The most famous cover in the history of The New Yorker magazine may be for the March 29, 1976 issue, a drawing known as “View of the World from 9 th Avenue.” You’ve no doubt seen it: 9 th Avenue large ...
The vast majority of New Yorker covers over the magazine's 100-year history have been illustrations. Only two issues broke that mold: a William Wegman portrait of a Weimaraner on the February 20 and ...
When it came to publishing the first issue of The New Yorker in 1925, the editor-in-chief Harold Ross had a problem: it was coverless and none of the artist submissions quite hit the mark. He was ...
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The New Yorker's tone-deaf Holy Week cartoon
(RNS) — The New Yorker magazine has just managed to insult Christians and Jews alike with a cartoon depicting the Last Supper. In the drawing, by Adam Sacks, Jesus, sitting at what we take to be the ...
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