New York Year 2023 Magazine Back Issues
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- Party Of One
- At Mar-A-Lago Trump's Reelection
- Campaign is Off To A Lonely Start
- By Olivia Nuzzi
- Inside Elon's Extremely
- What Happens When The World's Richest Man
- With The Thinnest Skin Buys Your Company
- On A Trollish Whim And Then Drives It Off A Cliff
- Is Everybody Tipping 25% On Bottled Water?
- What Do I Do If I Gave My Boss Covid?
- Can I Discipline My Friend's Children?
- How Do I Recover From Misgendering Someone?
- What Was Kyrie Irving Thinking?
- One Of The Greatest Talents Of His Generation
- Defiantly Un-Vaxxed And Broadcasting
- Conspiracy Theories, Has Left The Nets In Shambles.
- So Many People (And Half Of Hollywood) Are Suddenly Thinner
- Having Swapped Their Old Diets For A Dose Of The Diabetes Drug Ozempic
- By Matthew Schneier
- Bon Appetit
- I've Never Shared This With Anyone
- 17 Of The Most Accomplished Women In Broadcast Journalism Dish (Respectfully!)
- About Barbara Walters
- By Irin Carmon - Portfolio By Brigitte Lacombe
- Abortion Wins Elections
- The Fight To Make Reproductive Rights
- The Centerpiece Of The Democratic Party's 2024 Agenda
- By Rebecca Traister
- The Stormy Daniels Story
- By Olivia Nuzzi
- April 10 2023
- A Century Of The New York It Girl
- 151 Women Who Captured The City's Attention
- By Matthew Schneier
- 60 New State Laws Restrict What Teachers And Students Can Do And Learn
- I Will Not Say Gay
- Dozens More Could Pass Before The School Year Is Out
- The Republican Classroom By Jonathan Chait
- How Much Is That Lifestyle In The Window?
- We Asked Young New Yorkers About Their Dream Lives
- Then We Calculated Exactly How Much Each Would Cost
- Drew Barrymore Lights Up Daytime By E. Alex Jung
- The Television Issue
- Featuring The Sad Cowboys Of Yellowstone By Andrea Long Chu
- D'oh! The Simpsons Is Funny Again? By Jesse David Fox
- How Many Humans Does It Take To
- Make Tech Seem human? Millions
- Inside The AI Factory By Josh Dzieza
- How A Conspiracy - Spewing Literal Kennedy
- Posing As A Populist Outsider
- Jolted The Democratic Party
- Inside Job By Rebecca Traister
- 1 Penn Plz 645,000 Square Feet Available
- 2 Penn Plz 1.3 Million Square Feet Available
- Hudson Yards More Than 2.5 Million Square Feet Available
- 2 Manhattan West Just Opened! 2 Million More Square Feet
- How The Author Of The Body Keeps The Score
- Won A 50-Year Fight And Made Rauma
- America's Favorite Diagnosis
- By Danielle Carr
- The Candy Sellers
- The Lives And Livelihoods Of Some Of The City's
- Newest Migrant Children. By Jordan Salama
- Sondheim's Last Musical
- The Entire Story, From Beginning To End By Frank Rich
- Plus 44 Pages Of Fall Preview Including The City's Gleaming New Performance Cube By Justin Davidson
- Finally, The Horny, Bloody Lesbian Incel Comedy America Has Been Waiting For
- Your Kid Our Friendship
- When One Friend Has A Baby
- And The Other Doesn't By Allison P. Davis
- The Breakup Rupert Murdochs
- Long Agonizing Journey To Dumping His Favorite Fox News Host
- Tucker Carlson. By Michael Wolff
- Thirteen Weeks On The Campaign Trail
- With The Republican Also-Rans
- Chasing Trump By Olivia Nuzzi
- The Most Powerful New Yorkers You've Never Heard Of
- 49 Under The Radar People
- Who Shape The City
- Japanese Utopians. Corporate Glow-Ups.
- $400 Smoothies. The Strange History Of The World's
- Most Cultish Grocery Store.
- Erewhon's Secrets By Kerry Howley
- Torn Up And Apart
- Fears Protests, Posts, Firings.
- Doxings, Lost Friendship, Vigils And Betrayals
- The City Since October 7
- Your Upstairs Neighbors Have Ordered A Rug
- The Table You Requested May Be Available
- Your Roommate Will Fall In Love With Someone Who Lives Alone
- Behind Every M Train Is An F.
- The Calmest Democrats In The Country
- Despite Terrible Polls And Panicked Pundits
- The Mood Inside Biden Headquarters Is Chill
- By Gabriel Debenedetti
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New York is an American biweekly magazine concerned with life, culture, politics, and style generally, with a particular emphasis on New York City.
Founded by Clay Felker and Milton Glaser in 1968 as a competitor to The New Yorker and The New York Times Magazine, it was brasher in voice and more connected to contemporary city life and commerce, and became a cradle of New Journalism. Over time, it became more national in scope, publishing many noteworthy articles about American culture by writers such as Tom Wolfe, Jimmy Breslin, Nora Ephron, Pete Hamill, Jacob Weisberg, Michael Wolff, John Heilemann, Frank Rich, and Rebecca Traister. It was among the first "lifestyle magazines" meant to appeal to both male and female audiences, and its format and style have been emulated by many American regional and city publications.
New York in its earliest days focused almost entirely on coverage of its namesake city, but beginning in the 1970s, it expanded into reporting and commentary on national politics, notably Richard Reeves on Watergate, Joe Klein's early cover story about Bill Clinton, John Heilemann's reporting on the 2008 presidential election that led to his (and Mark Halperin's) best-selling book Game Change, Jonathan Chait's commentary, and Olivia Nuzzi's reporting on the first Trump administration. The New Republic praised its "hugely impressive political coverage" during the presidency of Barack Obama. It is also known for its arts and culture criticism, its food writing (its restaurant critic Adam Platt won a James Beard Award in 2009, and its Underground Gourmet critics Rob Patronite and Robin Raisfeld won two National Magazine Awards), and its service journalism (its "Strategist" department won seven National Magazine Awards in eleven years.
Since its sale, redesign, and relaunch in 2004, the magazine has won several National Magazine Awards, including the award for general excellence in 2006, 2007, 2010, 2011, 2014, and 2016, as well as the 2013 award for Magazine of the Year. Since the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism opened to magazines as well as newspapers in 2016, New York's critics have won twice (Jerry Saltz in 2018, and Andrea Long Chu in 2023) and been finalists twice more (Justin Davidson in 2020 and Craig Jenkins in 2021). In 2009, the Washington Post media critic Howard Kurtz wrote that "the nation's best and most-imitated city magazine is often not about the city—at least not in the overcrowded, traffic-clogged, five-boroughs sense," observing that it was more regularly publishing political and cultural stories of national and international import.
The magazine's first website, nymetro.com, was launched in 2001. In the early 21st century, the magazine began to diversify that online presence, introducing subject-specific websites under the nymag.com umbrella: Vulture, The Cut, Intelligencer, The Strategist, Curbed, and Grub Street. In 2018, New York Media, the parent company of New York magazine, launched a digital subscription product for those sites. On September 24, 2019, Vox Media announced that it had purchased New York magazine and its parent company, New York Media.