Posts Tagged ‘key and peele’

In this week’s New Yorker

February 28, 2015

The staff outdid themselves for the 90th anniversary issue with substantial profiles of a string of extraordinary people:

  • “Holy Writ,” in which longtime New Yorker copy editor Mary Norris reveals the inner workings of the New Yorker’s famous copy desk;
  • “The Cabaret Beat,” Ian Frazier on an early New Yorker star I’d never heard of named Ellin Mackay, who pretty much retired from writing her Jazz Age dispatches when she married Irving Berlin;
  • “The Shape of Things to Come,” very long and fascinating piece by Ian Parker about Apple’s chief designer Jonathan Ive;
  • “The Unravelling,” Jon Lee Anderson’s report on Libyan general Khalifa Haftar that leaves you with the impression that that country is, for the foreseeable future, as hopelessly fucked as Syria is;
  • “Brother from Another Mother,” a terrific reporting piece about the comedy team Key and Peele by novelist Zadie Smith; and
  • “Look Again,” literary critic James Wood’s piece about a writer named Edith Pearlman, who is unknown to me but apparently has been writing amazing short stories for decades.

And following a curious and yet sensible new publishing fashion, the New Yorker commissioned nine different covers and, rather than anointing one, published them all. My subscriber copy came with three, and the rest are easily visible online or on the iPad app. Here are my two favorites, by Carter Goodrich and Anita Kunz:

new york anno tweet cover new yorker anno reefer cover

 

In this week’s New Yorker

September 26, 2013

new yorker sept 30 cover
It took me a while to understand Barry Blitt’s cover (“Bad Chemistry”), but I guess I’m one of the last halfway sentient people in New York who has never watched an episode of Breaking Bad.

I found all four of the feature stories absorbing:

* Xan Rice’s “Now Serving,” about a brave Somali who opened a string of restaurants and hotels in Mogadishu and continues to operate despite being attacked by the Shabab, the same band of crazed thugs who shot up the shopping mall in Nairobi this week;

* Josh Eells’s “Night Club Royale,” about the dance nightclub industry in Las Vegas, where certain clubs pull in half a million dollars a night from drinks alone and star DJs get paid astronomical fees;

* I kept telling myself, ugh, I don’t want to read any more details about the distressing/hopeless situation in Syria, and yet the great reporter Dexter Filkins’s piece “The Shadow Commander” tells us about a figure it’s important to know about, Qassem Suleimani, an Iranian operative who has been calling the shots in Iraq and Syria for the last fifteen years;

edie windsor
* Ariel Levy’s “The Perfect Wife,” about how marriage equality activists and lawyers selected Edie Windsor as the case to take to the Supreme Court — and what a wild gal she is, even today.

I read with interest Emily Nussbaum’s essay about “Key and Peele,” a TV comedy show by a team of biracial comedians I’ve never heard of — I definitely plan to check them out. I also liked Cora Frazier’s hilarious Shouts & Murmurs piece, “To The N.S.A.: Some Explanations.”

Still not loving the newly designed Goings On Around Town, though I did admire this illustration accompanying Joan Acocella’s Critic’s Choice about two dance pieces based on Othello:

OTHELLo illo
But the best thing in the entire issue is Ian Frazier’s Talk of the Town piece about Shaina Harrison, a young community activist working hard to educate kids about guns in Red Hook. I liked the piece so much I reproduced it in full here.

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