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What to Do on New Year’s Eve

2025-12-26 19:06:02

2025-12-26T11:00:00.000Z

Few harbingers are more promising than the Swedish singer and producer Robyn. A sonic palate cleanser, she always seems to appear when we need her most. Her 1995 début, “Robyn Is Here,” signalled an alt-pop future. In 2005, her self-titled album bristled with a freedom from major-label concerns. 2010 brought the “Body Talk” era and its euphoric statement of purpose; she was a star dancing on her own. Nearly a decade passed before she reëmerged with her post-breakup opus “Honey,” in 2018. The singer, who officially returned from a seven-year hiatus last month with a new single, “Dopamine,” now grants a chance to revel in her latest comeback at Brooklyn Paramount, for a New Year’s Eve show dubbed “Robyn & Friends.”

Robyn Performer Person Solo Performance Adult Electrical Device Microphone and Photography
Robyn plays Brooklyn Paramount on New Year’s Eve.Photograph by Nicole Busch

As the clock strikes midnight on 2025, d.j.s across the city will help patrons usher in the coming year. Two shows stand out in a sea of turntablists and selectors. The Nowadays hosts Aurora Halal and Avalon Emerson—the former a creator of Brooklyn’s long-running party series “Mutual Dreaming,” and the latter a mixmaster and producer whose 2023 album, “& the Charm,” expanded her electronic music into a hazy, whimsical pop expanse—go on at midnight and play until six. There’s also the Palestinian techno artist Sama’ Abdulhadi, a trailblazer for her scene, who broke through in Beirut and has since turned mixing into a kind of activism. In a Bushwick warehouse at 99 Scott Ave., Abdulhadi continues an essential outreach program.

There are alternatives to ringing in the New Year on the dance floor, for those seeking them. Since 2024, the Bronx rapper and producer Cash Cobain has defined the sound of sample drill, a New York offshoot of the Chicago-born hip-hop subgenre. His début album, “Play Cash Cobain,” was released in August last year, and his profile has been boosted significantly this year by collaborations with Drake, Justin Bieber, and Cardi B—and sample drill has gone national. Cobain embraces his newfound prominence at Panda Harlem. On the opposite end of the spectrum is the iconic jam band Phish, an improvisational hydra that has made a four-decade career out of free forms like psychedelic rock and jazz fusion. The band, formed in 1983, released their sixteenth LP last year, but the group places greater emphasis on the live experience, which samples that discography as if it is a singular, ever-evolving organism, and has drawn a cult following. Those looking to join the jam can find the band squatting in Madison Square Garden from Dec. 28 until the ball drops.—Sheldon Pearce


What to Listen to

Vinson Cunningham on some of his favorite songs of the year.

Bad Bunny, “BAILE INoLVIDABLE”

Bad Bunny’s unforgettable “BAILE INoLVIDABLE” hooked me from its first seconds—those dreamy, moody, synthy minor chords and Bunny’s reflective crooning cast a spell. Soon the song flips into a more traditional salsa, with perhaps my favorite lyric of the year: “Tú me enseñaste a querer; me enseñaste a bailar”—You taught me to want; you taught me to dance.

Haim, “All over me”

I am an unrepentant fan of Haim—those sisters just know what sounds good. I love the song “All over me,” off the wistful album “I quit.” It’s jangly, drum-heavy, full of yearning and earnest temerity—a sad-sounding song about running headlong into falsely happy carnal entanglement.

Dijon, “my man”

I first heard “my man,” by the up-and-coming R. & B. experimentalist Dijon, on his revelatory album “Baby,” in August, while spending a week in a small hotel in upstate New York. The song, which is haunting, downbeat, and made up of all kinds of noise—shattering synths and vérité birdsong—fit the environment so well that I still can’t hear it without seeing the small waterfall rushing outside my window.

Summer Walker, “Go Girl”

You know what I like? Hearing people talk a whole bunch of confident shit over good beats. If you like this, too, you will love the song “Go Girl,” by Summer Walker, featuring Latto and Doja Cat. There’s a line about slipping into a salt bath, on account of being very rich!

DETROIT MICHIGAN  AUGUST 07 Summer Walker performs at Ford Field on August 07 2025 in Detroit Michigan.
Summer Walker.Photograph by Scott Legato / Getty

P.S. Good stuff on the internet:

Daily Cartoon: Friday, December 26th

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A woman holding a snack talks to people standing in line in front of a stall at a Christmas market.
“It’s good, but not waiting-an-hour-in-line-freezing-your-butt-off good.”
Cartoon by Anjali Chandrashekar

Bill Clinton’s M10: The Story Behind My Favorite Cartoon

2025-12-26 19:06:02

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Cartoonists are often asked which of their New Yorker cartoons are their favorites. Mine are those that come with stories about their creation, or whose publication causes serendipitous occurrences, which I call “blips.”

