and Prejudice
Uganda’s gay-rights activists are fighting
the government’s plan to enact another
homophobic law by Aryn Baker

32 Hooked
How powerful painkillers created an
epidemic in the U.S. by Massimo Calabresi

40 In the Arena
Democrats Martin O’Malley and Bernie
Sanders challenge Hillary Clinton
by Joe Klein

THE CULTURE

42 Second Acts
How celebrities
like Gwyneth
Paltrow, Jessica Alba
and Blake Lively
are reinventing
themselves as
domestic divas

45 Movies
Melissa McCarthy
takes smart gender
commentary
undercover in the
espionage spoof Spy

46 Books
Two new books
on the glutenfree
trend seek to
separate the fad from
the facts

48 Pop Chart
Quick Talk with
R&B singer Jason
Derulo; new baby
names; a Lego hotel
opens in Florida;
Neverland Ranch
for sale

50 The Awesome
Column
Joel Stein talks back
to talking gadgets

52 10 Questions
Former U.S. First
Lady Barbara Bush
vol. 185, no. 21 | 2015

A robot designed in the shape of a human at the Florida Institute for Human
and Machine Cognition in Pensacola, Fla. Photograph by Marco Grob for Time

4 Conversation

BRIEFING

5 Verbatim

6 LightBox
Seeking refuge in
Indonesia

8 World
Storm brewing in the
South China Sea; the
countries where gay
marriage may be legal
next; the U.S. calls
foul on FIFA

11 Spotlight
Meet John Malone,
cable mogul on a roll

12 Economy
Martin Feldstein on
the risks in the short
term (interest rates)
and long term (debt)

14 Milestones
Farewell to
mathematician
John Nash and actor
Anne Meara

FEATURES

15 Next Generation Leaders
In the third part of this series, six inspiring
innovators are driving real change

24 Still Far From Human
Robots may enter our world, if they can
learn to turn a doorknob by Lev Grossman

30 The Border Within
Kilometers from Mexico, undocumented
immigrants
are dying by the dozens
by Alex Altman; photographs by Kirsten Luce

COMMENTARY

38 Viewpoint
Matt McAllester on
education in the
Middle East

THE CULTURE

40 Movies
It’s a bro’s life on
the party that is the
Entourage movie set

44 Appreciation
Remembering
photographer Mary
Ellen Mark

45 Books
Fantasy team:
C.S. Lewis and J.R.R.
Tolkien’s circle

46 Sports
American Pharoah
faces the Belmont
Stakes

48 Pop Chart
Get ready for Shania
Twain’s last time live

50 The Amateur
Corporate America
is ditching hierarchy.
Can Kristin van
Ogtrop’s family?

52 10 Questions
Parenting guru
Penelope Leach

on the cover:
Photograph by Marco
Grob for Time
vol. 185, no. 20 | 2015

2 Conversation

BRIEFING

3 Verbatim

4 LightBox
Refugees from Ramadi
arrive in Baghdad

6 World
ISIS takes Ramadi;
the E.U.’s fight against
human trafficking; the
Amazon’s skyscraper

8 United States
Hillary Clinton’s
speaking fees; the
biker-gang shoot-out
in Waco, Texas

11 Business
How two California
chefs plan to freshen
affordable fast food

12 Spotlight
David Jaffe, CEO of
women’s-apparel giant
Ascena Retail Group

13 Milestones
Farewell to blues
legend B.B. King
COMMENTARY

14 In the Arena
Joe Klein assesses the
2016 Republican field

15 Viewpoint
Charlie Campbell: The
U.S. should not turn a
blind eye to Thailand’s
military dictatorship

31 The Awesome
Column
Joel Stein stunt-casts
himself as a political
consultant

16 Captain America
Since the Cold War, U.S. foreign policy has
been adrift. What role should the world’s
only superpower play? by Ian Bremmer

22 Papal Pivot
In advance of Pope Francis’ U.S. visit,
politicians from both sides seek to spin his
liberal leanings by Elizabeth Dias

26 The Art of Resilience
Scientists are uncovering why some
people’s brains bounce back more quickly
after hardships by Mandy Oaklander

32 No-Vacation Nation
It’s time Americans take a new approach
to time off by Jack Dickey
THE CULTURE

38 Summer Movie
Preview
Lev Grossman on
the disturbingly
realistic undercurrent
of this
cinematic season’s
robot war on
humanity

plus: Kristen Wiig
gets serious in
Welcome to Me; a
music-based movie
for every decade;
Rose Byrne as
Spy ’s subversive
villainess; LeBron
James’ Oscar bid;
Magic Mike XXL, by
the numbers

48 10 Questions
U.S. soccer player
Alex Morgan
May 25, 2015 Vol 185 No 19

Nepal Digs Out After the Quake

The Great Pot Experiment
Legalization keeps rolling ahead. But because of years of government roadblocks on research, we don’t know nearly enough about the dangers of marijuana-or the benefits

Obama Struggles to Soothe Saudi Fears As Iran Talks Resume

A Disunited Kingdom
Britain’s election could mean an unruly exit from the E.U.

