New Yorker: Fiction
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A monthly reading and conversation with the New Yorker fiction editor Deborah Treisman: Jeffrey Eugenides reads Harold Brodkey's "Spring Fugue"; Aleksandar Hemon discusses Bernard Malamud's "A Summer's Reading"; Mary Gaitskill reads Vladimir Nabokov's "Symbols and Signs"; Hilton Als discusses Jean Stafford and her story "Children Are Bored on Sunday"; T. Coraghessan Boyle reads Tobias Wolff's "Bullet in the Brain"; E. L. Doctorow reads John O'Hara's short story "Graven Image"; Jhumpa Lahiri reads the short story "A Day," by William Trevor; Antonya Nelson reads Mavis Gallant's short story "When We Were Nearly Young"; Paul Theroux reads Jorge Luis Borges's short story "The Gospel According to Mark"; Nell Freudenberger discusses Grace Paley's short story "Somewhere Else"; George Saunders reads Isaac Babel's "You Must Know Everything"; Donald Antrim reads Donald Barthelme's "I Bought a Little City"; Edwidge Danticat discusses Junot Diaz's "How to Date a Brown Girl (Black Girl, White Girl, or Halfie)"; Richard Ford reads John Cheever's "Reunion."<img src="http://feeds.newyorker.com/rss_views/fiction_podcast.gif">
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Head Cold from New Yorker: Fiction on August 07, 2008 18 views / likes
Jeffrey Eugenides reads Harold Brodkey's short story "Spring Fugue," and discusses it with The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman.
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A List of Books from New Yorker: Fiction on July 09, 2008 27 views / likes
Aleksandar Hemon discusses Bernard Malamud's short story "A Summer's Reading" with The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman.
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Sign Language from New Yorker: Fiction on June 02, 2008 57 views / likes
Mary Gaitskill reads "Symbols and Signs," Vladimir Nabokov's first story published in The New Yorker, and discusses it with fiction editor Deborah Treisman.
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Invalid Souls from New Yorker: Fiction on May 05, 2008 33 views / likes
Invalid Souls: Hilton Als discusses Jean Stafford and her story "Children Are Bored on Sunday" with The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman. Reading by Eliza Foss.
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This Is It from New Yorker: Fiction on April 09, 2008 63 views / likes
Louise Erdrich reads Lorrie Moores short story "Dance in America" and discusses Moore with The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman.
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This Is It from New Yorker: Fiction on April 09, 2008 33 views / likes
Louise Erdrich reads Lorrie Moores short story "Dance in America" and discusses Moore with The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman.
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The Wood Duck from New Yorker: Fiction on March 03, 2008 27 views / likes
Jonathan Lethem reads James Thurber's short story "The Wood Duck" and discusses Thurber with The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman.
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One with a Bullet from New Yorker: Fiction on February 11, 2008 33 views / likes
T. Coraghessan Boyle reads Tobias Wolff's "Bullet in the Brain" and discusses Wolff with The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman.
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Class Act from New Yorker: Fiction on January 07, 2008 42 views / likes
E. L. Doctorow reads John O'Hara's short story "Graven Image" and discusses O'Hara with The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman.
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Open Secrets from New Yorker: Fiction on December 10, 2007 45 views / likes
Jhumpa Lahiri reads the short story "A Day," by William Trevor, and discusses it with The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Triesman
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Waiting from New Yorker: Fiction on November 05, 2007 51 views / likes
Antonya Nelson reads Mavis Gallant's short story "When We Were Nearly Young" and discusses Gallant with The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman.
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Chapter and Verse from New Yorker: Fiction on October 08, 2007 45 views / likes
Paul Theroux reads Jorge Luis Borges's short story "The Gospel According to Mark" and discusses Borges with The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman. "The Gospel According to Mark" was published in The New Yorker on October 23, 1971.
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Talking Pictures from New Yorker: Fiction on September 10, 2007 51 views / likes
Nell Freudenberger discusses Grace Paley's short story "Somewhere Else" with The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman. The podcast includes a reading of the story by Barbara Rosenblatt. "Somewhere Else" was published in The New Yorker on October 23, 1978.
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Listen and Learn from New Yorker: Fiction on August 06, 2007 45 views / likes
George Saunders reads Isaac Babel's short story "You Must Know Everything" and discusses it with The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman.
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Urban Planning from New Yorker: Fiction on July 09, 2007 54 views / likes
Donald Antrim reads Donald Barthelme's 1974 short story "I Bought a Little City" and discusses it with The New Yorker's fiction editor, Deborah Treisman.
