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Critics at Large | The New Yorker

The New Yorker

Critics at Large is a weekly culture podcast from The New Yorker. Every Thursday, the staff writers Vinson Cunningham, Naomi Fry, and Alexandra Schwartz discuss current obsessions, classic texts they’re revisiting with fresh eyes, and trends that are emerging across books, television, film, and more. The show runs the gamut of the arts and pop culture, with lively, surprising conversations about everything from Salman Rushdie to “The Real Housewives.” Through rigorous analysis and behind-the-scenes insights into The New Yorker’s reporting, the magazine’s critics help listeners make sense of our moment—and how we got here.

See Critics at Large live at 92NY on February 19: https://www.92ny.org/event/vinson-cunningham-naomi-fry-and-alexandra-schwartz

Condé Nast 2023

Critics at Large is a weekly culture podcast from The New Yorker. Every Thursday, the staff writers Vinson Cunningham, Naomi Fry, and Alexandra Schwartz discuss current obsessions, classic texts they’re revisiting with fresh eyes, and trends that are emerging across books, television, film, and more. The show runs the gamut of the arts and pop culture, with lively, surprising conversations about everything from Salman Rushdie to “The Real Housewives.” Through rigorous analysis and behind-the-scenes insights into The New Yorker’s reporting, the magazine’s critics help listeners make sense of our moment—and how we got here.

See Critics at Large live at 92NY on February 19: https://www.92ny.org/event/vinson-cunningham-naomi-fry-and-alexandra-schwartz

