Tools
Change country:
Slate Magazine
  1. Slate Mini Crossword for Nov. 22, 2024 Take a quick break with our daily 5x5 grid.
    slate.com
  2. Slate Crossword: Town You’d Want to Get the Heck Out Of (Five Letters) Ready for some wordplay? Sharpen your skills with Slate’s puzzle for Nov. 22, 2024.
    slate.com
  3. Oh, So Now John Fetterman Likes Dr. Oz? Maybe he should go back and listen to some of his own campaign ads.
    slate.com
  4. Why Biden’s Economy Felt Worse Than It Was—and Doomed Harris’ Shot at the Presidency The Biden administration’s aggressive economic recovery plan worked on paper, but high costs and bad vibes told a different story at the polls.
    slate.com
  5. We Bought A House. Now He Won’t Marry Me. Help! Steven Ray Morris joins Dear Prudence.
    slate.com
  6. Donald Trump’s Cabinet Picks Break Norms Donald Trump continues to fill his Cabinet; Texas plans to teach the Bible in public elementary schools; and how Dr. Oz and RFK could shape healthcare
    slate.com
  7. Famous Supreme Court Lawyer: No Man Is Above the Law, Except Donald Trump, Actually As the saying goes, when you’re the president, they let you do it.
    slate.com
  8. slate.com
  9. Netflix’s Hit New Christmas Movie Has Me Wondering if Women Are OK Hot Frosty’s love interest is the perfect blank slate.
    slate.com
  10. Are Your Kids Safe on Roblox? Plus: getting out the door and unplugging.
    slate.com
  11. slate.com
  12. My Husband Uses the Family Dog as a Discipline Tool Against Our Kids. It’s Sickening. He thinks it gets “instant results.” I think it’s cruel.
    slate.com
  13. Help! My Mom Believes She Has a Psychic Connection to Her Dead Relatives. I think this is her way of grieving, but it’s starting to worry me.
    slate.com
  14. The Standard Unit for Measuring Pressure Is Named After Which Mathematician? Test your wits on the Slate Quiz for Nov. 21, 2024.
    slate.com
  15. Slate Mini Crossword for Nov. 21, 2024 Take a quick break with our daily 5x5 grid.
    slate.com
  16. Slate Crossword: Indian PM Who Renamed the World’s Largest Stadium After Himself (Four Letters) Ready for some wordplay? Sharpen your skills with Slate’s puzzle for Nov. 21, 2024.
    slate.com
  17. slate.com
  18. Why Do Wicked Stars Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo Keep Crying? Two Words. The drama, public messiness, and copious tears surrounding Wicked’s release are par for the course.
    slate.com
  19. Why Are Democrats Supporting a Bill That Would Give Trump More Power to Punish His Critics? The House is voting on a measure that could be all too easily weaponized.
    slate.com
  20. slate.com
  21. What Happens to Sexual Assault Survivors if Matt Gaetz Runs the DOJ If you’re experiencing alarming levels of déjà vu this week with the debate over Matt Gaetz’s fitness to run the DOJ, it’s not just you.
    slate.com
  22. Two Separate Shaken Baby Cases in Texas Expose the Death Penalty as a Farce They're likely innocent of the same crime. One may go free, one may die.
    slate.com
  23. I Cooked 25 Recipes That Changed Everything in American Cooking in One Month. I Was Not Prepared. I Cooked Every Single One of America's 25 Most Important Recipes. My Family Paid the Price.
    slate.com
  24. Rose Previte’s Baklawa Recipe—and the 1966 Recipe That Inspired Her The beloved Syrian-Lebanese dessert (with notes from Rose Previte’s mom).
    slate.com
  25. The First American Stir-Fry Recipe Adapted from “How to Cook and Eat in Chinese” (1945).
    slate.com
  26. It Was Once America’s Favorite Cake. Why Is It Now Impossible to Bake? In the late 1960s, you couldn’t go to a PTA potluck without running into one of these confectionary marvels—what happened?
    slate.com
  27. Josefina Velázquez de León’s Red Enchiladas From “Mexican Cook Book Devoted to American Homes,” 1969.
    slate.com
  28. If It Weren’t for Her, We Wouldn’t Have Many of Our Greatest Recipes. You Probably Don’t Know Her Name. For 60 years, she edited some of the greatest cooks in the world. Who was she?
    slate.com
  29. The 25 Most Important Recipes of the Past 100 Years A century of American braising, baking, and imbibing in one nation-spanning list.
    slate.com