Can Claressa Shields Remake Women’s Boxing? : The New Yorker

Shields’s performance in Spokane was so assured that it was easy to forget she was sixteen years old and the Olympic trials were only her second tournament in the adult division...
View Original Article on newyorker.com
Shared by 1 person
More from this website
Unburied: Tamerlan Tsarnaev and the Lessons of Greek Tragedy : The New Yorker (newyorker.com)
The odyssey of Tsarnaev’s corpse would be familiar territory to anyone even casually acquainted with the Greek classics…
Google Maps, Google Plus, Cards, and the Evolution of the Company's Design. : The New Yorker (newyorker.com)
As described to me at the Google I/O conference, a new design, called cards, is set to become one of the dominant ways Google presents information to users.
Sasha Frere-Jones: Daft Punk’s Puzzling New Album : The New Yorker (newyorker.com)
Daft Punk’s fourth studio album, “Random Access Memories,” is an attempt to make the kind of disco record that they sampled so heavily for “Discovery,” in 2011. As such, it serves as a tribute to those who came before them and as a direct rebuke to muc...
Buried Treasure : The New Yorker (newyorker.com)
Online version of the weekly magazine, with current articles, cartoons, blogs, audio, video, slide shows, an archive of articles and abstracts back to 1925
A Quantum Leap in Computing? : The New Yorker (newyorker.com)
Before you rush out to buy your own quantum computer, at least three caveats are in order.
What Steven Spielberg's Lincoln Got Wrong, and What It Got Right : The New Yorker (newyorker.com)
I’ve never looked forward to a movie more eagerly as I looked forward to “Lincoln.” I was disappointed the first time, and I’ll try to explain why. Then I’ll try to explain why I went to see it again, and why I reacted somewhat differently the second ...
H.P.P.D.: A Trip That Doesn't End : The New Yorker (newyorker.com)
Psychedelic lore is littered with cautionary tales. Should reports of hallucinogen persisting perception disorder count among them?
Susan Orlean: The Power of Walking While Working : The New Yorker (newyorker.com)
Working while walking on a treadmill may seem kooky, but Dr. James Levine is determined to make it mainstream. He tested the desks with a group of more than three hundred volunteers at the Mayo Clinic. He then partnered with Steelcase, the office-furni...
Scratching an itch through the scalp to the brain : The New Yorker (newyorker.com)
The Serious Superficiality of The Great Gatsby : The New Yorker (newyorker.com)
Baz Luhrmann’s “The Great Gatsby” is lurid, shallow, glamorous, trashy, tasteless, seductive, sentimental, aloof, and artificial. It’s an excellent adaptation, in other words, of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s melodramatic American classic. Luhrmann, as expecte...
"The Great Gatsby" Reviewed : The New Yorker (newyorker.com)
It would be fun not to know that Baz Luhrmann’s new movie is an adaptation, not to have read the book that it’s an adaptation of, not to bother comparing the movie to its source or evaluating its fidelity...
