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What will we be posting here? Words, pictures, drawings, videos, interviews, and links to other Web sites. We'll have guest cartoonists, and we'll even have guest editors from time to time who will share their humorous ramblings, such as former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.Aside from the fact that it's high time for The New Yorker to start closing up and lowercasing "website," I'm very excited about this virtual lounge, and am looking forward to lounging in it.
We'd also like to make this interactive, so we've got an e-mail address for your feedback which is absolutely free, if you can believe it. We'll also have contests and quizzes and other ways to elicit the best of what our viewers have to offer. It should be fun. Stay tuned.
Emdashes, founded December 2004, is a place where keen and dedicated readers of The New Yorker, past and present, can find related news and commentary: about people, subjects, and ideas within the magazine, and events and conversations outside its pages. Learn more about us and our contributors.
We welcome tips, questions, and comments about The New Yorker past and present, plus related events, links, typeface sightings, &c. To contact the magazine or send a submission, click here.
No fear: Everything you say or send is off the record unless we ask for your permission to use it.
This site is neither owned nor operated by The New Yorker magazine or Condé Nast Publications.
They say that dashes “are particularly useful in a sentence that is long and complex.” Emdashes—like em dashes—emphasizes what’s between: in particular, between the lines, covers, and issues of a magazine close to my heart.
The New Yorker
Events listed by the magazine
Web resources: New Yorker writers and artists
Books, Organizations, &c.
Edited by Martin Schneider, designed by Pretty, and illustrated by Inkleaf. Additional drawings by Carolita Johnson. Kissable pencil girl by Jennifer Hadley, based on a 1943 Dorothy Gray ad.