| A Reporter at Large How a Tycoon Linked to Chinese Intelligence Became a Darling of Trump RepublicansGuo Wengui has been trailed by scandals involving corruption and espionage. What is he really after? By Evan Osnos | | | | This Week’s Cover | Cover Story “Old Glory”The cover artist for the Money Issue, Barry Blitt, discusses consumerism and what he would buy if he won the lottery. By Françoise Mouly | | | | Shop this cover and others from The New Yorker in the Condé Nast Store » | | | Reporting and Commentary | American Chronicles What We’ve Lost Playing the Lottery The games are a bonanza for the companies that states hire to administer them. But what about the rest of us? By Kathryn Schulz | The Sporting Scene Will the Saudis and Donald Trump Save Golf—or Wreck It? Is the new LIV league a way to reward players, or the vanity project of a despot, or something else? By Zach Helfand | | Annals of Diplomacy Inside the U.S. Effort to Arm Ukraine The Biden Administration has provided valuable intelligence and increasingly powerful weaponry—a risky choice that has paid off in the battle against Putin. By Joshua Yaffa | Comment The G.O.P. Is Standing by Trumpists Ahead of the Senate Midterms One shouldn’t expect an overflowing of dignity in any of the half-dozen states where Senate seats are being seriously contested. By Amy Davidson Sorkin | | | | The Critics | Books Who Paul Newman Was—and Who He Wanted to Be He thought his success was just a matter of hard work and good luck. Other people had a different perspective. By Louis Menand | Pop Music Two Indie Rockers Rediscover Country Music Together With Plains, Katie Crutchfield and Jess Williamson turn back to the sounds of their Southern youths. By Carrie Battan | | Dancing Alexei Ratmansky’s Dance for the War in Ukraine “Wartime Elegy” is a jagged affair, but that may be part of the point, and the result is strangely haunting. By Jennifer Homans | The Current Cinema Whimsy and Violence in “The Banshees of Inisherin” Martin McDonagh treads familiar turf in his black comedy, but the performances of Brendan Gleeson, Colin Farrell, and Kerry Condon give everything life. By Anthony Lane | | | | Fiction from the Issue | Fiction “Tiny, Meaningless Things”“He’s only a little boy, but he’s managed to unsettle her. It has been so very long since she was unsettled.” By Marisa Silver | | | | Humor from The New Yorker | Shouts & Murmurs Yet Another COVID-19 Screening Form Have you experienced cough, sore throat, shortness of smell, loss of throat, intergluteal elm bark, Count Scrofula, or fisherman’s lonely-eye? By Jay Katsir | Cartoons from the Issue Cartoons from the Issue Funny drawings from this week’s magazine. | | Crossword A Challenging Puzzle “Walking on Broken Glass” singer: eleven letters. By Natan Last | Name Drop Play Today’s Quiz Can you guess the notable person in six clues or fewer? By Liz Maynes-Aminzade | | | | Newsletters Sign Up for The New Yorker’s Movie Club NewsletterReviews of the current cinema, plus recommendations for classics and underrated treasures available on streaming services, every Friday. | | | | More from The New Yorker | The New Yorker Interview Geena Davis Is Ready for the Geenaissance The actor discusses her new memoir, “Dying of Politeness,” and her life as a feminist icon, data geek, world-class archer, and more. By Michael Schulman | Culture Desk What Ghost Stories Taught Me About My Queer Self On literary ghosts, queer invisibility, and coming of age, then and now. By Nell Stevens | | | | | | |
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