Tuesday, May 19, 2009


The Hamptons in Flip-Flops
Jemal Countess/WireImage
The Hamptons in Flip-Flops

Low-key and beachy is the theme this year, but you’ll still need a fat wallet.

Whiffle Hurling? Bag Tag? Hey, It’s Art

Actors and artists in New York City are inventing high-concept sports that are meant to be both games and art.

Generation B
Legalization? Now for the Hard Question

The executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance has been advocating for the legalization of marijuana for 20 years and says he’s seen more progress in the last four months than in the previous two decades.

On the Street | Swoosh!

As the petals of the dogwoods fall, saucy skirts are causing men to turn their heads.

Pulse by Karin Nelson

Save that old Polaroid film. Fame could be a snap away.

Social Q’s
Stop That Nanny

This week, answers to readers' questions about being stood up by a stand-up guy, being too tall for regular airline seats and other issues.

Melinda Thomas and Michael Fabozzi
Randi Lynn Beach for The New York Times
Vows
Melinda Thomas and Michael Fabozzi

After commuting cross-country, they eventually ended up on the same coast.

Katherine Park and Robert Price

Katherine Jeehae Park and Robert David Price were married Saturday at Ici restaurant in Brooklyn. Jesse D. Hendrich, a minister of the Church of Spiritual Humanism, officiated.

Kirti Magudia and Anand Nataraj

Kirti Magudia and Anand G. Nataraj were married Saturday at Gardens at Heather Farm in Walnut Creek, Calif. Prabha Duneja, a Hindu priest, performed the ceremony.

Linda Thomas and John Termini

Linda Lisa Thomas and John Termini were married Wednesday by Betty Cole, a deputy clerk of Brevard County, who officiated at the Harry T. & Harriette V. Moore Justice Center in Viera, Fla.

Carol Huang and Chin Tang

Dr. Carol Li-Wen Huang and Dr. Chin C. Tang were married Saturday at Gotham Hall, an event space in Manhattan.

Caught in the Safety Net
Stuart Isett for The New York Times
BOUNDARIES Nan Mooney, 39, and her son, Leo, live with her parents, Robert and Jacquelinn Mooney, but have a makeshift kitchen.
Caught in the Safety Net

When hard economic times force adults to move back into their parents’ homes, the move is rarely without tensions.

On Location
A Portraitist of Homes Remakes His Own

The Hudson, N.Y., home of the accomplished architectural photographer Peter Aaron illustrates the gulf between his professional and personal lives.

For Urban Gardeners, Lead Is a Concern

Experts worry that the increasing popularity of gardening, particularly in cities, will put more people at risk for lead poisoning.

The Home Portraitist at Home

The photographer Peter Aaron, who has shot pictures of buildings by the world’s most prominent architects, describes his 1858 house in the Hudson River Valley.

Made in Brooklyn

Just as Brooklyn has become a center for locally produced, handcrafted food, it has also developed a broad population of independent, often artisanal designers.

Absinthes to Go Mad Over
Tony Cenicola/The New York Times
An Art Nouveau fountain drips water onto a sugar cube atop absinthe. Water makes the spirit drinkable.
Spirits of The Times
Absinthes to Go Mad Over

Absinthe is legal again, and the romance of belle époque naughtiness must give way to what’s in the glass. The tasting panel sampled 20 bottles of the spirit.

When ‘Local’ Makes It Big

Corporate food executives are turning to the concept of “local food” to sell products, embracing a broad interpretation of what eating locally means.

In New York, the Taste of Victory

Cook-off mania has taken hold in New York, drawing in young, obsessive home cooks, sustainability enthusiasts and the odd professional or two.

Restaurants
Follow the Sound of the Slurps

It’s not the Malaysian flavors or Manhattan tropes that will dictate your response to the new Fatty Crab on the Upper West Side. It’s your appetite for a certain kind of giddy, sloppy abandon.

Frank Bruni and other Dining section writers on restaurants and food.

On the pleasure, culture and business of wine, beer and spirits.

About food — cooking it, eating it, thinking about it and more.

The Call Back

That bad-boy auteur Quentin Tarantino auditions his newest find, Diane Kruger.


The Moment

The Moment is a daily blog that spans the T Magazine universe of fashion, design, food and travel.

Go to The Moment Blog »
Profile in Style: Pedro Almodovar

Win or lose, the Spanish filmmaker always takes the prize for best dramatic flair.

Hearts of Palme

They came, we saw, they conquered. Seven originals who were never the same after Cannes.

The Cannes-Do Guy

Got a brand to push? A film to finance? Charles Finch, a month-of-May migrant worker who jets in to the French Riviera for the Cannes Film Festival, is the man.

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