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2023 Chevrolet Corvette Z06

Here’s the short version of our review of the new Chevrolet Corvette Z06: It’s the best American sports car ever made. How can we say this so definitively? What about the Ford GT? What about the Dodge Viper ACR? You know we’ve driven, tested, and tracked them, and they’re both great cars. And each is a Le Mans winner in its own right (though Corvette Racing has more wins than the two of them combined). The 2023 Z06 is better. As much as there is to talk about with the C8 Z06, we must begin with the sacrilegious dual-overhead-cam, flat-plane-crank V-8 engine. No, it doesn’t burble like a cross-plane-crank V-8, because it isn’t one. It does, however, make more naturally aspirated power than any production V-8 in history. We’re talking 670 American…

2023 Chevrolet Corvette Z06

2023 Porsche 911 GT3 RS

Before you read a word, look at the pictures accompanying this story and answer this question: If the 911 GT3 RS carried a sticker price of $1 million, how long would you need to pick yourself up after you collapsed in laughter? Whatever your estimate, it’s likely fair enough on the surface. The 911’s enduring, insuperable popularity has encouraged Porsche to crank out as many derivatives of its 59-year-old sports car as its assembly lines can accommodate—and selling every one of them, mind you. Another year, another month, another week; ho-hum, look out, here comes another 911! People who don’t get it understandably hit the snooze button. If the average 911’s ubiquity is at least partially a result of its inherent goodness, the GT3 RS is the line’s bucket of dry ice…

New neighbors

New neighbors

BRADLEY FREEMAN JR. WAS DOING SOME CHRISTMAS SHOPping at Target when he got the email. Glancing down at his phone, all he could see was a preview: “Hey Brad, thanks for taking the time to audition for us …” He immediately assumed he had been rejected. Then he read the rest. “I had to read it over, like, seven different times to make sure that I actually got the part,” he says. “I say yes, and then I realized I didn’t actually type anything so I had to send a second email and say yes and then texted—I was like, ‘Just making sure you know that I accepted this part.’” The part—the one that had him “hyperventilating in the middle of Target”—is the puppeteer for Wesley Walker, a new Black Muppet who, along…

Editor’s Note

I KNEW I’D RELIED on the same weeknight supper rotation for too long when my then 6-year-old turned to me mid-bite—a look of mild disgust in his eyes—and said, “Mommy, I’m done eating pasta.” He paused, then added: “Forever.” How did I get to a place where one of the most popular and plainest dishes gets cut from my child’s “approved foods” list? My interest in cooking has always ebbed and flowed; I go through bursts of intense weekend meal prep and weeknight pot stirring, followed by longer stretches of improvising with peanut-butter sandwiches, cereal, scrambled eggs, and takeout. My home-chef instincts were at an all-time high when my older son started solids. I made fruit and vegetable purees, combined them in distinct flavor profiles, froze them into cubes, and created a meal…

Editor’s Note

Autumn Aglow

HOW-TO Leaf Candlestick SUPPLIES Template (download at marthastewart.com/leaftemplate)Copper-foil sheet, 36 gaugeStylus or blunt pencilMetal shearsCopper wire, 24 gaugeCandlestick and candle 1. Lay template on copper sheet, and trace outline of leaves with stylus, fitting as many small and medium-size leaves as possible. Holding shears steady, move copper around to cut out shapes. Make sure to keep stems long. 2. Unfurl a piece of copper wire long enough to fit all the leaves, and place first stem at the beginning. Fold wire back ¼ inch to fasten, then tightly wrap metal around wire. Slightly overlap next leaf, and continue, alternating sizes, until all leaves are attached. Cut wire and drape garland around candle base. THE DETAILS: St. Louis Crafts Art Metal foil sheets, 36 gauge, $17 for 12; and copper wire, 24 gauge, $4 for 100 feet,…

Autumn Aglow

THE CASE OF THE DISAPPEARING VACATION RENTAL

TIPS AND TRICKS TO HELP YOU TRAVEL SMARTER “IN RETROSPECT,” says Melany Robinson, “the pricing was too good to be true.” Robinson, a hospitality publicist and seasoned traveler who lives in Birmingham, Alabama, was surfing Craigslist in the summer of 2020, looking for a ski-season rental in Park City, Utah. She came across a five-bedroom, five-bath chalet with panoramic views, a wood-burning fireplace, and an outdoor deck complete with a hot tub. It looked perfect for her family and was available for her dates in February and March of this year. Robinson e-mailed the contact listed and quickly heard back from someone calling himself Thomas. Using public records, she matched that name with the property’s deed holder and began discussing rental terms. Thomas promptly answered all her questions, and, in July, she…

THE CASE OF THE DISAPPEARING VACATION RENTAL
Blood Work

Blood Work

Late one night in 1982, a Yale University medical student named Martin Yarmush witnessed a harrowing scene at a local hospital. A toddler was admitted, and several nurses attempted to insert an IV needle into one of the child’s tiny veins. Each time they missed the vessel, the child screamed more shrilly, and the mother grew more worried. There has to be a better way, thought Yarmush, now a professor of biomedical engineering at Rutgers University. The incident changed his outlook on medicine. Thoroughly unnerved by the anguish he’d witnessed, Yarmush started to imagine what would happen if the process of drawing blood could be automated. At the time, automation was found primarily on assembly lines for cars, where robots were so powerful and dangerous that they were bolted to the ground…

TOUCH POINTS

TOUCH POINTS

Several years ago, Sushma Subramanian was procrastinating on her work when she noticed her desk was a bit wobbly. It was a rather mundane moment, she recalls. But as she began to fiddle with the tabletop, the science journalist found herself noting how the experience felt: the grain of the wood against her fingers, the pinching of her skin and the sensation of her muscles straining to lift the desk. As Subramanian explains in her book, How to Feel: The Science and Meaning of Touch (Columbia University Press, 2021), it was a moment when she began to consider how little she knew about this multifaceted sense. The questions kept forming, eventually leading Subramanian to write an article for Discover in 2015 about the development of tactile touch screens. In her latest work,…

MEET Nabhaan Rizwan

‘IT’S A REFRESHING REMINDER THAT love is possible,’ says Nabhaan Rizwan of The Last Letter from Your Lover, his first major leading role. Adapted from Jojo Moyes’ novel, it follows two stories in different eras: a heady 1960s French Riviera romance, and an innocent affair in contemporary London. Rizwan plays Rory, a newspaper archivist who, along with journalist Ellie – played by Felicity Jones – finds a cache of heartaching letters sent between two lovers in the 1960s (Big Little Lies’ Shailene Woodley and Fantastic Beasts’ Callum Turner). Though decades apart, their stories slowly become entwined. ‘Previously, when I’ve watched this genre, it’s perpetuated archaic gender roles and [that] takes me out of the film. It’s a distraction,’ says 24-year-old Rizwan. ‘But this script was different.’ Yes, there’s the obligatory (and…

MEET Nabhaan Rizwan
HOW to BE AN OPTIMIST IN dystopia

HOW to BE AN OPTIMIST IN dystopia

‘WHEN HAVE WE EVER BELIEVED that the world wasn’t ending?’ asks a character in Emily St John Mandel’s latest book Sea of Tranquility. ‘There’s always something.’ Depending on how you look at it, Emily St John Mandel is either a remarkably prescient writer or simply a student of history who recognised that pandemics are an inevitable part of life. Her award-winning 2014 novel Station Eleven, set in a world where 99 percent of humanity has perished from a swine flu, debuted as a television series earlier this year, as the UK entered its third year coexisting with Covid. Mandel, whose last book The Glass Hotel was released in March 2020, spent much of lockdown writing Sea of Tranquility (out April 28). The expansive novel explores moon colonisation, time travel and,…

MY LIFE, MY STYLE

’I’ve always been incredibly drawn to family businesses,’ says Gigi Ettedgui. It’s no wonder – she herself was born into one of the most influential families in fashion. Her mother Isabel is the creative director and owner of the British lifestyle brand Connolly, and her late father was the designer and retailer Joseph Ettedgui, known for introducing brands including Kenzo and Yohji Yamamoto to the UK, as well as championing young British talent such as Margaret Howell and Alexander McQueen. ‘One of my earliest memories is sitting on the floor of Azzedine Alaïa’s atelier, playing with tin toy cars he had given me, when I was about five years old,’ says Gigi, who was a regular visitor to designer showrooms as a child. ‘Azzedine was doing a fitting, and I…

MY LIFE, MY STYLE

DIE ZUKUNFT HAT BEGONNEN

DAS PROJEKT Standort Medemblik, Nordholland Bewohner Kim Wiebring und Richard Pronk Bauweise denkmalgeschützter Klinkerbau Baujahr 1650 Umbau 2020 Umbauzeit 6 Monate Wohnfläche ca. 150 m2 plus Souterrain Grundstück ca. 150 m2 BAUEN & UMBAUEN SPECIAL Am Hafen von Medemblik stehen die Häuser mit den typisch holländischen Treppengiebeln Backe an Backe, jedes nur so breit wie ein Zimmer. Die Fassade von Kim Wiebring und Richard Pronk misst gerade mal 4,10 Meter, dafür ist das Haus aber fast 14 Meter tief. Vorn steht es direkt an der Straße, hinten liegt ein schmaler Garten. „Wir wohnten in der Nähe und wollten gar nicht umziehen“, erzählt Kim, „aber als dieses Kleinod auf den Markt kam, konnten wir nicht widerstehen – und haben es keine Sekunde bereut.“ Das Paar hat das 370 Jahre alte Gebäude restauriert und auf den heutigen Stand gebracht – mit viel Enthusiasmus. „Wir…