10 Questions with the 17th Karmapa
He’s an environmentalist, he’s friends with the Dalai Lama, and, at 29, the 17th Karmapa may be Tibet’s next hope

ISIS Is a Danger on U.S. Soil
The terrorist group poses a gathering threat

The Panama Canal Gets Grander
More than a century after it was built, the waterway grows to take bigger ships

Jimmy Kimmel: Watching David Letterman ‘Was More Important Than Sleep’
Kimmel tells TIME about the lasting influence of Late Night

David Letterman, Infinite Jester
As Late Show ends, its humor has gone viral

Mad Max and the Stronger Sex
Eve Ensler lends feminist cred to the new movie

Behind the Music in Pitch Perfect 2
How the experts chose the right notes

When an Ordinary High School Graduation Is an Extraordinary Moment

Dave’s Top 10 Greatest Moments.
Classics from Late Night and the Late Show

Dave’s Top 10 Guests and Sidekicks

No State Left Unturned for Clinton
The campaign is focusing on all states, red and blue alike-for now

Tragedy on the Rails
The Amtrak derailment in Pennsylvania prompts a debate on infrastructure and passenger rail travel

Dieter’s Dilemma
Science weighs in on which popular weight-loss plans truly work

Chris Burden
Performance artist

Catching Criminals With the Cloud
How better software can help the police
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May 18, 2015 Vol 185 No 18

How Narendra Modi Wants to Change India

Exclusive Interview with Narendra Modi: ‘We Are Natural Allies’

Welcome to the Whitney’s New Home
A famous architect takes the museum downtown

Simple Moves That Boost Men’s Heart Health
New research shows it doesn’t take much to improve your cardiac health

The Incredible, Surprising, Controversial New Way to Make a Baby
A new in vitro technique could change fertility

Rousseff Is in Deep Trouble in Brazil

This Company Is Designing the Home of the Future
Quirky is inventing the sleeker, smarter home of the future, one everyday product at a time

America’s Broken Ladder
Why racial and economic fairness can no longer be treated as separate issues

Cities Are at the Center of the 2016 Campaign
Candidates are forced to take a stance on urban issues

10 Questions With Chris O’Dowd
Irish funnyman Chris O’Dowd on tasty wallpaper, imaginary friends and his Hulu show turned YA book series

New Tricks for Lily Tomlin and Jane Fonda
The actresses are heading to Netflix

Review: It’s a Madding, Madding World
The Thomas Hardy heroine gets an update

The Battle of Solar vs. Conventional Utilities
Power companies are fighting back as more homes opt for renewable resources

Review: Life After Life After Life
Kate Atkinson’s grand design in A God in Ruins

How Startups Are Rethinking Delivery (Again)
New companies are eliminating the middle man

Wallets Over Ballots
What we buy determines our fate much more than who we vote for

Stephen Curry: Basketball’s Bright Light
Meet the NBA’s new MVP

Milestones
May 11, 2015・Vol 185 No 17

’This Is the Earthquake We’ve Been Waiting For’

Europe’s Crisis of Conscience
As more migrants drown in the Mediterranean and anti-immigrant sentiment on the continent continues to rise, what will Europe’s leaders do?

Scotland’s Nationalist Surge
Less than a year after rejecting independence, Scots may hold the balance of power in the U.K. elections

How the U.S. Can Counter China in Asia
The Trans-Pacific Partnership offers a new solution

Free-Range Parenting 2.0
Forget letting the kids roam on their own. How about letting parents off the leash instead?

10 Questions with Harold Bloom
The literary scholar on life at Yale, his critics and why reading should be ’elitist’

The Clinton Blind Spot
The former President’s fundraising-for his family and foundation—could cripple his wife’s campaign

Review: Spinster Preaches Self-Contentment
The message at the heart of Kate Bolick’s new book

Review: Avengers: Age of Ultron Introduces the Cloud-Based Villain
Joss Whedon’s super-sharp writing elevates the newest Marvel film beyond the pack

Review: The Aftermath of Equality on Southern Rites
The documentary depicts a town in transition

Baltimore’s Mayor Under Fire
Stephanie Rawlings-Blake talks to TIME about why Baltimore erupted, her handling of the crisis and the ”thugs” comment

The Dune Abides
Frank Herbert’s iconic work turns 50

Same-Sex Marriage’s History Test
A surprise turn for the high court’s debate on same-sex marriage
Apr 27, 2015 Vol 185 No 15-16

The 100 Most Influential People in the World

How We Pick the TIME 100
Every year we hope the list will introduce you to influential people you might not have met before

See TIME 100 Honorees’ Predictions for the Future
Here’s what David Chang, Miley Cyrus and others think is next for their industries

See the TIME 100’s Power Tools
The objects that inspire our influencers

How to Make Influential Friends
Amy Schumer, meet the scientist who sequenced the Ebola genoma

The Name Game
Can you match these influencers with their obscure bio details?

Home Lands
Where the 2015 Time 100 were born

On Time.com
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