

In 1925, Harold Ross, The New Yorker’s founding editor, envisioned a magazine of wit, reporting, fiction, art, and criticism—“a reflection in word and picture of metropolitan life.” A century later, The New Yorker is still known for its capacity to surprise, delight, and inform with accuracy and depth. Please join us in celebrating a hundred years of the magazine, and enjoy special centenary issues, curated archival collections, exhibits and events, and more.
—David Remnick, editor


Alex Barasch on the auteurs behind the indie film studio A24, Ruby Tandoh on the world of “The Great British Bake Off,” and Joshua Rothman on creativity in the age of artificial intelligence. Plus: Sam Knight on Sotheby’s, Kelefa Sanneh on music criticism, Alexandra Schwartz on Patricia Lockwood, and more.
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Ian Frazier on sharing the city with pigeons, Eric Lach on Andrew Cuomo’s comeback and the race for mayor, and Louisa Thomas on Juan Soto and the Mets’ ascendance. Plus: Lena Dunham on leaving, Zach Helfand on parking, Jordan Salama on the undocumented workers of the outer boroughs, and more.
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Jill Lepore on the letters of New Yorker editors and writers, Adam Gopnik on Ernest Hemingway and Lillian Ross, and David Remnick on the magazine from 1925 to today. Plus: Lawrence Wright on the bond between women on death row in Texas and an order of nuns, Kathryn Schulz on learning to love the spider, Dhruv Khullar on interplanetary travel, and more.
In the Beginning
Editors and writers who shaped The New Yorker during its first decade and beyond.
Takes
Writers, editors, and friends of the magazine revisit significant works from the archive. Read the series »
Tell us what The New Yorker means to you.

At this milestone in The New Yorker’s history, we’re collecting our readers’ stories of life with the magazine. Perhaps you grew up with issues on your coffee table, or you tape up covers and cartoons, or you can pinpoint a piece that changed you. Share your favorite moments with the magazine at themail@newyorker.com.
Submissions may be edited for length and clarity, and may be published in any medium.


A weekly game, inspired by the magazine’s hundred-year archive of cartoons, challenges you to place six cartoons in chronological order according to when they were originally published.

Don’t miss our crosswords, quizzes, and other brainteasers. Browse all games »

Celebrate the magazine in style. Shop the full collection »
Onward and upward.
From its beginning, The New Yorker has been devoted to depth, rigor, craft, and accuracy. In the face of great challenges to journalism today, we remain committed to our founding values and to our readers.
The best way to celebrate the magazine at one hundred is to read it: to find insight and enjoyment in its reporting, criticism, humor, fiction, and more.
We hope you’ll consider the New Yorker app—the best way to read The New Yorker anytime, any place.


Illustrations by Luci Gutiérrez, Javi Aznarez; animation by Arnau Solà Vila. Culture Industry issue covers by Cindy Sherman, Rea Irvin. New York issue covers by Christoph Niemann. Anniversary issue covers by Rea Irvin, Diana Ejaita, Anita Kunz, Camila Rosa, Javier Mariscal, Kerry James Marshall.