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New Yorker: Naked Campaign
Videos of New Yorker illustrator Steve Brodner caricaturing the Presidential candidates, directed by Gail Levin, with animation by Asterisk and camera by Ben Shapiro: Drawing Obama the pragmatist and an idealistic supporter; Steve Brodner maps McCain's global gaffes; Painting the pivotal states in the electoral college; Steve Brodner on candidate duplicity; Steve Brodner makes egg salad; Steve Brodner toasts Hillary Clinton; What does campaign rhetoric have to do with the average American voter?; John McCain's war story; The family ties that connect Obama and Clinton to George W. Bush, Celine Dion, Brad Pitt, and Angelina Jolie; The candidates and their powerful but troublesome ties: Geraldine Ferraro, the Rev. John Hagee, and Jeremiah Wright; Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and the Democratic nomination hanging in the balance; Thinking about Hillary Clinton's combativeness; Sizing up the winners of Super Tuesday; Surveying the landscape of the Republican vote in California; Sketching the recent battle between the Presidential heavyweights Bill Clinton and Ronald Reagan; Exploring the relationship between Senators Obama and Clinton; Discussing the religious undertones of the race; Drawing Mitt Romney; Drawing Barack Obama; Drawing Rudy Giuliani; Drawing Hillary Clinton; Drawing John McCain; Drawing Mike Huckabee. img src= http://feeds.newyorker.com/rss_views/naked_campaign.gif
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New Yorker: Campaign Trail
A weekly discussion about the Presidential race and developments in Washington, hosted by The New Yorker's executive editor, Dorothy Wickenden, and featuring the magazine's Washington correspondent, Ryan Lizza, and other contributors. August 20: David Remnick, Hendrik Hertzberg, and George Packer talk about Obama, McCain, and the Democratic Convention. August 7: Dorothy Wickenden, Hendrik Hertzberg, and Ryan Lizza discuss McCain's recent negative turn and the debate over energy independence. July 25: David Remnick, Hendrik Hertzberg, Ryan Lizza, and George Packer on Obama and the future of Iraq. July 18: John Cassidy and Ryan Lizza on the candidates' positions. July 11: Barack Obama, John McCain, and the press' obsession with flip-flopping. June 26: The candidates' stances on energy and the environment. June 12: The economic positions of Barack Obama and John McCain. June 5: The end of Hillary Clinton's run, and the opening shots of the general election campaign. May 22: Whether Hillary Clinton will give in before the convention, and Barack Obama's foreign policy. May 15: McCain's declaration of independence, and Obamas vulnerability to racism. May 8: Where Hillary Clinton's campaign went wrong, and whether McCain or Obama is the more convincing populist. April 29: Reverend Jeremiah Wright, Bill Clinton, and the role of race. April 17: McCarthyism in the Philadelphia debate, Hillary's tenacity, and doubts about McCain's stance on trade. April 2: Obama's Pennsylvania makeover, Clinton's whoppers, and McCain's patriotic posturing. March 21: George Packer and Dorothy Wickenden discuss Barack Obama's speech on race and his strategy to attack McCain on Iraq and the economy. March 7: The negative turn in the Democratic primary, how Obama and Clinton might fare against McCain, and the role of money in the general election. February 28: How the probable nominees look at foreign policy. February 20: Hillary Clinton's dwindling chances, the fundamental differences between McCain and Obama, and Michelle Obama's first big gaffe. February 6: The Super Tuesday results, the end (or not) of the Republican primary, and the long Democratic contest ahead. February 1: The endorsements, debates, and departures leading up to Super Tuesday. January 22: Clinton and Obama take the gloves off again, and the perils of standing on principle. January 16: The shifting Republican base and the new mood of the Democratic race. January 9: The surprising New Hampshire primaries, what carried Hillary to victory, and John McCain's chances of winning the general election. January 4: The Iowa caucuses, the speeches that followed, and the possibility of a Bloomberg candidacy. December 20: The Bill Clinton question, the John Edwards surge, and the fight over how best to change America. December 14: What's wrong with the Republicans, and are the Democrats are born to lose? December 4: Highlights from recent debates, and the limitations of the political press. November 28: Mike Huckabee's humor, religion, and temperament, and recent criticisms of Hillary Clinton. November 20: Approaches to flip-flopping, and the role of religion in the Republican primary. img src= http://feeds.newyorker.com/rss_views/campaign_trail.gif
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New Yorker: Conference Video
Interviews, presentations, and panels from Stories from the Near Future, the New Yorker Conference held on May 8-9, 2008: Michael Novogratz talks with Nick Paumgarten about the long-term effects of a shifting economy; Fareed Zakaria and David Remnick discuss democracy, modernity, and what it means to be a superpower; Peter Gelb talks with Alex Ross about the appeal of opera in modern culture; Sheila Nevins and Jeffrey Toobin discuss the art of documentary filmmaking; Scott Hemphill and Kal Raustiala talk with James Surowiecki about the effect pirated goods have on the fashion industry; New York City Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly discusses anti-terrorism tactics; Steve Stoute talks with Kelefa Sanneh about marketing to a new generation of consumers; Jane McGonigal talks with Daniel Zalewski about alternate-reality gaming; Robert Mankoff, the cartoon editor of The New Yorker, discusses the concept of humor throughout history; Paco Underhill talks with Malcolm Gladwell about how to remake air travel for the twenty-first century; Francesco Vezzoli talks with Michael Specter about cinema, kitsch, celebrity, and democracy; Amy Smith talks with Rebecca Mead about applying new technology in the developing world; Bill Buford talks with the chefs David Chang, Daniel Humm, and Marc Taxiera about their influences and the future of the culinary world; David Adjaye talks with Thelma Golden about architecture in contemporary culture and what buildings can be in the twenty-first century; Duncan Sheik talks with Susan Morrison about Spring Awakening and reinventing the American musical; Yoky Matsuoka, the director of the neurobotics laboratory at the University of Washington, discusses how brain signals can control prosthetic limbs, and other advances in the hybrid field of neuroscience and robotics; Jane Mayer talks with Eric Haseltine, the former chief technology officer of the U.S. intelligence community; James Surowiecki discusses the future of the labor movement with Andy Stern, the president of the Service Employees International Union; Malcolm Gladwell on the challenge of hiring in the modern world; San Francisco mayor Gavin Newsom talks with Dana Goodyear on what it means to be green in politics and in the world; Linda Avey and Anne Wojcicki talk with Michael Specter on the future of genetics; Rahm Emanuel talks to Ryan Lizza about the Democratic primaries, Hillary Clinton's future, and what the first hundred days of the Obama Administration might look like. Also, interviews, presentations, and panels from the 2007 New Yorker Conference. img src= http://www.newyorker.com/rss_views/conference_video.gif
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