Mort Gerberg wearing an eyepatch.

Of all my cartoons that prompted blips, my most memorable was this one, from the September 21, 1992, issue.

Hand holding a cartoon depicting a ClintonGore campaign bus.

In mid-August, 1992, I received the O.K. from cartoon editor Lee Lorenz, who requested a fast finish.

Hand holding a note.

I drew through the night, delivered final art the next day, and Lee approved it. So did the fact checkers, except for a woman named Dusty, who said, “No! The bus stop sign is wrong because . . .”

Hands holding a cartoon depicting a ClintonGore campaign bus.

Immediately, I told Lee that Dusty was wrong, which I knew because my apartment was a half block away . . .

Gerberg talking to Lorenz at his desk.

After a week of silence, Lee told me that Dusty insisted that I bring her a photograph of the M10 bus stop.

Mort on the phone.

Dusty approved the drawing and, after the two-week delay (which possibly caused the blip), it was published. But when the cartoon appeared, it attracted immediate attention.

Mort working at his drawing board.
Mort on the phone.

A young woman’s voice—a soft, Southern drawl—lilted hesitantly from the phone.

Mort on the phone while sitting at his drawing board.
Mort on the phone.
Mort on the phone.
Mort on the phone.
Mort looking surprised.
Mort on the phone.
Mort half frowning.
Mort on the phone.
Mort on the phone.
Mort on the phone.
Mort holding phone receiver away and looking at it.
Mort talking on the phone.
Mort on the phone.
Question mark over Mort looking confused.

And, in the next moment, my inner imp of the perverse seized control over me, as my mouth opened and words popped out, saying . . .

Mort looking at phone receiver.
Mort smiling and holding phone receiver.
Mort looking at the phone receiver.
Mort on the phone.
Mort holding the phone away and smiling at laughter.

Miss Jackson said that if Clinton won, I’d be given a special viewing place on the Inauguration parade route and an invitation to the inaugural ball!

Mort leaning back in chair and looking at phone on speaker.

But all I got out of the “deal” was a phone number. I call and learn that I’ll get the parade places and ball invites after my five-hundred-dollar donation to the Democratic party is received. Oh.

Mort shrugging.

So, after Election Day, I mail the five-hundred bucks and quickly receive the credentials and tickets. Great! I get my drawing back from The New Yorker and ship it to Clinton. Judith and Lilia obsess about what to wear and I have my tuxedo cleaned.

And, a few weeks later, I received a sweet surprise . . .

Mort and a close up of a letter.

But on Inauguration Day, January 20, 1993, there was another surprise. Our special viewing site was chairless, so our options were to stand in the icy wind or to watch the parade on television in the Overseas Press Club.

People watching TV on a wall in a press room.

That evening, we joined hundreds of other formally dressed guests from New York State at a gala in a Capitol Hill armory. We ate, drank, danced, and inched along the line to shake hands with the new President and First Lady. Over the din, I shouted,“Congratulations President Clinton! Mort Gerberg here! Have you hung up my cartoon yet?”

Photograph of Mort his wife and his daughter.

Because of the noise, and the prodding from the Secret Service, I couldn’t hear an answer. But a few months later, I received another note from Clinton, inviting me to write to him again . . . sort of.

Mort reading letter and a close up of the letter.

And I couldn’t resist sending a note to Dusty at The New Yorker, thanking her for helping certify the validity of the M10 sign. But I never received a reply.

Mort putting a letter in a mailbox.

Daily Cartoon: Thursday, December 25th

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A small child watches as Santa Claus who is hanging upside down in a chimney fiddles with a smartphone.
“Hold on, let me take a picture to confirm I delivered it.”
Cartoon by Jeremy Nguyen

“All I Want for Christmas Is You,” Edited by Someone in Couples Therapy

2025-12-25 20:06:02

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I don’t want a lot for Christmas, but I do have some valid and reasonable expectations
that I
should feel safe to express.
There is just one thing are several things I need:

I don’t actually do care about the presents underneath the Christmas tree.
I just don’t want you for to gift wrap them on my own.
There are more than you could ever know.
Make my wish come true—
All I want for Christmas is for you to pass me the Scotch Tape at that critical moment when
I’m holding the gift wrap in place. In other words, to feel like a team.
Yeah.