DIE ZUKUNFT HAT BEGONNEN

jolly good

After the May through November rush of wedding season, December arrives like a sigh at Cornman Farms, a private event center in southeast Michigan. Snow kisses the rooflines of a cheerful red barn and stately 1834 farmhouse, trimmed in white lights and puffing wood smoke. A flock of geese mills about the naked trees, and a few horses graze nearby. Even in the winter pause, though, Cornman’s founder and executive chef Kieron Hales keeps busy. Preparing for catered holiday parties, he bustles around the kitchen in suspenders, a bow tie hanging loose around his neck. As he dresses a plate with supple leeks and extra-crispy potatoes, he stops to hand over a spoonful of whatever’s on his stovetop for a taste. “You know how they say, ‘Kill people with kindness?’” he…

jolly good
◼ IN BRIEF

◼ IN BRIEF

● The US will bolster the nuclear deterrence it provides South Korea. US President Joe Biden and South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol announced the agreement on April 26 at the White House. In return, Washington secured a pledge from Seoul that it won’t pursue its own atomic arsenal. The level of support will be similar to that provided to Europe under the US nuclear umbrella at the height of the Cold War. The arrangement doesn’t mean US nuclear weapons would be deployed on South Korean soil, they said. ● War in Ukraine ▶ Chinese leader Xi Jinping spoke with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy for the first time since Russia invaded 14 months ago. ▶ Russia threatened to pull out of the UN-brokered deal to protect Ukrainian grain shipments, after accusing Kyiv of launching…

COME AT ME

COME AT ME

“RAISE YOUR HAND IF YOU THINK YOU’VE HAD A HARDER week than I’ve had.” It was Feb. 14, 2019, in the early afternoon, and for perhaps the first time in the 25-year history of Amazon.com Inc., Jeff Bezos was prepared to explain himself to his employees. Bezos was a master compartmentalizer; his ability to keep the intricate threads of his personal and professional lives separate was unrivaled. This talent had allowed him to build Amazon while also running a space company, Blue Origin LLC, and reviving the Washington Post—all while keeping his family life private. But those threads had gotten tangled. Bezos, a father of four, was the subject of tabloid stories in the National Enquirer about his relationship with a married former television host. Rather than doing what most billionaires do under…

Chained To Trump

Chained To Trump

On a brisk Saturday morning in mid-April, grassroots Republicans gathered in county conventions across Georgia to begin deciding their party’s future. The day ended with Donald Trump firmly in control of the state Republican Party, in a microcosm of the national struggle for the GOP’s soul following the November election and the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. In the state’s biggest Republican strongholds, conventions that were supposed to last a few hours dragged into the evening as insurgent delegates—many of whom had never participated in party politics before—booted longtime leaders in favor of Trump-embracing newcomers. They attacked the party’s top officeholders, passing resolutions condemning them for not supporting Trump’s false claims of a stolen election. They dissed former GOP officeholders, too, flouting a tradition of giving them votes at…

When the Boss’s Boss Is a Machine

When the Boss’s Boss Is a Machine

On a recent August morning, inside a cavernous Amazon.com Inc. fulfillment center outside Seattle, Evan Shobe positioned himself before a bank of nine computer screens. Known internally as the quarter-back desk, or QB, the command center lets Shobe monitor the intricate workings of a building the size of about 15 football fields. Thousands of blue dots show robots ferrying products around the facility; yellow figures that look a little like restroom signs represent the humans who load and unload the robots. A maze of green lines shows conveyors speeding orders to stations down the line and, ultimately, to waiting delivery trucks. The system is running smoothly on this early morning, as it mostly does seven days a week at more than 900 Amazon logistics facilities across the U.S. BFI4, located in…

Short on Drivers, Shippers Shift Gears

Since she got her learner’s permit at age 16, Clarise King-Green had driven just about every vehicle imaginable: cars, vans, minibuses, box trucks. But like most women in transportation, she’d never gotten behind the wheel of a freight truck. That changed last summer when the Philadelphia resident, 50, enrolled in a state-sponsored program that helps aspiring drivers pay for commercial-trucking school, where tuition costs as much as $7,000 for a multiweek course. It’s a line of work she’d briefly considered decades ago, but finding someone to care for her young daughters during nights spent on the road put her off. Now that they’re older, King-Green decided it was time. “People that know me well say driving is in my blood, so it wasn’t intimidating. It was exciting, really,” she says about her…

Short on Drivers, Shippers Shift Gears
There Is No Free Parking

There Is No Free Parking

Over a Zoom call from sunny Los Angeles, Donald Shoup—sporting a big white beard, a brown cardigan sweater, and a marketer’s telephone headset—was yelling at me. “Oh, how terrible, you have to move your car, so they can sweep the road. I think that’s just awful,” he said, with audible italics. “To overcome the base desires of people like you”—people like me?—“you have to give the money back to the neighborhood.” I’d made the mistake of griping to the bona fide king of parking reform that owning a car in New York City was annoying. Twice-weekly street sweeping forces a large group of people to fight for a small number of free curbside spots that they must then vacate frequently. It’s the rare game of musical chairs that requires insurance. And…

A Pop-Up Store Hits the Road

A Pop-Up Store Hits the Road

A new type of store is popping up at a California mall on June 10. It looks a lot like a regular shop, full of handbags, small leather goods, and jewelry. Oh, except it’ll be outside, and the floors, counters, and racks all fit on a flatbed truck, to be transported and remade anywhere—some assembly required. Cuyana, a San Francisco-based premium fashion label, is taking its traveling showroom on a summer road trip. The portable pop-up presents retailers and malls with a new way to sell goods, gather data, and try out locations without committing to a larger lease or paying repeatedly for major renovations. Just load the whole thing onto a truck and plop it down somewhere. “Retail’s not going away,” says Shilpa Shah, co-founder of Cuyana. “It just needs…

Thai Dissidents Break a Royal Taboo

Thai Dissidents Break a Royal Taboo

At a recent showing of the James Bond movie No Time to Die at a theater in Bangkok, almost half of the 60 people in the audience sat down without incident as the royal anthem played—a scene unthinkable only a few years ago, when not standing was risky. The shift highlights changing attitudes toward Thailand’s monarchy following more than 15 months of protests. Pro-democracy students and other demonstrators have called for reforms to the country’s constitution and to the monarchy, its most powerful institution. Thailand’s royalist government hasn’t acceded to their demands. But major political parties are starting to acknowledge them ahead of an election that could come in early 2022. One of the protesters’ goals is the revoking of a so-called lèse-majesté, or royal insult law, which makes it illegal to…

Bonds Are Turning Right Side Up

Bonds Are Turning Right Side Up

Fewer bond investors are having to pay for the privilege of lending out their money. For the first time in years, the global supply of debt with a negative yield is in meaningful decline. The trend is strongest in Europe, where subzero bonds have been an everyday reality for investors. Although the shift will be welcomed by those seeking safe income from new investments, it means current bondholders are losing money. (Bond prices fall when yields rise.) It also signals that higher borrowing costs are on the way for everyone from governments to corporations to homeowners. It could be an especially nasty jolt for junk-rated companies and emerging-market governments, which have been able to gorge themselves on debt at much lower rates than they’re used to as investors have taken on…

GE’s People Factory Imports Talent

General Electric Co. for decades was known as much for producing elite managers as it was for the lightbulbs, power equipment, and home appliances that wore its logo over the years. When leaders departed—often for the top job at other large companies—GE could tap its deep bench of executives honed at its famed management training institute, which former Chief Executive Officer Jack Welch once called the “greatest people factory in the world.” The company’s jargon-filled training program, taught at its Crotonville, N.Y., campus on the Hudson River, was even parodied in the NBC sitcom 30 Rock by Tina Fey and Alec Baldwin, back when GE controlled the network. For generations of recruiters, experienced GE leaders were some of the most sought-after executives anywhere, with alums going on to helm a who’s…

GE’s People Factory Imports Talent
A Grape Guru’s Magic Touch

A Grape Guru’s Magic Touch

Known for his classically balanced wines and long commitment to organic production, Steve Matthiasson is a man in high demand. For his eponymous label, he farms a dozen small vineyards, including one at his winery in Napa’s Oak Knoll district. He consults on 15 more that belong to his eight high-profile clients—the largest sprawls across 400 acres. His 27th harvest season stretches over seven weeks, and each day is a master class in multitasking. The key decision, he says, is always when to pick. That, more than anything else, determines the style of wine you can make. Last year’s harvest in Napa was a horror show of wildfires; this year Matthiasson is all smiles. “The quality is the best I can remember,” he says. Here’s what his day looked like on Sept. 2,…

Will a Strongman Relent?

Will a Strongman Relent?

