Newsweek magazine has a long-standing tradition of providing readers with the most updated information on the most pressing issues affecting our nation and world today. Newsweek is able to fill the gaps when a story has passed and is able to come up with insight or synthesis that connects the cracking, confusing digitals dots in today's fast paced news cycle.
Church and Stare
Embassy Row
Hand Wringing
Reins in Blood
Ollie’s New Army • The incoming president of the NRA has a long—and notorious—history of peddling alternative facts
Who’s Laughing Now? • Beppe Grillo—Italy’s comedian turned prominent politico—talks Putin, Trump and the future of the European Union
Party Foul • For all its righteous—and commendable—outrage over the Eric Schneiderman scandal, the Democrats’ grasp on moral superiority is tenuous
ART OF THE DEAL • For years, he’s been seen as a naïf or a MADMAN. But what if KIM JONG UN is the smartest guy in the room?
DISAPPEARING ACTS
Seeing Double • A scientist solves an H2O mystery with profound implications for science
A Grave Diagnosis • SOLVING HISTORICAL COLD CASES WITH HINDSIGHT—AND MODERN TECHNIQUES
Soybeans • How the glycine max—an innocuous member of the pea family—became the world’s most wildly important and environmentally damaging bean. And why China’s proposed levy on imports of the U.S. crop would be devastating to American farmers
Risky Business • Twenty years after co-creating Hedwig and the Angry Inch, John Cameron Mitchell is struggling to be as sexy as he wants to be
Still Giving Love a Bad Name • Every Bon Jovi album ranked, from worst to best
Hari Kondabolu