Condé Nast 2023
92hr 4min
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Thumbnail for "“Love Story” and Why We Cling to the Kennedy Myth".
Thumbnail for "The Hall of Fame—and of Shame—of Oscars Hosts".
Thumbnail for "Critics at Large Live: “Wuthering Heights” and Its Afterlives".
Thumbnail for "The Truth of Toni Morrison".
Thumbnail for "Charli XCX Misses the Moment".
Thumbnail for "“Heated Rivalry,” “Pillion,” and the New Drama of the Closet".
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Thumbnail for "Does “Hamlet” Need a Backstory?".
Thumbnail for "After “Wicked,” What Do We Want from the Musical?".
Thumbnail for "In “Pluribus,” Utopia Isn’t All It’s Cracked Up to Be".
Thumbnail for "The Guilty Pleasure of the Heist".
Thumbnail for "Critics at Large Live: Padma Lakshmi’s Expansive Taste".
Thumbnail for "Why Horror Still Haunts Us".
Thumbnail for "In the Dark: Blood Relatives, Episode 1".
Thumbnail for "Art in the Age of Artificial Intelligence".
Thumbnail for "I Need a Critic: October, 2025, Edition".
Thumbnail for "How the Trad Wife Took Over".
Thumbnail for "One Paul Thomas Anderson Film After Another".
Thumbnail for "What's Cooking?".
Thumbnail for "“The Paper,” “The Lowdown,” and the Drama of Journalism".
Thumbnail for "Why We're All In on Gambling".
Thumbnail for "Our Fads, Ourselves".
Thumbnail for "How to Watch a Movie".
Thumbnail for "Les Américains à Paris".
Thumbnail for "How Zohran Mamdani Became the Main Character of New York City".
Thumbnail for "Late Night's Last Laugh".
Thumbnail for "“Eddington” and the American Berserk".
Thumbnail for "“Materialists,” “Too Much,” and the Modern Rom-Com".
Thumbnail for "Why We Travel".
Thumbnail for "The Diva Is Dead, Long Live the Diva".
Thumbnail for "Why We Turn Grief Into Art".
Thumbnail for "Our Romance with Jane Austen".
Thumbnail for "“Mountainhead” and the Age of the Pathetic Billionaire".
Thumbnail for "Lessons from “Sesame Street”".
Thumbnail for "The Season for Obsessions".
Thumbnail for "The Grand Spectacle of Pope Week".
Thumbnail for "I Need a Critic: May 2025 Edition".
Thumbnail for "How “Sinners” Revives the Vampire".
Thumbnail for "War Movies: What Are They Good For?".
Thumbnail for "“The Studio” Pokes Fun at Hollywood’s Existential Struggle".
Thumbnail for "Gossip, Then and Now".
Thumbnail for "Joe Rogan, Hasan Piker, and the Art of the Hang".
Thumbnail for "Critics at Large Live: The Right to Get It Wrong".
Thumbnail for "Our Modern Glut of Choice".
Thumbnail for "How “The Pitt” Diagnoses America's Ills".
Thumbnail for "In “Severance,” the Gothic Double Lives On".
Thumbnail for "The Staying Power of the “S.N.L.” Machine".
Thumbnail for "How Romantasy Seduces Its Readers".
Thumbnail for "David Lynch’s Unsolvable Puzzles".
Thumbnail for "The Splendor of Nature, Now Streaming".
Thumbnail for "The New Western Gold Rush".
Thumbnail for "The Elusive Promise of the First Person".
Thumbnail for "Hayao Miyazaki’s Magical Realms".
Thumbnail for "Critics at Large Live: The Year of the Flop".
Thumbnail for "After “Wicked,” What Do We Want from the Musical?".
Thumbnail for "The Modern-Day Fight for Ancient Rome".
Thumbnail for "Will Kids Online, In Fact, Be All Right?".
Thumbnail for "The Value—and Limits—of Seeking Comfort in Art".
Thumbnail for "Critics at Large Live: Julio Torres’s Dreamy Surrealism".
Thumbnail for "Help, I Need a Critic!".
Thumbnail for "A Controversial Trump Bio-pic and the Villains We Make".
Thumbnail for "“The Substance” and the New Horror of the Modified Body".
Thumbnail for "The Fate of the Finance Bro".
Thumbnail for "Sally Rooney’s Beautiful Deceptions".
Thumbnail for "Was Abraham Lincoln Gay . . . And Should We Care?".
Thumbnail for "The Trap of the Trad Wife".
Thumbnail for "Tarot, Tech, and Our Age of Magical Thinking".
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Thumbnail for "Charli XCX, Chappell Roan, and the Unstable Hierarchy of Pop".
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Thumbnail for "The Kamala Harris Vibe Shift".
Thumbnail for "From Vanity Fair’s “Dynasty”: Can Harry and Meghan’s Hollywood Dream Last?".
Thumbnail for "Alice Munro’s Fall from Grace".
Thumbnail for "The Changing World of Nature Documentaries".
Thumbnail for "From The New Yorker Radio Hour: Emily Nussbaum on the Beginnings of Reality TV".
Thumbnail for "Summer Obsessions".
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Thumbnail for "The Many Faces of the Hit Man".
Thumbnail for "The Rising Tide of Slowness".
Thumbnail for "The New Midlife Crisis".
Thumbnail for "Kendrick Lamar, Drake, and the Benefits of Beef".
Thumbnail for "Our Collective Obsession with True Crime".
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he ex-congressman has already pivoted from politics to pop culture—and become the latest beneficiary of America’s enduring fascination with con artists. Are we the ones being duped?
Thumbnail for "Hayao Miyazaki’s Magical Realms".
The Japanese filmmaker behind “My Neighbor Totoro” and “Spirited Away” is renowned for stories about resourceful children navigating surreal, often perilous circumstances. In “The Boy and the Heron,” the eighty-two-year-old makes a rare return to his own youth.
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“The Buccaneers,” a new television series based on the Edith Wharton novel of the same name, is the latest in a string of shows to mix a historical setting and a distinctly modern sensibility. Are the updates revelatory, or pandering?
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Samantha Irby Knows How to Be Funny
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Is “The Golden Bachelor” Too Good to Be True?
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Why We Dine Out (or Don’t)
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Britney Spears Tells Her Horror Story
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Martin Scorsese’s America
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Are Straight Couples O.K.?
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Spies, Sex, and John le Carré
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Taylor Swift Is Everywhere All at Once
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The Myth-Making of Elon Musk
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What Is Cringecore, and Why Is It Everywhere?
Thumbnail for "Introducing: Critics at Large".
On a new culture podcast, The New Yorker’s critics take on some of the defining texts of our era, from Rushdie to “The Real Housewives.”

The New Coming-of-Age Story

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March 14, 202450min 1sec

For centuries, the bildungsroman, or novel of education, has offered a window into a formative period of life—and, by extension, into the historical moment in which it’s set. Vinson Cunningham sent the draft of “Great Expectations,” a book loosely based on his experience on Barack Obama’s first Presidential campaign, to publishers on January 6, 2021. Shortly after he hit Send, he watched rioters break into the Capitol building. “For me, it was, like, cycle complete,” he says. The age of optimism ushered in by Obama was over. “We are off to another thing.” Cunningham’s novel is part of a tradition that stretches back to the eighteen-hundreds: coming-of-age plots that chart their protagonists’ entry into adulthood. On this episode of Critics at Large, Cunningham and his fellow staff writers, Naomi Fry and Alexandra Schwartz, discuss how “Great Expectations” fits in the genre as a whole. They consider it alongside classic texts, like Gustave Flaubert’s 1869 novel “Sentimental Education,” and other, more recent entries, such as Carrie Sun’s 2024 memoir, “Private Equity,” and reflect on what such stories have to say about power, disillusionment, and our shifting relationships to institutions. “I think, if the bildungsroman has any new valence today, it is that the antagonist is not parents, it’s not religion, it’s not upbringing—these personal facets that you usually have to escape to come of age,” Cunningham says. “It’s the superstructure. It’s finance with a capital ‘F.’ It’s government with a capital ‘G.’ ” 

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The New Coming-of-Age Story
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