Work
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News
Who Is Liable for A.I. Creations?
Tools like ChatGPT could open a new line of questions around tech products and harmful content.
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Newyork
Fever Ray’s Karin Dreijer, Behind the Mask
The musician, whose new album was released in March, discusses disguises, recording and why they find karaoke so off-putting.
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Books
Njideka Akunyili Crosby Wants to Take it Slow, Despite Her Rapid Rise
LOS ANGELES — To listen to Njideka Akunyili Crosby talk about the lengths to which she’ll go in researching the scientific classification of plants to depict in one of her paintings — Madagascar Jasmine? Safari Sunset? — is to begin to understand ...
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Newyork
Martin Amis, Acclaimed Author of Bleakly Comic Novels, Dies at 73
In books like “Money” and “The Information,” he created “a high style to describe low things,” as he put it. He found more renown as a critic, and a measure of unease as his famous father’s son.
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US
Biden Taps Two Negotiators to Reach Debt Ceiling Deal With Republicans
President Biden selected Shalanda Young and Steve Ricchetti to talk directly with aides to Speaker Kevin McCarthy in an attempt to avoid default.
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News
How a Solo Gig Can Give You a Stronger Retirement
Becoming a solo entrepreneur in the years between leaving an employer and claiming Social Security can give your savings a boost. Here’s what to know.
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Books
Chris Wheeldon’s ‘Dangerous and Exciting’ Adventure at City Ballet
Wheeldon is back at New York City Ballet, where he honed his choreographic skills, making a non-narrative work set to Schoenberg.
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Books
What to See in N.Y.C. Galleries in May
Want to see new art in the city? Check out Michael McGrath’s emoji landscapes, Enrique Chagoya’s “reverse anthropology” or King Cobra’s metaphorical butchery.
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Books
James Harithas, Maverick Museum Director and Founder, Dies at 90
Whether directing august art museums or scrappy upstarts of his own, he championed art-world outsiders and socially conscious and political art.
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News
How Janelle Jones’s Story About Black Women and the Economy Caught On
The first Black woman to serve as chief economist at the Labor Department advanced the idea that lifting up people on the margins helps everyone else, too.