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Para un niño que veía televisión en los ochenta y noventa, observar a los adultos dejándose llevar y bailando de súbito era un presagio de que crecer quizás no tenía que ser un lastre.
Por Shane O’Neill
For a kid watching TV in the 1980s and ’90s, seeing grown-ups get weird meant that adulthood might not have to be a drag.
By Shane O’Neill
At Los Angeles International Airport, plane spotters gather to watch the sky.
By Sinna Nasseri and Rebecca Bengal
Last summer, diehards and newbies sweated it out in the hot sun for a brief glimpse of pure speed
Text by Kent M. Wilhelm and Photographs by Scott Rossi
A quiz about familiar (and troubling) romantic-comedy cliches.
By Tala Safie and Alexis Soloski
Who needs a stage when you have stairs? On film and in life, each step is more than a step: It’s the potential for a dance of daring.
By Gia Kourlas
Songs with familiar samples dominated pop and performed well on the charts, lending upstart artists a trick to break through — and tossing older ones a lifeline.
By Jon Caramanica
These are the images that defined a remarkable time across the worlds of art, music, dance and performance.
By Marysa Greenawalt, Laura O’Neill, Jolie Ruben, Elena Noel Santos and Amanda Webster
The much-respected Sight and Sound poll of the best films ever shows that what is valued onscreen has changed over time, sometimes radically.
By Eric Grode, Weiyi Cai, Rumsey Taylor and Josh Williams
On the anniversary of the landmark 1972 album “Talking Book,” musicians who made it and artists who cherish it share their stories.
By The New York Times