Celebrity Life
2021 Could Be the Biggest Wedding Year Ever. But Are Guests Ready to Gather?
Always high-stress affairs, weddings are now testing our willingness to step back into society
How TIME Chose Its 2021 List of Next Generation Leaders
I was catching up the other day with a friend, who asked how remote work had been going, and I mentioned that sometimes late in the day, when my youngest child has had it with the closed door in the attic office space I share with my wife, I slip into the kidsâ backyard treehouseâŚ
The Pandemic Revealed How Much We Hate Our Jobs. Now We Have a Chance to Reinvent Work
The workplace doesn't work. Now's our chance to reinvent it
How Juul Got Vaporized
On June 7, North Carolina attorney general Josh Stein will enter a Durham courtroom with a mission: proving that the e-cigarette company Juul Labs purposely targeted teenagers with its nicotine-rich products. If Steinâwho in 2019 became the first state attorney general in the U.S. to sue Juulâis successful, the vaping company may be in forâŚ
Comedian Patti Harrison Has Her First Leading RoleâBut Sheâs Not Looking to Stop Goofing Around
The comedian talks to TIME about her new film, her first leading role, and her hopes for transgender characters in entertainment
People Expected Police Behavior to Change After George Floydâs Murder. The Numbers Tell a Different Story
Since last June, police in the U.S. have killed people at virtually the same rate that they have for the past five years
Americans Have Learned to Talk About Racial Inequality. But Theyâve Done Little to Solve It
Janell Ross reflects on what has changedâand what hasnâtâone year after Americaâs so-called racial reckoning
âI Didnât Have the Privilege of Escaping.â 8 TIME Journalists Reflect on a Year of Covering Stories About Their Communities
Longstanding journalistic maxims would have a reporter remain disengaged while gathering the facts. But pursuing the whole truth means considering the humanity of oneâs subjectsâand of oneself. Lived experience can help a reporter empathize and deepen their work in the service of telling stories that accurately reflect the world. After an intense year of reportingâŚ
The Story Behind TIMEâs First-Ever BIPOC-Led Issue
A year ago, we at TIME started talking about the ways weâve fallen short. Soon after George Floyd was murdered in Minneapolis, staffers from across the organization began sharing painful memories of being mistreated in our workplace and demanding change. I called Edward, our editor-in-chief, whose words you usually read in this space, to askâŚ
Indiaâs COVID-19 Disaster May Be Turning Into an Even Bigger Global Crisis
High in the thin air of the Mount Everest Base Camp in Nepal, Sherpas and climbers used to walk freely from one group of tents to another, holding gatherings, singing and dancing. Now the Sherpas who escort climbers to the summit have a new job: enforcing unofficial social-distancing rules. âClimbing Everest is always a matterâŚ
How Communities of Color Have Found Strength, Joy and Comfort in a Year Like No Other
The supreme thrill of sharing space with others has never been so keenly feltâor missedâas in the past year. In a time marked by immeasurable loss, fear and upheaval, pods and social distancing entered the common lexicon, their frequent use serving as constant reminders of both our hunger for connection and its current limitations. SoâŚ
The Racial Reckoning Went Global Last Year. Hereâs How Activists in 8 Countries Are Fighting for Justice
The video of Derek Chauvinâs kneeling on George Floydâs neck traveled from a Minneapolis street to every corner of the world. Black activists in the U.K. spoke of their visceral reactions to the footage, while Floydâs dying words, âI canât breathe,â brought back painful memories in France and Australia of Black and Aboriginal people killedâŚ