It’s 11 a.m. on a Saturday in early June, and I’m in Caracas, Venezuela’s capital, on the 10th floor of the finance ministry. One side of the building overlooking the dilapidated downtown has enormous portraits of Simón Bolívar, South America’s great liberator; Hugo Chávez, the socialist revolutionary who won the presidency in 1998; and Chávez’s successor, Nicolás Maduro, who rules Venezuela today. The presentation I’ve been summoned to see starts with a PowerPoint slide in Spanish. It reads: “The Attack on Venezuela.” I’ve been in the country less than 24 hours. Let the propaganda begin, I think. A few weeks earlier, in mid-April, I’d received a WhatsApp call dangling the possibility of an interview with Maduro. It was from Hans Humes, a New York-based hedge fund manager whose specialty is investing…

Afghanistan’s Dollar Drought

Afghanistan’s Dollar Drought

Just weeks after the last U.S. troops left Afghanistan, a cash crisis has crippled its already feeble economy. The tight supply of money, along with border restrictions and increasing international isolation, is robbing many Afghans of their livelihoods and driving the cost of food and other essentials higher, setting the stage for a humanitarian crisis. During the 20-year U.S. occupation, the economy was propped up mainly by international aid and U.S. dollars, which circulate alongside the local currency—the afghani—and are used regularly to pay for imported goods, as well as for big-ticket transactions such as buying a home or paying for private school tuition. Shah Mehrabi, a board member of Afghanistan’s central bank who’s now in the U.S., estimates that dollars accounted for about two-thirds of bank deposits and half of…

And God created Kate

OBSERVE THE DEEP SKY IN ARA

THE CONSTELLATION ARA (pronounced AIR-uh) the Altar was one of the “original” constellations of the Greeks. It appeared in Phaenomena, a 3rd-century-b.c. work by the Greek poet Aratus. He based it on a work written a century earlier by Eudoxus of Cnidus. The constellation’s position is easy to locate directly beneath the tail of Scorpius. Making an altar out of the stars is more difficult. Ara is visible May through July in the Northern Hemisphere, the time Scorpius hangs directly in the south. Its center lies at right ascension 17h18m and declination –56°30'. Ranking 63rd in size out of the 88 constellations, Ara covers 237.06 square degrees (0.575 percent) of the sky. And while its size is nearer to the bottom than the top of that category, it fares somewhat better (34th)…

OBSERVE THE DEEP SKY IN ARA
50 YEARS ON MARS

50 YEARS ON MARS

FIFTY YEARS AGO THIS NOVEMBER, three spacecraft were bearing down on Mars in a frantic race to become the first mission to orbit it. They were the survivors of a fleet of five. Of that group, two were NASA efforts: Mariner 8 and Mariner 9, jointly known as the Mariner Mars 71 Project. The other three were Soviet: M71-S (S for “Sputnik”), Mars 2, and Mars 3. All five spacecraft were designed to orbit the Red Planet, and Mars 2 and Mars 3 were also designed to deploy landers that would attempt the first robotic surface explorations of that world. After having lost the race to put a man on the Moon two years earlier, the Soviets were determined to beat the U.S. to the surface of Mars, even if only with…

Recollections of Russia

Recollections of Russia

“How could they do that to those beautiful girls?” my great-aunt Mary suddenly said as we sat quietly chatting in The Admiral, her local pub in Islington, London. “Every day they used to play with my children – then they simply disappeared. A year later, we learned the whole family had been murdered.” The burden of her disbelief still weighed heavily. I didn’t interrupt the remarkable story that had been unfolding since we’d entered The Admiral an hour before. It was 1951, and I’d recently come to London – the home of many relatives. A cousin suggested I look up our great-aunt. So, one evening I knocked on her door in a nondescript block of flats that sat in the middle of ruins. The area had been heavily bombed in the Blitz…

The Case of the Broken Window

FROM THE BOOK THE FEATHER THIEF On June 24, 2009, the Natural History Museum deputy security guard was halfway through his round when he noticed shards of glass near the base of the building. He scanned the area until his eyes settled on the smashed-out window overhead. He hurried inside to inform the Tring’s curators that there seemed to have been a break-in. The police arrived and began searching for evidence, examining the bird skin cabinets in the vicinity of the broken window and scanning the ground outside. Mark Adams, the senior curator responsible for the Tring’s bird skin collection, raced to the stacks containing the museum’s most precious specimens. He feared the worst as he nervously unlocked the cabinets containing the Tring’s treasures: the Galapagos finches collected by Darwin during the voyage of…

The Case of the Broken Window

DUBAI

While visiting Dubai Design Week 2021, Lauren Grace Morris finds a city poised to assume a valuable position in the design industry – if regional creativity is at the core. 60 years ago, so little of this was here. Once a small pearling community, Dubai now features arresting glass structures that jut from the desert land like unexpected gems. It’s home to the biggest building in the world, the second-largest shopping mall, the biggest observation wheel – the list goes on and on. Standing in front of the Burj Khalifa, which shoots 828 m into the sky, I’m prompted to think of the United Arab Emirates city’s moniker, at least in some circles: ‘The Superlative City.’ In 2013, a book of the same name was published by the Harvard Graduate…

DUBAI

Fun and Games

While 2020’s Summer Games were a year late, the 2022 Winter Games are right on schedule. But not missing a beat means surprises—especially for the athletes. (Surprise number one: Their events are already complicated by politics, with the U.S. staging a diplomatic boycott—athletes will still attend; dignitaries will not—in protest of China’s human rights record.) Ski slopes that are being groomed at this moment on Xiaohaituo Mountain, in Yanqing National Park, about 60 miles north of Beijing, were originally scheduled to host a 2021 trial run. That was canceled, due to the pandemic. This month, skiers will be meeting the mountain for the first time. “None of us know it,” says Mikaela Shiffrin, 26, the alpine ski racer who has won two Olympic golds, “but what I’ve seen from the videos,…

Fun and Games
The many lives of Demi Lovato

The many lives of Demi Lovato

IN THE YOUTUBE DOCUMENTARY DEMI LOVATO: DANCING WITH THE DEVIL, the 28-year-old singer and actor speaks openly about her battles with eating disorders and drug addiction, focusing most acutely on the 2018 overdose that nearly killed her. But the most revelatory words in the film belong to a selection of her fans, young women with makeup so precise and polished they look as if they’re suspended in a world smoothed out by an Instagram filter. One nearly runs out of breath as the words tumble out: “I love what she does for young girls, and her music—it just saved my life.” Another beams, “I don’t think she really understands how much of an impact she has on her fans.” That kind of idolatry would weigh heavily on anyone’s shoulders, and Lovato—a…

Finishing techniques

Finishing techniques

Finishing the ends of a kumihimo project can be done in several ways, and each method serves three primary purposes: • Provide a secure and sturdy way to attach a clasp or closure so you can wear your piece • Prevent the braid from coming undone — ever • Conceal the end of the braid Most of the projects in this issue use one of the following three finishing methods. Get familiar with them now so you know how to proceed when it’s time to finish your braids. Glue and end cap with loops or a magnetic clasp Magnetic clasps are great for finishing kumihimo ropes. Most varieties have a magnet on one end and an opening on the other, which is where the end of the braid is inserted. End caps have an opening on…

Choosing Vital Vitamins

Choosing Vital Vitamins

MULTIVITAMIN Yes, eating a well-balanced diet can help you meet your nutritional needs, but taking a daily multivitamin can fill in any common nutrient gaps, like vitamin A or D. “Your body will keep what it needs and let go of the rest in your urine or stool,” explains Niket Sonpal, M.D., an internist and gastroenterologist in New York City. VITAMIN D Even if you spend time outside or consume vitamin D–fortified foods, you’re likely still short on this nutrient—most Americans are. Few foods naturally contain it (fatty fish like trout and salmonare the best sources), and the sun’s effectiveness changes depending on the time of year, where you live, and your skin’s pigmentation. But don’t let that keep you from getting your share: Vitamin D helps absorb calcium, which strengthens your bones,…

Your guide to making the days easier and the journey sweeter

It’s Crunch Time If presentation is what it takes to get kids psyched about vegetables, then this idea is a game changer (so to speak). After all, carrots are much cooler when they’re pulled from a Jenga-like tower rather than fished out of a baggie. Celery and carrots (we used orange and yellow varieties of the latter) are a natural choice, but you can level up the competition with parsnips, large radishes, or jicama. Just cut the veggies into equal-size blocks and trim their curved sides so they lie flat—you’ll need 30 to build a ten-story tower. Pro tip from Rachel Faucett, generator of this idea (and others in The Handmade Charlotte Playbook): Cut more than you think you’ll need. As kids pull sticks, they’re likely to nibble along the way…

Your guide to making the days easier and the journey sweeter

A New Day For Working Moms

IF YOU’VE been feeling as if the world is on fire, you’re right. It was, literally, for a while: As if a pandemic, a recession, a racial reckoning, and a contentious election weren’t enough, 7.7 million acres of land and thousands of homes burned in the wildfires that swallowed the West. We’ve lost so much in the last year. Loved ones. Time. Sanity. And jobs. Last year, my friends and colleagues, suddenly separated from their lives at work, joked that they missed wearing heels and pants that weren’t sweats. But beneath the jokes was something else: grief. “Grief is loss of your present, of your perceived future,” says Rebecca Soffer, cofounder of the Modern Loss community. “You feel untethered.” Working women have been gravely impacted by the events of the last year—more…

