No. 2 House Republican Steve Scalise is diagnosed with blood cancer and undergoing treatment

America’s fourth and eighth grade students’ sliding reading scores worsened in 2024, according to th

Ryuichi Sakamoto has been an enormously respected artist for decades, starting with his work in the

This week, we hunted monsters, learned how to be better movie watchers, and relished in a Met guard'

ROME — Cinema Troisi is an art movie house in central Rome. Its stark, white, minimalist façade cont

NEW YORK (AP) — The NHLis partnering with P-X-P to serve the Deafcommunity, creating an alternate te

Is high school theater the next battleground in the culture war? In Florida, Indiana, Kansas and

Slate film critic Dana Stevens traces Keaton's trajectory, from performing in his family's vaudevill

Seven years ago, Slate Magazine published the Black Film Canon, a collection of 50 of the best films

WASHINGTON (AP) — A person accused of accosting U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace in a Capitol Office building pl

Imani Perry says the South can be seen as an "origin point" for the way the nation operates. Her boo

Return to Seoul is a film that's easy to love: it has a killer soundtrack, a magnetic protagonist, a

For the last six years, tourists at London's Tate Modern who wandered up to the 10th story could cat

You're pulling your hair out, trying to fix something on your computer. You Google it and find what

About 20 years ago, when UCLA law professor Joanna Schwartz was a civil rights attorney in New York,

There's something elfin and even a little mischievous about the 102-year-old man who goes by Walter

Forensic musicologists race to rescue works lost after the Holocaust