Dan Duray
Robert Longo: Men, Monsters, and Museums
The New York-based artist talks about Goya and Eisenstein, making art from catastrophe, and the curious resilience of Johnny Mnemonic.
The Doomsday Feeling of Watching the Debate in Las Vegas
"I would vote but it's a rigged election," one man told me, "because guys like me get shut out of the system because you drink a 72-ounce Mountain Dew Code Red and try to watch 'The Secret Life of Pets.'"
My Afternoon with the Women Who Won't Quit Trump
For these Las Vegas women, the narrative about their candidate's struggles and sexism is manufactured by the media.
The New James Bond Movie Is Way Too Sane and Relevant
The problem with 'Spectre' isn't that it's dumb—it's that it's not dumb enough.
How LARPing Grew from an Odd Hobby to an International Phenomenon
Beyond the stereotypes, live action role-playing is a vibrant scene that draws inspiration from tabletop games, drama, and performance art.
Alexandra Kleeman's Debut Novel 'You Too Can Have a Body Like Mine' Charts New Dystopian Territory
We met the novelist to talk about Philip K. Dick, roommate dynamics, and gender in paranoid, postmodern-y works.
Hannibal Buress Is the Comedian We Need
In the premiere of his new show 'Why?,' America’s most laid-back comedian dips into try-hard sketch comedy.