A New Day For Working Moms
WHEN VIRUSES HEAL

WHEN VIRUSES HEAL

Sitting in an isolated room at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, Frank Nielsen steeled himself for the first injection. Doctors were about to take a needle filled with herpes simplex virus, the strain responsible for cold sores, and plunge it directly into his scalp. If all went well, it would likely save his life. Nielsen was a cancer survivor and, once again, a cancer patient. His melanoma, which had responded to conventional treatments the first time around, had returned with a frightening aggressiveness. Within weeks, a lump on his scalp had swelled into an ugly mass. Unlike the first time, options like surgery weren’t viable — it was growing too quickly. As a last resort, his doctors turned to a cutting-edge drug known as T-VEC, approved in 2015 in the…

THE HIGHEST-PAID ENTERTAINERS

1. Peter Jackson • $580 mil The Lord of the Rings director became a billionaire in November when he sold part of his visual-effects firm, Weta Digital, to Unity Software for $1.6 billion, about 40% of it in cash. 2. Bruce Springsteen • $435 mil (See story, page 15.) 3. Jay-Z • $340 mil The hip-hop mogul cashed out stakes in music streamer Tidal and the Armand de Brignac champagne brand. 4. Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson • $270 mil About 25% of his earnings came from starring roles in films like Jungle Cruise and Red Notice; most of the rest came from his buzzy tequila brand, Teremana. 5. Kanye West • $235 mil He earns most of his money from a multiyear deal to design Yeezy sneakers for Adidas. A jacket and hoodie designed for the Gap arrived last…

THE HIGHEST-PAID ENTERTAINERS

DRESS QUEENS

BALENCIAGA SAINT LAURENT DIOR PRADA ERDEM LOUIS VUITTON DOLCE & GABBANA ALEXANDER McQUEEN FENDI VALENTINO GUCCI SIMONE ROCHA GIORGIO ARMANI MIU MIU MODELS: ODETTE PAVLOVA, LILI SUMNER, RILEY MONTANA, LORENA MARASCHI AND NEELAM GILL AT NEXT MODELS LONDON HAIR: SAMANTHA HILLERBY AT PREMIER HAIR AND MAKE-UP, USING ORIBE. MAKE-UP: SHARON DOWSETT AT CLM HAIR & MAKE-UP USING CHANEL NEAPOLIS NEW CITY AND BLUE SERUM EYE. NAILS: AMA QUASHIE AT CLM HAIR & MAKE-UP USING DIOR CAPTURE TOTALE DREAMSKIN AND DIOR CHRISTMAS COLLECTION 2017. BUS: RED ROUTEMASTER. WITH THANKS TO MARRIOTT COUNTY HALL HOTEL…

DRESS QUEENS
BEHIND THE CURVE

BEHIND THE CURVE

Flesh. Even the word is – no pun intended – freighted. What should be a simple descriptive for, well, flesh, has, over the past century, become charged with negativity for women. Such is the programming running in my 49-year-old subconscious that the terminology alone is enough to make me recoil slightly. Yes, however much I consider myself resistant to the aesthetic pressures women are put under – with my grey hair and my unBotoxed frown lines – I haven’t managed to fight entirely shy of this one. I am someone who is naturally fleshy, who has a bum and thighs, and society has taught me to police that tendency. And so surreptitiously, unnoted often even by me, I do. Yet look how fabulous flesh is! Look at these glorious, celebratory pictures of…

BRIGHT YOUNG THINGS

at the beginning of 2021, analysts predicted we’d be ending the year with a period of exuberance, glamour and frivolity akin to the last century’s Roaring Twenties. Those post-war years were defined by hedonism, pleasure and a keenness to celebrate life. Youth culture demanded new experiences, and the combination of women’s right to vote, the flourishing Jazz Age and technological advances certainly provided them. It marked the arrival of the independent, liberated flapper girls and the modern cosmetic industry as a new means of self-expression. Whether we’re on the verge of such a moment continues to be debated, but there is certainly optimism to be found in beauty’s current mood. Having pared back our make-up routines for the past year, this season’s collections are bright and bold, inspiring a painterly approach. Driven…

BRIGHT YOUNG THINGS
SPECIAL INTERESTS

SPECIAL INTERESTS

ADVENTURE TRAVEL Kassandra Magruder While Magruder plans trips worldwide, her expertise lies in Africa, Latin America, and the polar regions. She recently organized a 43-day trip for a solo traveler that took in rain forests, cities, and sand dunes, with expert guides at stops along the way. From $200 per person per day; 406-540-1903; kassandra.m@adventure-life.com; adventure-life.com. AIR TRAVEL Paul Tumpowsky Tumpowsky arranges discounted airfares with such major carriers as American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, and Emirates, saving his clients thousands of dollars while securing such perks as refundability. From $500 per person per day; 917-664-6200; p@skylark.com; skylark.com. BUSINESS TRAVEL Jennifer Wilson-Buttigieg Whether she’s planning a long weekend at Gleneagles, in Scotland, for top travel industry executives or arranging a digital detox for a busy client at Four Seasons Resort Seychelles at Desroches Island, Wilson-Buttigieg goes above and beyond…

FOUR FRESH WAYS TO LEAN IN TO WINTER

FOUR FRESH WAYS TO LEAN IN TO WINTER

Rest and Recharge New York’s Finger Lakes aren’t typically top of mind this time of year, but the Inns of Aurora (innsofaurora.com; doubles from $200) is set to open a 15,000-square-foot spa in early 2021, with hydrotherapy circuits, pools, and winter-themed activities, like tea-blending classes. Outside Montreal, the resort Spa Eastman (spa-eastman.com; $169 per person per night, all-inclusive) roars to life in winter, with treatments in the Finnish sauna, hammam, and outdoor whirlpools. Meanwhile, some innovators have started “snowga” classes that combine yoga and a wintry outdoor setting. “Practicing in these mountainscapes connects us to the elements and to spaciousness within,” says instructor Rebecca Black (balancebec.com), a snowboarder who’s pioneering the practice with retreats in the Tarentaise Valley of the French Alps. Chase the Night Lights The northern lights are on view in…

The ‘Covid Zero’ Trap

A smattering of places, mainly across the Asia-Pacific region, have achieved stunning victories in the battle against Covid-19, effectively wiping it out within their borders. Now they face a fresh test: rejoining the rest of the world, which is still awash in the pathogen. In some ways, the success of “Covid Zero” strategies is becoming a straitjacket. As financial and travel hubs such as New York and London return to business as usual—tolerating hundreds of daily cases while vaccinations gather pace—counterparts in Asia like Singapore and Hong Kong risk being left behind as they maintain stringent border controls and tighten other curbs in response to single-digit flareups. China, Singapore, Australia, and New Zealand have suffered fewer deaths during the entire pandemic than many countries—even highly vaccinated ones—currently log in a matter of…

The ‘Covid Zero’ Trap

A Matter Of Trust

The future of Huarong Asset Management Co., a troubled Chinese financial conglomerate, may be determined by a man who believes that allowing more state-owned companies to default is just what the country needs: Vice Premier Liu He. While Huarong insists it’s healthy enough to repay its debts, markets have been pricing in the risk of default since the company missed a March 31 deadline to report 2020 earnings. Another portent: In January, Huarong’s former chairman, Lai Xiaomin, was executed on charges that he’d accumulated a fortune in bribes during his years at the helm. Under Lai, the company moved beyond its original mandate of helping banks dispose of bad debt, raising billions of dollars from offshore bondholders and expanding into everything from trust companies to securities trading and illiquid investments. At…

A Matter Of Trust

EASE OF SHOES

Earlier this year a curious sneaker popped up on Nike Inc.’s website. Instead of lying flat on the ground, the shoe has a band that squeezes it so its sole bends in the middle, creating an unusually large opening for a person’s foot. Just slide your toes down into the gap and press down with your heel, and the band contracts to close the shoe into its proper shape and hold the foot firmly in place. This is the Go FlyEase, a breakthrough in Nike’s attempts to make a sneaker that’s effortless to put on and take off. Removing the shoe is a little more complicated than putting it on—wearers use a hand or the other foot to engage a built-in kickstand—but the band system makes a big difference for many…

EASE OF SHOES
September Is Here. Normal Isn’t

September Is Here. Normal Isn’t

When President Joe Biden signed a $1.9 trillion U.S. stimulus package in March, dissolving most of the emergency pandemic safety net come September seemed to make sense. Vaccinations were rising rapidly, and schools were preparing to resume in-person learning in the fall, removing two main hurdles keeping people—especially parents—out of the workforce. All spring long, that month was heralded as a symbolic turning point for the U.S. economy. With schools set to reopen, companies solidified September return-to-office dates. Virus fears were abating, with the country in May on track to have 75% of the population vaccinated in September. The shortage of workers—brought on by a mismatch between the robust snapback in consumer demand and the number of Americans willing and able to work—was expected to “fade in the coming months and…

The Next War

The Next War

Brandon Tseng, a former Navy SEAL who served in Afghanistan and elsewhere overseas, developed the idea for his startup Shield AI to solve a problem specific to what he and his colleagues saw in the field. One of the most dangerous tasks for U.S. ground troops in the Middle East was entering buildings that might contain armed fighters. So Shield, founded in 2015, built fleets of small, autonomous drones that would go in first and send photos and maps to soldiers waiting nearby. The U.S. military has used Shield’s technology in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria. The end of U.S. involvement in Afghanistan marks a new era for the military, and for Shield. The company has spent the better part of the year acquiring new technology and pitching officials and investors on…