I don’t want a lot for Christmas,
But there is just one other thing I need.
And I don’t do care about the presents underneath the Christmas tree.
But I don’t need to hang my stocking there upon the fireplace.
Santa Claus won’t make me happy with a toy on Christmas Day, because, for all intents and purposes, I am Santa.
I just want you for my own to share the mental load,
More than you could ever know.
Make Cut my wish come true list in two.
All I want for Christmas is for you to at least buy the gifts for your side of the family.
You, baby.

Oh, I won’t ask for much this Christmas, mainly because “asking” suggests that you’re doing me a favor, when, in actuality, I’m setting some healthy boundaries. From now on, it’s also your responsibility to:
I won’t even wish for Shovel the snow (and Ice),
I’m just gonna keep on waiting underneath String up the mistletoe,
I won’t Help the kids make a list and send it to the North Pole for Saint Nick (me).
I won’t Do you even stay awake to know how many batteries are required to hear make those magic reindeer click?

’Cause I just want you here a beer tonight.
Holding the fort down for on to me, all right? so tight
What more can I do?
Oh, baby, all I want for Christmas is for you to write the gift labels in your good handwriting, arrange the table settings, put out the cookies and milk for Santa, deal with your parents, the tree decorations, the eggnog, the fireplace, and the inevitable conversation with my dad about which routes people took to get here.
You, baby.

Oh, all the lights are shining so brightly everywhere (so brightly, baby, are you sure you
used the right setting?).
And the sound of children’s laughter fills the air (oh, oh, yeah, so when I said, “Let them have a treat,” I didn’t mean three candy canes each).
And everyone is singing (oh, yeah, even Dad. How much rum did you put in the eggnog?
Sorry, I don’t mean to use “you” language, it’s just that when the Christmas lights are
flashing in my face, the kids are screaming, and there’s too much booze in the eggnog, I feel overwhelmed).
I hear those sleigh bells ringing. Can anyone else hear them, or are they in my head?
Santa, won’t you bring me the one things I really need?
Yeah, oh.
Won’t you please bring my baby noise-cancelling headphones and a very large gin to me?

Oh, I don’t want a lot for Christmas.
This is all I’m asking for—
I just wanna see my baby standing right outside escape to my bedroom for a couple of hours
and close my door.
Oh, I just want you for, sorry, need, time on my own,
More than you could ever know.
Make my wish come true—
Oh, baby, all I want for Christmas is you to eat some brownies while watching “The Family Stone.” ♦



What Kind of New World Is Being Born?

2025-12-25 20:06:02

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According to the Gospel of Luke, the Virgin Mary first learns that she’ll soon give birth to Christ when she gets an unsolicited visit from an angel. Nice messenger service if you can get it. But before trusty Gabriel can dispense the good news upon which Christmas depends he has to calm the girl down. “Fear not,” he says, and, in a way, this sombre reassurance is the Yuletide message in drastic miniature. This kid Jesus will save the world, Gabriel assures Mary. But if you’ve only known the world as it is—small, dark, inhospitable, beset by imperial Rome—you might be right not to get totally excited about what comes next. One person’s salvation might be somebody else’s death.

And then, of course, there’s the sheer fear of birth. So much blood to bring love into the world! The real Nativity—for Mary, but also for anybody hoping to bring new life onto the scene—is a shocking, grisly business, including, these days, an operating table and a tangle of bleeping machines. Only a fool wouldn’t be a little scared.

2025 in Review

New Yorker writers reflect on the year’s highs and lows.

Who knows what’ll happen? What kind of new world is waiting? Christmas is the season of waiting and arrival, of tension and release, of birth as a paradigm-changing surprise. Recently, I’ve been thinking about the past year in this way, as something waiting to express itself in an unsettlingly new fashion. In some of the best moments of “Hamnet,” one of the most discussed movies of the year, the actor Jessie Buckley twice portrays the violence of childbirth and how close it can bring you to the threshold between life and death. Life feels like that now: some new way of living keeps sloshing around the amniotic water, with more volume and vigor and perilous determination every day. Whatever it is, there’s no guarantee that it’ll be good.

