Some robot accounts protest; others expose racists; and at least one — aimed at people looking for a fight — keeps them busy talking to a brick wall.
To prepare for his role in “Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812,” he tackled the accordion — and, reluctantly, learned to dance.
The Times’s critics give their choices of the best fiction and nonfiction works of the year.
The executive, Patricia Barbizet, will be vice chairwoman. Mr. Cerutti is taking over at a time when auction houses are struggling to fill sales with inventory.
Some people have it all, but still crave luxury, novelty and access without irksome hurdles. At Barclays Center, that’s the Nets’ Brooklyn Experience.
How Google used artificial intelligence to transform Google Translate, one of its more popular services — and how machine learning is poised to reinvent computing itself.
The radio host on talking about politics in public and whether we’ve elected a president who appears to be indifferent to religion.
After an attack in Cairo that killed 25 people on Sunday, the Islamic State vowed to escalate its “war on polytheism,” a reference to Christianity.
The International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Association plans to name a new site in the coming days.
With the team mired in a 16-year title drought, American tennis officials reimagined the job as full time and set their sights on re-energizing the nation’s top young players to get on board.
Fueled by regret, Paraag Marathe of the San Francisco 49ers has found his voice in helping to educate people about eating disorders and their treatments.
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