Laura Miele Is Listening

One of the first things Laura Miele did when she became chief studios officer of Electronic Arts Inc. three years ago was to gather 19 video game influencers in a conference room. “What do you want me to hear? Lay it on me,” she recalls asking them. “One guy sitting at the corner of the table, he just said, ‘I don’t understand why you don’t give players what they’re asking for.’ ” It’s something many gamers have wondered about EA for years. The $40 billion company, one of the biggest in gaming, is responsible for Battlefield, Madden NFL, and other megahit franchises. But many gamers have long seen EA as a necessary evil, resenting the direction in which it took some games and bristling at its aggressive attempts to extract money…

Laura Miele Is Listening
Saudi Arabia’s Slow Religious Revolution

Saudi Arabia’s Slow Religious Revolution

As an agent of Saudi Arabia’s powerful religious police, Ahmad Alghamdi thought he’d finally found the perfect job. He would order stores to close during prayers, tell men to go to the mosque, and ask women to adjust their veils. He’d previously had short stints as a customs official, accountant, and teacher, but those jobs didn’t sit well with the sheikhs, or religious scholars, whose doctrine he followed. Yet not long after joining the formidable muttawa in his 20s, he grew disillusioned, he says, with what was a pillar of the kingdom’s establishment. He wasn’t convinced its heavy-handed practices were grounded in Islamic law. Today, Alghamdi, now 56, is a sheikh who advocates for freedoms that his former superiors had banned, such as allowing men and women to mix in public, or…

Peak Pallet

Peak Pallet

After carrying the weight of the global economy since World War II with little fanfare, the lowly shipping pallet is finally commanding some respect. Demand for the platforms used to haul consumer goods and industrial materials is soaring amid a surge in e-commerce, forcing retailers and manufacturers to expand warehouses or pile inventories higher. At the same time, two key production inputs—cheap lumber and low-wage labor—are scarce, and even nail costs are rising. The result: Pallet prices have hit record highs, according to a U.S. Labor Department index, while European gauges show big jumps from the U.K. to Germany. The market may stay hot through the peak home construction season in the springtime and as Covid-19 vaccines help revive restaurants and event venues—adding to inflationary pressures rippling across supply chains. “Supply is…

The Bank That Didn’t Blow It

On the day before one of the biggest margin calls in history, Deutsche Bank AG Chief Executive Officer Christian Sewing joined an urgent meeting with a not-unfamiliar message: There was a problem, and billions of dollars were at stake. But as executives on the late March call briefed him on the bank’s exposure to Bill Hwang’s Archegos Capital Management, it wasn’t all bad news. Risk managers had been concerned by Archegos’s growth for some time and were collecting more collateral on its highly leveraged market bets. The bank’s traders stood ready to quickly offload the slumping assets. Archegos’s fall in the following days slammed rivals with more than $10 billion in losses. But Deutsche Bank walked away without a scratch, reporting its highest profit in seven years. The escape added to a…

The Bank That Didn’t Blow It

Wall Street’s Newest Bet On Houses

Zillow Group Inc. is best known for the addictive real estate listings that keep people browsing the internet all night, checking out interior shots of homes for sale or the estimated prices of their own houses or the ones down the street. But Chief Executive Officer Rich Barton has staked his company’s future on the idea that its software can also ease a critical pain point for U.S. homeowners: the time it takes to sell. In recent years, Zillow has essentially dived into the house-flipping business, offering to quickly take properties off sellers’ hands. And in the process it’s helping pull Wall Street even deeper into the $2 trillion U.S. housing market. In August, Zillow raised $450 million from a bond backed by homes it’s bought but not yet sold. The…

Wall Street’s Newest Bet On Houses

Now Crypto Is Barking at Me

With virtual life increasingly indistinguishable from everyday reality, it makes sense: Just as the price of dog-inspired cryptocurrencies Dogecoin and Shiba Inu coin have exploded, so has demand for—what else?—living, breathing shiba inus. While Dogecoin, the cryptocurrency created from a meme back in 2013 using the image of a shiba inu, enjoyed a burst of popularity this summer, it was recently overtaken in market value by the slightly less creatively named Shiba Inu coin. In classic crypto style, it sounds like a joke but is immensely valuable, with investors pushing up its price almost 800% in the past month, even though a coin still costs a tiny fraction of a cent. At the same time, shiba inu breeders across the U.S. say they’re seeing more business than ever since cryptocurrency trading brought…

Now Crypto Is Barking at Me

Africa Steam Power Heats Up in Kenya

When Kenya opened the Olkaria power plant four decades ago, it was considered more research project than commercial venture. Located in Hell’s Gate National Park, a barren zone of volcanic rock permeated by sulfurous gases and populated mostly by warthogs and zebras, the facility generated electricity using steam rising from deep in the ground. The untested and costly geothermal technology was at best experimental, with the first unit expected to supply power for perhaps 10,000 homes. Today, Olkaria generates more than 50 times that, and the technology is on track to become the backbone of the country’s electricity grid. “Our strategy going forward is geothermal,” says Rebecca Miano, chief executive officer of the state-owned Kenya Electricity Generating Co., or KenGen. For decades, Kenya and surrounding countries focused on hydroelectric power and…

Africa Steam Power Heats Up in Kenya
10 Common Career Tips That Might Be Wrong for You

10 Common Career Tips That Might Be Wrong for You

You’ll get plenty of sound career advice during your lifetime. Much of it will be valuable, but some of it will come at the wrong time or be the opposite of what you need to hear at that moment. Depending on your immediate needs and long-term desires, good career advice can turn out to be wrong for you. Curious to hear other people’s experiences, I asked around and collected ten pieces of career advice that don’t always hold up. 1. GO WHERE THE MONEY IS There are high-paying jobs, and then there are jobs that come with lower base pay but generous compensation packages that lead to more guaranteed money in the long term—and sometimes a happier life. The classic example: any job with a pension. If you collect a full pension for…

What the West Gets Wrong About China

What the West Gets Wrong About China

AUTHORS WHEN WE FIRST traveled to China, in the early 1990s, it was very different from what we see today. Even in Beijing many people wore Mao suits and cycled everywhere; only senior Chinese Communist Party (CCP) officials used cars. In the countryside life retained many of its traditional elements. But over the next 30 years, thanks to policies aimed at developing the economy and increasing capital investment, China emerged as a global power, with the second-largest economy in the world and a burgeoning middle class eager to spend. One thing hasn’t changed, though: Many Western politicians and business executives still don’t get China. Believing, for example, that political freedom would follow the new economic freedoms, they wrongly assumed that China’s internet would be similar to the freewheeling and often politically disruptive…

Black as night

Black as night

Bob’s recent book, Earth-Shattering (Little, Brown and Company, 2019), explores the greatest cataclysms that have shaken the universe. It may seem cruel and unusual that days get shorter the moment summer begins. But this expansion of night is ideal for exploring the shadowy topic of darkness. Actually, the only convenient way to experience full darkness is to lock yourself in a closet. The night certainly isn’t black; even in the most rural regions, the heavens aren’t truly dark. The source of this illumination is the sky itself. The name for the sky’s natural fluore-scence is airglow. It was discovered by Swedish physicist Anders Ångström in 1868, and it’s caused by incoming solar particles exciting our atmosphere’s gases to produce an effect like constant miniature, widespread aurorae. This background glow varies greatly, but can…

Building Israel’s first Shermans

As the future state of Israel approached independence in early 1948, acquisition teams scoured Europe for weapons in preparation for an expected conflict with neighboring Arab states. In addition to patching together a few barely functional Sherman tanks from British scrap yards in Palestine, the Israelis clandestinely purchased a number of better running tanks from depots in Italy. Only three Shermans were ready in time for the War of Independence. These three tanks intrigued me, being the Shermaholic that I am, and one, Tamar, is well-documented in photos. Using those and other documents as reference, I set about building one of the other two Shermans. I figured it would be an interesting project because, like the real thing, the model would be an amalgamation of different Sherman variants. The crew ISRAELI TANKERS wore…

Building Israel’s first Shermans

ANDREW LLOYD WEBBER

…WE LIVED IN A RENTED FLAT When my parents met, Dad had close to zero income. He, Mum, my dear Granny Molly and Mimi, my mother’s pet monkey, shacked up under one roof in a rented flat in London’s South Kensington. …MY FATHER WAS A MILD MAN My paternal grandfather was a keen amateur musician. As a child, Dad got music scholarships all over the shop. At an unprecedentedly youthful age he won a gong to the Royal College of Music. But for all his talent Dad wouldn’t say boo to a goose. He was content in his academic roles such as Professor of Composition at the Royal College of Music. Mum found his lack of ambition infuriating. …MUM’S MONKEY DISLIKED ME When Mum got pregnant, her pet monkey Mimi became horrendously…

ANDREW LLOYD WEBBER

Scammed!