More people are surrendering the tough, meaning-making work of cognition to A.I. products whose owners seem, at best, blithely uninterested in the lives and psyches of their customers. My girlfriend sent me a funny video the other day—it’s a bunch of Brazilian guys who look exactly like Will Smith, Daniel Radcliffe, Vin Diesel, and Jackie Chan: highbrow stuff. I spent about twenty minutes replaying it, squinting my eyes, inspecting the evidence with scrutiny unequal to its importance, making sure it wasn’t the product of some kind of tech deception before I allowed myself to laugh. Huge corporations are eating one another whole, happy to sell themselves and their publics out, sucking up to Donald Trump and plumping their own portfolios and pockets.

For much of the year, I very slowly read “America, América,” Greg Grandin’s brilliant parallel history of North and South America. The hero of the book’s first section is the sixteenth-century Spanish priest and writer Bartolomé de las Casas, who straddled the Old World and the New, issuing startling moral novelties to both. After a traumatizing early encounter with the horrors visited upon Indigenous people by the conquistadores and the colonial encomienda class, las Casas spent his life writing and speaking with an otherworldly energy against the conquest, frustrating both the Spanish crown and the hierarchy of the Catholic church. His keen focus on the equal personhood of the Indigenous people—who were undergoing a process that was “among the greatest mortality events in human history”—lit the fire of “a modern ethics of equality.” “In this,” Grandin says, las Casas was “a kind of Adam.”

Don’t we need another one of those today? Some brave doula to help the world-to-come through the birth canal and to offer it an ethical path? I keep wondering: What kind of new moral being—good or bad—might be born in our time? One way to understand the worst actions and attitudes of Donald Trump is to recognize that he is auditioning with a cold cynicism for just this kind of role. Not only does he lie without shame, dole out violence as a way to keep power and entertain a perverse crowd, maintain an unstinting disdain for the poor and the weak and the lonely, and manifest sheer glee at the sight of other strongmen getting their way—but, just as ominously, he pretty brazenly recommends these behaviors to the rest of us. He lights the bomb of hatred and contempt, then looks out at us, smiling, as the flame eats the cord.

In January, during his second Inauguration, an event I keep trying to forget, he grimaced and mugged constantly—smirked while taking the oath, making po-faced ad-libs when talking disingenuously about God. He wanted, I think, to be seen taking serious things lightly, making a joke of rituals and sensibilities that he’s glad to see fading away. What he presents, more than thin cultural and economic promises, is a bleak anthropology: The time of restraint and fair dealing and good will is over, kid!, he always seems to be saying, like a brutish “realist” out of a mid-century novel. Get yours or get left behind. He’s surveyed the scene and sees a world finally bending itself in his inhumane direction. He wants the Nobel Peace Prize because he’d like to redefine peace.

In April, upon the death of one of Trump’s most steadfast and charismatic foils, Pope Francis, a new Pontiff was elected in Rome. Leo XIV, an Augustinian priest named Robert Francis Prevost, was raised in Chicago and spent much of his ministry in Peru—one of las Casas’s intellectual battlefields in his campaign against the conquest. Prevost, a surprise to much of the Pope-watching public, stepped out onto the loggia wearing around his neck the ornate, blood-red papal stole that his predecessor had studiously eschewed, and, on his face, a modest smile. He had given himself a promising name. In 1891, Leo XIII—a fellow who used to go by Vincenzo Gioacchino Pecci, from Italy, where they used to make Popes—wrote a famous encyclical, “Rerum Novarum,” or “Of the New Things.” The letter was a response to the twinned hastenings of capitalism and industrial power, aimed at maintaining the dignity of workers in a time of uncertainty and upheaval.

The new Leo was entering the fray at a similar juncture, and, early in his papacy, he began to admit his anxiety over the development of artificial intelligence. In an address last May, with an understatement that has quickly become his signature, he spoke about the technology, predicting that it would “pose new challenges for the defense of human dignity, justice, and labor.” He has continued to raise the issue, before groups of journalists and throngs of Catholic youth, always careful to avoid rote doomsaying but never seeming, either, to downplay its grave importance. In a similar way, in implicit counterpoint to Trump, he keeps speaking out on behalf of suffering people in Ukraine and Gaza and ICE detention centers and sundry other theatres of cruelty, articulating a hope that the swaddling clothes of the epoch to come won’t have to be studded with spikes. His ongoing performance, though subtle, is one to watch.

To fret over the future of human creativity is, eventually, to mourn lost artists. Back in June, Sly Stone—a great American genius by my lights—slipped off the scene at the age of eighty-two. What always impressed me about Stone was his interest in combination and synthesis, his strict disavowal, audible from one song to the next, of the idea of a “pure” music whose borders could be defined by genre, or by period, or, worst of all, by race.

