Teen-agers
The Front Row
“How to Have Sex”: A Sharp Drama with Blank Characters
Molly Manning Walker’s first feature is empathetically centered on three teen-age girls whose lives it leaves unconsidered.
By Richard Brody
The Weekend Essay
Facing the Rivals
I was eager to escape my parents. Then they befriended a couple from Belgium, who seemed eager to replace me.
By Lucy Sante
Annals of Education
Virtual-Reality School as the Ultimate School Choice
The conservative education activist Erika Donalds envisions a world where parents unsatisfied with their public schools can opt out by putting their kids in a headset.
By Emma Green
The New Yorker Interview
Why Emma Seligman Decided to Make a Movie About a Queer Fight Club
The director of “Shiva Baby” and “Bottoms” on indies, male validation, third-wave feminism, and whether you need to be a dick to be successful.
By Naomi Fry
Cultural Comment
The “Dazed and Confused” Generation
People my age are described as baby boomers, but our experiences call for a different label altogether.
By Bruce Handy
Here To There Dept.
Supply-Chain Problems? Teen-Age Truckers to the Rescue!
Mr. Forry’s driver’s-ed class, in Pennsylvania, is training eighteen-year-olds to drive eighteen-wheelers as Congress lowers the minimum age for driving a big rig across state lines, in an attempt to ease the country’s logistical woes.
By Oliver Whang
Shouts & Murmurs
An Episode of “Euphoria,” Based Solely on the Jokes I’ve Seen About It on Social Media
Rue lights a bridge on fire. Then she lights an entire city block on fire. Then she flips a bunch of police cars over and lights those on fire.
By Carlos Greaves
The New Yorker Interview
Stevie Nicks Is Still Living Her Dreams
The rock-and-roll icon talks about style, spirits, and writing one of her best songs ever.
By Tavi Gevinson
On Television
The Addictive Chills and Thrills of “Euphoria”
The second season of the hit HBO show is a thing of beauty—a stylized, heightened, art-directed fantasia of a dark suburbia where really bad things look really good.
By Naomi Fry
Onward and Upward with the Arts
The Women Behind the Thirteen-Year-Olds of “PEN15”
How the show’s co-creators found comedy in the pain of revisiting adolescence.
By Rachel Syme
Annals of Justice
When a Witness Recants
At fourteen, Ron Bishop helped convict three innocent boys of murder. They’ve all lived with the consequences.
By Jennifer Gonnerman
A Reporter at Large
The Shadow Penal System for Struggling Kids
The Christian organization Teen Challenge, made up of more than a thousand centers, claims to reform troubled teens. But is its discipline more like abuse?
By Rachel Aviv
Photo Booth
What a Group of Young Migrant Men Want the Camera to See
Felipe Romero Beltrán’s series shows North African youths at an internment facility as they laze, play, and perform for his lens.
By Eren Orbey
Shouts & Murmurs
What to Expect When You’re Expecting to Be a Gen X Girl
Please enjoy both screaming and hearing “Get off the phone!” every day of your pubescent life.
By Kimberly Harrington
Cultural Comment
Could the Teen Magazine Rise Again?
Instagram and TikTok erased the authority of the traditional teen magazine, but teen-agers still want guidance and a community.
By Kate Dwyer
The New Yorker Documentary
A Young Female Boxer’s Recovery and Rise
“Team Meryland” follows a teen-ager’s journey from the Watts housing projects to the Junior Olympics.
The Sporting Scene
A Tennis Fairy Tale in New York
In a U.S. Open final with no precedent, the qualifier Emma Raducanu held her nerve to see off Leylah Fernandez.
By Louisa Thomas
Shouts & Murmurs
A Dishwasher Obsession
The dishwasher has become a nucleus of daily life, simultaneously saving time and generating a cycle of dependence.
By Glynnis Fawkes
Growing Pains
I Do Live Here
I hadn’t yet crossed that threshold Black adolescents cross in America’s codified subconscious—adorable kid to dangerous threat.
By J. M. Holmes
Q. & A.
When Parents Forbid the COVID Vaccine
A teen-ager explains how his parents’ resistance to vaccination has strained their family life, and the options he’s explored for receiving the shot without their permission.
By David Remnick