FROM THEWALRUS.CA The email popped up on my screen at 6.45am on December 24 last year. It was from someone I know quite well: the minister of my church. “I need a favour from you,” it read. “Email me as soon as you get my message.” “Ahoy, Ron,” I replied. A friend was in the hospital battling cancer, he said. Could I possibly pick up some iTunes gift cards? “She needs the cards to download her favourite music and videos to boost her confidence on her next phase of surgery.” He’d do it himself, but he was tied up. “I will surely reimburse you as soon as I can.” “OK,” I emailed back. THE SYMPATHIES OF THE VICTIM ARE MANIPULATED BY A NARRATIVE SLEIGHT OF HAND “Thank you so much, Bruce,” my correspondent replied. Then he…

Scammed!

market

MOLTENI OCTAVE Architect-designer Vincent Van Duysen’s inspiration for the design of Octave, a system of modular geometric sofas for Molteni, was the sweeping view of cities offered by wide skyscraper windows. ‘The Octave sofa collection is a subtle study of proportions, creating a graphic interplay of geometric volumes,’ says Van Duysen. ‘The feet – key features – underline the lightness of the sofa, as if it were suspended in air.’ A timely product, Octave is ideal for home-working environments because of its versatility; binding components are designed to support laptops, small printers and tablets. molteni.it DEL SAVIO 1910 OPUS CERTUM Vague, Dot (pictured) and Optic are three variations of Opus Certum, a contemporary take on Palladian flooring created by Treviso-based studio Zanellato/Bortotto for Del Savio 1910. The surfacing was developed by positioning irregular pieces…

market
PLANET B

PLANET B

Space Age 2.0 is an era of exponential technological progress, driven by desire for discovery, domination and the continued survival of humanity in light of the environmental crises taking place on Earth. Just as Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey aestheticized mysteries of the cosmos during the initial space race in the 1960s, the futuristic affordances of Asian space exploration are now informing new visions of emergent commercial worldbuilding. The liminal nature of interstellar existence is encoded into work, hospitality and retail spaces that behave more like spacecraft than physical destinations. Unassuming concrete exteriors conceal remarkable thresholds, transporting visitors from reality to unreality via steel-clad, fluorescent-lit tunnels and celestial glossy white staircases. Secure from external hostilities, intrepid explorers are admitted into open and transparent internal vistas. Infinity mirrors, parametric formations and…

the office of tomorrow

Counterpoising the ‘feel good’ office culture in favour of a more emotion-inclusive atmosphere, LOLA TUAL suggests employing an antipode of the Chief Happiness Officer. You recently graduated from the Design Academy Eindhoven with a project that criticizes the open-plan office – in a playful manner that is. LOLA TUAL: Yes, indeed. I was fascinated by the open-plan office and the way in which its occupants are basically under constant surveillance by their peers. Open-plan offices are meant to improve productivity, but in fact most of us become dysfunctional when we feel like we’re being watched all the time. It results in codified behaviour and can be suffocating. And to make matters worse, there’s no space to escape from it all. Except for… The toilet! So that’s where I focused on in my graduation project.…

the office of tomorrow

What Would Donny Do?

I HAVE ONE SIBLING, A BROTHER NAMED DONNY. Because he’s seven years older, our childhood worlds rarely overlapped. When he was a high school senior, preoccupied with girls and Guns N’ Roses, I was in the fourth grade, building Lego pirate ships and mastering Super Mario Bros. 2. I was the good student; I liked school and got mostly A’s. Donny was the music guy, the fashion guy, the car guy. He drove an orange ’74 MG. The one time he helped me with homework, I was sixteen and reading The Great Gatsby. My American Lit teacher had assigned us a short paper on a Jazz Age–related topic of our choosing. The topic Donny suggested: the martini. You might say I was Donny’s student. He taught me to drive stick. Made me…

What Would Donny Do?
The quarantine bookshelf

The quarantine bookshelf

A year into the pandemic, readers know more than ever: the act of picking up a book can be transformative. When lockdown orders swept the U.S. beginning in March 2020, many turned to books to help escape—or confront—the unknown. Some readers favored light distraction, while others flocked to narratives that tackled pandemics head-on. Virtual book clubs kept readers connected, and rallying cries to support independent bookstores echoed around the Internet. While we were confined to our homes, books kept us going and allowed us to discover new worlds without going anywhere. To reflect on a year of reading in isolation, TIME asked nine fan-favorite authors to share the books that have brightened their days, provoked them or simply helped carry them through. CHARLES YU The National Book Award–winning author of Interior Chinatown…

Leaf It to Us

Chorizo-and-Mustard-Greens Tacos 1 tablespoon thinly sliced garlic (from 2 cloves)3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, divided1 bunch mustard greens, stemmed and roughly chopped (6 cups)Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper12 ounces Mexican chorizo, casings removed½ cup finely chopped white onion, divided¼ cup finely chopped fresh cilantro stems, plus ¼ cup chopped leaves¼ cup salsa verde, such as Frontera, plus more for serving12 6-inch corn tortillasSour cream and sliced pickled jalapeños, for serving 1. In a large skillet, cook garlic in 1 tablespoon oil over medium-high heat until sizzling. Add greens; season with salt and cook until just wilted. Transfer to a plate. Add remaining 2 tablespoons oil, chorizo, ¼ cup onion, and cilantro stems to skillet; season with salt and pepper. Cook, breaking up chorizo with the back of a spoon, until cooked…

Leaf It to Us

Your guide to making the days easier and the journey sweeter

Street Cred Make your birthday kid’s eyes light up even before they see what’s inside the box. Start by packaging the gift in solid-colored paper. Then crisscross two strips of black chalkboard tape or duct tape around the present to make it look like two intersecting roads. Draw lanes with a white-paint pen, and pop a car or two on top (keep them in place with a bit of heavy-duty double-sided tape). Now you’ve got something wheely cool for the younger set. / IF YOU ASK ME / “How young is too young—and how old is too old—to trick-or-treat?”Three parents, no wrong answers “Too old? Easy. Thirteen. Thirteen-year-olds can dress up. Celebrate. Have a little backyard party. But when I see a teenager dressed up next to a 6-year-old at my door, both asking…

Your guide to making the days easier and the journey sweeter
How to keep kids safe

How to keep kids safe

With the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine newly given emergency-use authorization for children 5 to 11, many parents are asking the question: Should we vaccinate our kids? Many of them may have already made up their mind. Some of those arguing against vaccinating kids make the case that COVID-19 typically does not cause severe illness among children with healthy immune systems. Thankfully, purely as a percentage of total cases, it does hold true. To date, around 6 million children in the U.S. have contracted this coronavirus, which has led to more than 65,000 hospitalizations and 897 deaths. These numbers pale in comparison to the over 3 million hospitalizations among U.S. adults, and a staggering 754,000 deaths. The low rates of complications and severe illness from COVID-19 in children are the exact data needed to…

Hands On With the OnePlus Watch: Lots of Promise for Just $159

Hands On With the OnePlus Watch: Lots of Promise for Just $159

I’ll admit, I was pretty skeptical before unboxing the first smartwatch from OnePlus, aptly named the OnePlus Watch. At $159, it’s less than half the price of our Editors’ Choice winner, the Apple Watch Series 6 (which starts at $399). And while it doesn’t work with iPhones, it offers many of the same features as Apple’s market-leading wearable. So far, my skepticism appears to have been unfounded. The OnePlus Watch offers a large color touch screen, built-in GPS, 2GB of storage, a 402mAh battery that promises two weeks of power, and the ability to make and receive calls. It also has plenty of health and fitness features, including support for more than 110 workout types, automatic workout detection for jogging and running, rapid-heart-rate alerts, guided breathing exercises, stress detection, and the…

FIXING FORENSICS

FIXING FORENSICS

Statistics research doesn’t usually require weapons. But to develop their latest algorithm, Iowa State University statisticians Alicia Carriquiry and Heike Hofmann needed thousands of bullets fired from a small collection of handguns. So they put the firepower in their own hands, and hit the range. criteria that distinguish science from speculation. That so-called sorcery has destroyed lives. The For nearly a year, Carriquiry and Hofmann, supervised by sheriff’s deputies, unloaded round after round into a tube with Kevlar fibers. After each shot, they fished out the bullet and tucked it in a plastic baggie labeled with critical data: gun, barrel, shot number. “If you had asked me a few years ago whether I was going to be doing this type of data collection, I would have said, ‘You’re crazy,’” says Carriquiry. It’s not…

Cool Ranch

IT WAS THE EARLY DAYS of the pandemic when Lauren Malloy’s father, a Vermont physician, called his daughter in California to urge her and her husband, Keith, to stock up on supplies. “Like any loving dad, he was worried about us,” says Lauren, who had just given birth to the couple’s third child, Clay. “I said, ‘Dad, remember where we live? We’re better prepared than most!’” Indeed, the Malloys, who call four acres in bucolic Santa Barbara County home, were already remarkably self-sufficient. They had a cow (and therefore fresh milk on tap), chickens (for eggs and the occasional roaster), pigs (more meat), and a vegetable garden teeming with kale, cabbages, herbs, and much more. And in the kitchen, Lauren even had a soon-to-be-coveted quarantine staple: a trusty sourdough starter. “If…