Stone, raised in the multiculti Bay Area, came up playing music in the Church of God in Christ, a big Pentecostal denomination. He played in all kinds of bands and worked as a d.j. for a popular radio station. His eventual band, the Family Stone, was racially mixed—rare at the time—and, from the beginning, shone with evidence of its leader’s sophistication and restless ear. The name of the group’s début album sounded like advance notice of an impending birth: “A Whole New Thing.” My favorite song on that record is “Advice.” I love the menacing nonsense of its opening lyrics:

Take my advice if you want a lover
I’m not going to be your brother
Are you afraid of what you might want to do
Or is reality hard for you?

Reality sometimes seemed very hard for Michael Archer, the singer better known by his stage name, D’Angelo, who died in October at fifty-one. He’d come along in the late nineties and, after the release of his first album, “Brown Sugar,” full of nicely made soul-funk confections such as “Lady” and “Shit, Damn, Motherfucker,” he became a paragon of “neo-soul,” a category meant to package a loosely connected group of musicians who took their sonic cues from the soul records of the sixties and seventies. D’Angelo’s talent was always more capacious than that label. His second album, “Voodoo,” full of off-kilter, behind-the-beat rhythms and ever-intensifying Pentecostal repetitions—he was a church boy, just like Sly—revealed him to be a skittish experimentalist, following a sound that emanated not from market imperatives but from some private grotto in his heart and head. “Voodoo” is often hailed as D’Angelo’s masterpiece, but for the past decade I have been much more in love with his third album, “Black Messiah,” which went even further in testing the limits of inwardness and intelligibility. His light, slurring, hornlike, Al Green-ish singing now melted into the rest of his watery compositions, making the lyrics hard to hear but his great reservoir of unembarrassed feeling impossible to miss.

After the success of “Voodoo,” and, specifically, of the song “Untitled (How Does it Feel),” D’Angelo fled the mainstream spotlight, reportedly traumatized by his turn as a hunk-idol in the famously revealing music video for that song. He was a poet, a sophisticate whose music was the final outpouring of his encyclopedic knowledge of and vast affection for Black music. His songs outlined the shape of a complex identity to which no image—even the “sexiest”—could do real justice. D’Angelo was a guy, like many guys I know, who had trouble with his body. He was the kind of artist worth missing forever.

I spent a week this summer teaching at a small liberal-arts college in upstate New York. Nice rhythm: workshops by day and readings of fiction and poetry by night. One night, the poet Chase Twichell read a suite of poems. Many of the pieces—I won’t quote them; they’re from an upcoming book—had to do with the death of her husband, the novelist Russell Banks. They were tough, funny, uncomfortable attempts to regularize the awful, oblong shape of grief. Twichell read without irony: no standup-comedy interludes between poems or undercutting faces while delivering her lines. She made only the smallest gestures—her thin, muscular arms julienning the air. Twichell has written often about her practice of Zen Buddhism, and one of her rare asides, offered after a particularly sad poem, had the feeling of ancient wisdom. “You don’t get to choose what you write about,” she said.

The truth of the statement shivered through me; I’ve been thinking about it for months now, less as a commentary on the writing life than a brutal fact of how it feels to live in history. All of us are surfing events, responding to tectonics deeper than we know. Only time will tell what we’ll be forced to sit and think through and attempt to describe. I admire people who stay faithful to their senses, who dedicate themselves to describing the harder edges of reality. One such artist is the filmmaker Raoul Peck, whose documentary “Orwell: 2+2=5” was, I feel sure, the most harrowing viewing experience of my year.

The movie narrates the life of George Orwell, using a compendium of archival sources, including the great writer’s letters and journals. But—as is often the case with Peck’s bristlingly fertile and intelligent movies, such as “I Am Not Your Negro,” a similar work of portraiture, about James Baldwin—the film spirals outward from the specifics of Orwell’s biography, incorporating contemporary news clips and terrible images of children in danger, in Gaza and beyond. It asserts through juxtaposition and strong implication that the fascism against which Orwell inveighed is sitting, again, right now, at the doorstep of the world, waiting like a vampire to be invited fulsomely in.

It’s scary stuff, reflecting with strident clarity a scary world. Peck strikes me as an updated version of an Old Testament prophet, spreading unwelcome truths at a moment of great significance. Or perhaps he’s like Gabriel, bringing news that might cause us to stop and think, fish an unlikely salvation out of murky waters. These days surrounding the winter solstice are dark, dark, dark. Nice time to think about what we might make together when the light returns. Merry Christmas, no matter how sharp the birth pains. Fear not! ♦