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Buy New Yorker Cartoons » Zoe Si has been contributing cartoons and articles to The New Yorker since 2020. In 2022, she was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in illustrated reporting and commentary.
In a new video, The New Yorker’s cartoon editor, Emma Allen, and the artist Liz Montague talk about diversity in comics and finding humor in moments of unrest. By Emma Allen Video Dept.
There’s a scene in Molly Roden Winter’s debut, “More: A Memoir of Open Marriage,” that should come with a warning. Winter is at her home in Brooklyn. She has just had sex with her ...
Lee Lorenz, a cartoonist and cartoon editor who over 40 years at The New Yorker introduced unconventional illustrators like Roz Chast and Jack Ziegler while publishing droll covers and some 1,800 ...
Hey, I’m Ronny Chieng. I’m going to try to caption some New Yorker cartoons, right here. I’m seeing all of this for the first time, by the way—I didn’t cheat. I didn’t get this ahead ...
Magazine cartoon editor makes history as the youngest and first woman in the role 07:45. For almost a century, readers have turned to The New Yorker for its award-winning journalism.
This year, The New Yorker has teamed up with Santa Claus to recognize those who hit Like on the cartoons we’ve posted online. By Colin Stokes December 15, 2022 ...
The cartoonist—who depicted dogs, porch-sitters, mechanics, cave-dwellers, bath-takers, military men, yokels, and churchgoers—worked and lived with uncontainable self-amusement.
Eli Grober writes a humorous piece about how marriage makes things sound fancier than if you were not married. ... More Humor and Cartoons. ... Eli Grober has contributed to The New Yorker since 2016.
Rebecca Mead reviews “On Marriage,” by Devorah Baum, and “The Two-Parent Privilege: How Americans Stopped Getting Married and Started Falling Behind,” by Melissa S. Kearney.
The writer and National Book Award winner on his book “James.” The New Yorker Radio Hour Nikki Glaser at the Top of Her Game Triumph hasn’t spoiled the comedian, or settled her insecurities ...
In 1993, the New Yorker published a cartoon featuring two dogs sitting at a computer. With a paw resting on the keyboard, one says to the other: “On the internet, nobody knows you’re a dog.” ...