Cool Ranch

New BOHEMIA

THE MOOD ANYTHING GOES ONCE THE SUN IS OUT, SO HAVE FUN CLASHING PRINTS AND MAXING OUT ON YOUR ACCESSORIES THE KEY PIECE A GLITTERING JEWEL-TONED TOP ADDS AN ELEMENT OF GLAM TO POOLSIDE PATTERNS THE KEY PIECE YOU CAN’T GO WRONG WITH A ROOMY BASKET BAG – ESPECIALLY WHEN IT COMES DIPPED IN WARM SUNSET SHADES THE ACCENTS TAKE A MORE-IS-MORE APPROACH TO YOUR LAYERING BY STACKING ACID-BRIGHT COLOURS AND UPBEAT PATTERNS THE STAPLE THEY’RE NOT JUST FOR FESTIVAL SEASON – PATTERNED BUCKET HATS LOOK JUST AS GOOD ON THE BEACH THE PALETTTE THE SHADES OF SUMMER? A PALETTE OF JUICY CITRUS TONES – ZESTY ORANGE, BOLD GRAPEFRUIT, THE LIST GOES ON THE KEY PIECE WORN OVER A BIKINI, AN ORNATE CROP TOP TAKES YOU FROM SUN-WORSHIP TO SUNDOWNERS IN A MATTER OF SECONDS THE TIP LEAVE MINIMALISM ON THE SHORE AND GO BOLD…

New BOHEMIA

CONTRIBUTORS

BOO GEORGE The Irish photographer began snapping at a very young age, after his father gifted him a camera. He cut his teeth spending nine months in the North Sea, taking pictures of fisherman and won ‘The Shot’, a global photography talent search in 2013, after which he turned his lens on innumerable celebrities such as Emma Watson and Sienna Miller. This month, he shoots Keira Knightley for his first Bazaar UK cover. What does family mean to you? ‘I love them all, my mother and wife especially. I speak on the phone to my mum every day; wife not so much…’ The one piece of advice you would give your children ‘Work hard, play harder, but save for a rainy day.’ You know it’s summer when… ‘you launch the boat for dropping lobster…

CONTRIBUTORS
THE COLLECTIONS

THE COLLECTIONS

outside the box (office)

outside the box (office)

A HUSH SETTLES as the lights fade to black. There’s a moment of charged silence as the audience sits at attention, suspended between two worlds. Then the music swells, the opening sequence rolls, and a group of strangers hurtles headlong into a story. “Watching a movie is like riding a roller coaster,” says Holly Crane, co-owner of Bookhouse Cinema in Joplin, Missouri. “You’re all feeling the highs, the lows, the emotions. My favorite thing is to sit by the door and hear everybody laughing together. Seeing movies is important, but it’s even more important to look at someone’s face and see that they’re affected by the same thing I am.” That shared experience of taking an immersive silver screen journey with other people feels extra magical—even healing—after a year of watching films…

The Inflation Guy Is Feeling Pumped

Michael Ashton, who styles himself “Inflation Guy” on Twitter, has been preparing for this moment for almost 20 years. In the early 2000s, he was a derivatives trader at Barclays Capital in New York when he was tapped to build a business around inflation swaps, contracts that let traders bet on a rise in consumer prices. Ashton says he was a “good enough” trader—the real job was to build a market by being “an evangelist for the product.” He became one even though, until recently, he expected inflation to be low and stable. Correctly so: In recent years, the U.S. consumer price index has often grown by less than 2% annually. Ashton says his measured outlook irritated his bosses at Barclays, who viewed it as an impediment to drumming up business.…

The Inflation Guy Is Feeling Pumped
Your Facebook Friend Has Some ~Thoughts~ to Share About Your Covid Vaccine

Your Facebook Friend Has Some ~Thoughts~ to Share About Your Covid Vaccine

Kaleese Williams had mostly stayed off Facebook and Instagram before Covid-19 hit. But during the lock-down, the 37-year-old was stuck on her north Texas farm with her husband, their 3-year-old, and their chickens and goats. She was also cut off from a source of income. Williams sells essential oils for a multilevel marketing company in Utah called Young Living. She’d normally set up booths at conferences and other events, making a little money while socializing with passersby. “Quarantine is not a whole lot of fun,” Williams says. “So I started thinking, ‘What would be so wrong with me sharing on social media?’ ” Her plan was to take her essential oils business on Instagram, where she could sell to people she met there. Williams decided to splurge on an online course…

Bracing for Life After Coal

Bracing for Life After Coal

Gerald Lucas, 69, is a former coal miner and federal mine inspector who now gives public tours underground at the Beckley, W.Va., Exhibition Coal Mine, which ceased operations in 1953. He describes it as a fun job that allows him to share his decades of experience with visitors. A career change such as his is becoming more common among West Virginians as the rural state of 1.8 million moves toward a new economy in which coal is no longer king. West Virginia lawmakers also occupy key perches on Capitol Hill as President Joe Biden introduces a sweeping infrastructure and climate package—the $2.25 trillion American Jobs Plan—and pledges to revitalize coal country. Senator Joe Manchin, a conservative Democrat, is a crucial swing vote in the 50-50 Senate and chairs the Committee on Energy…

Winning a Wager on U.S. Sports Betting

Greg Bunnell has played fantasy football since he was a teenager. So when Indiana legalized sports betting two years ago, the 39-year-old project manager seamlessly switched from plotting his next player transfer to setting himself up to bet—all within the FanDuel app. Bunnell, who says he plans to wager as much as $100 a weekend, is one of a record 45 million Americans expected to legally bet on professional football this season, a 36% increase from last year. Thirty states are set to allow such wagering by the Super Bowl’s coin toss in February, following a U.S. Supreme Court decision three years ago to strike down a federal ban on sports betting. FanDuel Group Inc. has emerged as the top business in this new market, nabbing a 42% share of U.S.…

Winning a Wager on U.S. Sports Betting

Target, The Police, And the Damage Done

Before police Sergeant Alice White assigns officers to work off duty at the East Lake Street Target store in South Minneapolis, they get what Target calls values training. Included are specific instructions for greeting customers with a smile and a friendly hello. It’s an unusual script for Minneapolis cops, who are known for adopting a more intimidating posture. That’s certainly been the case at some Targets. But in the wake of the murder of George Floyd in May 2020 by a Minneapolis policeman, Target Corp. is trying to recalibrate. The 127,000-square-foot store on East Lake Street sits about 2 miles from the corner where Floyd was killed, and it was among the first buildings ransacked after the murder sparked an uprising across Minneapolis. The scene that night is etched in the…

Target, The Police, And the Damage Done
The Political Perils of the Carless City

The Political Perils of the Carless City

On Milan’s long list of pandemic-era public initiatives, remodeling Piazza Sicilia is a strange one to get worked up about. The city built the tiny park in just a few weeks last autumn, at an estimated cost of €20,000 ($23,600). The strip of land had been a right-turn lane at the intersection of busy Via Sardegna and four residential streets, jammed every morning with honking commuters and every afternoon with parents double-parked to pick up their kids from school. Now, with cars forced to divert around the piazza, one of Milan’s myriad traffic nightmares has become a place where children play soccer, food delivery riders perch on their bikes awaiting calls, and residents of nearby apartment blocks face off at the pingpong table. But people are worked up. Covidera urban planning…

Macron’s Mess

The French like to say they are ungovernable, invoking Charles de Gaulle’s exasperated (and likely apocryphal) comment about the difficulty of managing a country with 246 different cheeses. Emmanuel Macron, too, has called the French obstinately opposed to change. Both presidents, former and current, might appear to be right given the images of the Bordeaux City Hall gate that was torched on March 23 or the cancellation of King Charles III’s visit over worries about violent protests coinciding with his stay in Paris. In truth, the French aren’t more averse to change than most. But when they contest a particular policy such as Macron’s plan to raise the retirement age to 64, opponents have only one way to really make a difference, which is to head to the streets. And unfortunately, one…

Macron’s Mess

He’s Making Apple the Bad Guy

Horacio Gutierrez made his name in U.S. corporate law two decades ago defending Microsoft Corp. against charges of anticompetitive behavior in the first major antitrust case of the internet age. As the tech industry is once again dominated by talk of monopolies, Gutierrez, now Spotify Technology SA’s chief legal officer, has switched sides. For the past five years he’s led Spotify’s campaign against Apple Inc., one of a series of antitrust actions with the potential to make an even greater impact than the Microsoft litigation. While the shift in public opinion about the tech industry in recent years has been stunning by any measure, the change in the perception of Apple may be the most improbable. When Gutierrez started accusing the company of anticompetitive behavior in 2016, many public officials had…

He’s Making Apple the Bad Guy

British Watches Take Off

Although Switzerland reigns supreme in watchmaking, that hasn’t always been the case. “In the 17th and 18th centuries, pretty much every concept that you find in a modern Swiss watch was developed primarily in England,” says watchmaker Robert Loomes, chairman of the British Horological Institute. Even the Swiss lever escapement—which makes the ticking sound in mechanical watches and clocks—isn’t Swiss: It was created in London around 1750 by Thomas Mudge. “There were some extraordinary watchmakers who rivaled the likes of Patek Philippe,” Loomes says. “Firms like Players of Coventry made the most extraordinary, complicated, beautiful, and expensive watches.” So what happened to British watchmaking? World War I and II. Timepiece makers joined the army, and many studios were bombed during the Blitz. “When those workshops were destroyed in the Second World War, very…

British Watches Take Off
Best Friends Forever

Best Friends Forever

As the tech industry has matured, people in Silicon Valley have become obsessed with developing ways to stop the human aging process. It started with really long bike rides and intermittent fasting, but some venture capitalists and startup employees have moved on to taking dozens of pills every morning, or injecting stem cells into their brain, or infusing their body with the blood of the young and virile. This brand of life-extension experimentation remains fringe, probably because it’s weird and there’s not a ton of evidence any of it works. But Celine Halioua has a plan to take the field mainstream, and it involves dogs. Her startup, Cellular Longevity Inc., is developing treatments that extend the life span of dogs while also making them more active in their later years. Should…

Wall Street Cash Buoys DeSantis

Wall Street Cash Buoys DeSantis

When it comes to the likely Republican presidential candidates in 2024, Wall Street’s money is on Florida Governor Ron DeSantis—not former President Donald Trump, who’s been teasing another run at the White House. A fifth of the $55 million that DeSantis has raised this year came from hedge fund billionaires, private equity bankers, investment managers, and other finance industry donors. Trump, who got less than 2% of his 2020 reelection funds from Wall Street, has raised the bulk of his $100 million war chest from small-dollar donors. “Ron DeSantis is my favorite man,” says Thomas Peterffy, 77, the billionaire chairman of Greenwich, Conn.-based Interactive Brokers, who gave $250,000 to DeSantis’s political action committee in April. Although he donated hundreds of thousands to Trump in 2016 and 2017, he says he would rather…

Buyout Funds Want To Save the Planet

Buyout Funds Want To Save the Planet

Decades after the leveraged-buyout industry rebranded itself as private equity, private equity is rebranding as the next big thing in green and socially minded money management. While some see this as a way to put a kinder, gentler face on a famously aggressive business, investors have been pouring billions of dollars into funds that aim for a positive impact beyond financial return. A record 132 “impact” funds have started this year, according to data from Preqin, which tracks the industry. The category has amassed $20 billion since 2015, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Impact funds often target investments in renewable energy, health care, affordable housing, or other socially important industries. More broadly, many clients want firms to consider ESG criteria, the industry shorthand for a company’s environmental, social, and governance practices.…

11 Things I Never Knew About Disney World Until I Worked There

In the 1960s, Walt Disney had a dream: He’d turn a San Francisco-size swath of swampland and orange groves in central Florida into a version of utopia where childhood fantasies could spring to life. The Magic Kingdom opened on Oct. 1, 1971—50 years ago last week—beginning a fairy tale that’s panned out just as intended. Over the decades, Walt Disney World has lured millions of pilgrims to a place where dreams come true, not just for visitors but for employees, too. In fact, there are no fans more devout than the people working at Disney’s four theme parks. Called “cast members,” they are ambassadors of happiness who delight in perpetuating a mythology that never breaks the fourth wall of the Cinderella Castle. In their minds, Tinkerbell is real, there are actual…

11 Things I Never Knew About Disney World Until I Worked There

TAKE TWO

When Rihanna ascended the grand staircase at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume Institute’s 2018 exhibition, Heavenly Bodies, channelling the full Catholic panoply in a coruscating pearl- and crystal-encrusted minidress with full-skirted robe designed by John Galliano for Maison Margiela Artisanal – topped off with a papal mitre fashioned by Stephen Jones – she showed, as American Vogue noted at the time, “why she continues to inspire the fashion faithful”. Designer Tomo Koizumi, a Galliano admirer since the age of 14, when he first saw the designer’s work for Dior, recalls his delighted surprise at Rihanna’s appearance – “It was a very sophisticated look that defied my expectations in a good way,” he remembers – so he was overwhelmed when Galliano donated the outfit’s original toile for a Vogue-sponsored collaborative…

TAKE TWO

When Your Business Needs a Second Growth Engine

in a series of forums we held recently with chief executives of large companies around the world, we uncovered a preoccupation with obsolescence and renewal. When we surveyed them, 65% of the CEOs predicted that in five to seven years their firms’ main competitors would be different from their main competitors today, and 63% said that new competitors with new business models would pose a major threat to their firms’ core business. The CEOs projected that in the next decade 40% of the value their companies created would come from entering new markets and launching new business models. Clearly, the business landscape feels highly unstable to them—which is understandable, given that new technologies continue to upend industries and wipe out businesses at a remarkable rate. The good news is that there…

When Your Business Needs a Second Growth Engine
SKY THIS MONTH

SKY THIS MONTH

JANUARY 2023 Long winter nights Early winter sunsets offer nice evening views of the planets, starting with Mercury and Venus. Mercury quickly drops away, only to reappear in the morning sky before the end of the month. Venus is dazzling in the west and later in the month has a close encounter with Saturn, a stunning sight in small telescopes. Mars and Jupiter dominate the evening sky and the Red Planet is occulted by the Moon for observers in the southern U.S. Uranus and Neptune wander among fainter stars but are easy targets for binoculars or small scopes. Let’s begin on the evening of Jan. 1. Mercury is the first planet to set, within an hour of the Sun. Look with binoculars 6° due west of Venus 20 minutes after sunset for magnitude…

Melodies Straight From The Heart

Melodies Straight From The Heart

IN 1955, AT AGE 12, I BECAME obsessed with the idea of recording an album for our parents for Christmas. My sister, aged nine, brother, ten, and myself would sing our favourite songs from the era – an unusual undertaking for a child in those days. My sister and I used to take our time washing the dishes so we could sing our hearts out to the latest songs by Doris Day, Pat Boone, Rosemary Clooney and Vera Lynn. There were also a few child stars at the time, like Shirley Temple and Judy Garland, who gave us inspiration. We all loved the movie Hans Christian Andersen starring Danny Kaye, with songs The Inch Worm, The Ugly Duckling and The King’s New Clothes. I remember feeling the romance and sadness of Hans…

LIFE’S LIKE THAT

NOVEMBER 1984 ◆ After my 20-year marriage ended in divorce, I went to live with my daughter and son-in-law. They encouraged me to start dating and, after a few months, I accepted a dinner engagement with an attractive man I had met at a party. Nervous about my ‘first date’, I told my daughter I would be home no later than midnight. When I tiptoed in at 3am, this note was on my bedroom door: “Mum, in the future if you’re going to be late, I expect you to let us know where you are, who you’re with and a phone number where you can be reached. P.S. You’re grounded until further notice!” PHYLLIS J. PATTERSON ◆ My husband’s office was being relocated and he had to spend long hours at work, often staying…

LIFE’S LIKE THAT

1 Can jewellery retail court Gen Z?

We’re in the midst of a major rebranding of legacy jewellers, as it becomes clear that the classic luxury cues these houses relied on for decades are losing relevance for Generation Z. Along with millennials, these youngsters are predicted to garner more than 60 per cent of the luxury market by 2025, according to Boston Consulting Group. Luxury jewellery veteran Tiffany & Co has recognized this with a slew of initiatives to attract a younger customer base. Its latest campaign, Not Your Mother’s Tiffany, is accompanied by a pop-culture partnership with Beyonce and Jay-Z. The signing of 18-year-old British tennis champion Emma Raducanu as its latest brand ambassador shows how seriously the jeweller is taking its foray into youth culture. While these long-awaited shifts in brand marketing represent progress for the…

1 Can jewellery retail court Gen Z?

What I’ve Learned

MÓNICA PONCE DE LEÓN: I grew up in Venezuela, surrounded by cutting-edge public buildings that were tied to community identity. We Venezuelans knew the names of the architects who designed them, that they were important, that they were creating a language of expression that was uniquely ours. A language that responded to our climate, our customs, our history. We all knew the name Carlos Raúl Villanueva, and that his design for the public Central University in Caracas was unequivocally Venezuelan. Discussing materials and construction techniques – new and old – was part of our culture. During career day in high school, I saw a recent graduate’s presentation about architecture as a profession. He showed us images of Banco Metropolitano by José Miguel Galia, a tiny building in Sabana Grande, one of…

What I’ve Learned

market

VIBIA GHOST Made of handblown triplex opal glass, Arik Levy’s Ghost line for Vibia is a set that brings a sense of grandness to entryways and living areas. The Ghost table lamp combines two stacked curved forms cinched by a black band, which functions as a handtouch dimmer – its light can also be programmed to emanate a white, burgundy or amber hue. Hung from barely visible cables, the large pendant has a sculptural presence. vibia.com DESALTO FOURMORE The moniker of Gordon Guillaumer’s Desalto dining table Fourmore comes from the ability to host ‘four more’ guests with its extension. Its lacquered steel frame holds up a tabletop in light or dark oak veneered wood that is joined with a seamless sliding system on aluminium tracks. Guillaumer’s design comes in two sizes – 180 (250)…

market
3 How long until you can download a Ducasse?

3 How long until you can download a Ducasse?

Back in January, while surveying this year’s Consumer Electronics Show (CES), we suggested that 2020 had renewed momentum behind the consumer robotics industry. Last year, with its emphasis on hygiene and hands off service, saw robots emerging into many aspects of public life, from patrolling parks to disinfecting transport terminals. In that context, CES’s perennial parade of autonomous helpers suddenly didn’t look as far-fetched as at previous fairs. About a month later, a Pew Research survey on what the ‘new normal’ might look like by the middle of the decade reconfirmed this hunch. Authorities from the likes of IBM and Carnegie Mellon University predicted that we would see a rise in domestic robots. Paul Jones, professor emeritus at the University of North Carolina, was more specific, arguing that the robot revolution…