Good morning. Today my colleague Sapna Maheshwari explains how TikTok has reshaped American life. We're also covering Iran and Israel, Trump's trial and the new Taylor Swift album. — David Leonhardt
TikTok changed usIn the coming days, Congress may advance a bill to ban TikTok or force its sale to an American company. Politicians in both parties call the app a threat to national security. But its reach is felt most acutely in our culture. Since it first arrived in the United States in 2018 (after merging with another app), its 15-second gulps of entertainment have become a fixture in the lives of tens of millions of Americans — including those who've never opened the app. The engine that powers this juggernaut is TikTok's recommendation algorithm, which figures out what users like and populates a customized feed of addictive videos. It's called the For You Page, or FYP. It was not built to connect people with friends, the way Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat were. It was built to entertain. As the app fights the most serious threat yet to its autonomy, my colleagues and I explored the ways that its innovation has reshaped American lives. In today's newsletter, I'll spotlight a few of them.
Our story also chronicles how TikTok has prompted self-diagnoses of ADHD and replaced window shopping at the mall. My colleagues looked at the app's knack for spreading conspiracy theories, its fight with Taylor Swift's record label and the secrecy around its algorithm. We hope you'll spend some time on these articles, even if it's only to check how many TikTok "microtrends," such as glazed-donut skin and sleepy-girl mocktails, you've heard of.
More on TikTok
Iran and Israel
Israel-Hamas War
Reaction to the War
More International News
Trump on Trial
More on Politics
Other Big Stories
Opinions Hilary Cass, the pediatrician who led a review of gender transition treatments in England, had the courage to follow the evidence, David Brooks writes. How would Americans react to the O.J. verdict today? The answer highlights our racial progress since the 1990s, John McWhorter writes. Here are columns by Michelle Goldberg and Pamela Paul on Columbia's response to protests and Frank Bruni on the Trumps' marriage. A subscription to match the variety of your interests. News. Games. Recipes. Product reviews. Sports reporting. A New York Times All Access subscription covers all of it and more. Subscribe today.
Like it's 1989: In the 1980s and '90s, Dafydd Jones's pictures captured the parties of Manhattan's rich and powerful. Social Q's: "Should I be loyal to my father or to my dying uncle?" In Manhattan: A Nigerian chess master is trying to break the record for the longest chess marathon. And he's playing the games in Times Square. Processing: After a hard loss, an e-bike helped a writer embrace life again. Rebrand: Manischewitz, a staple in American Jewish households, is using a fresh look and new recipes to court a new generation. Lives Lived: The guitarist and singer Dickey Betts was a guiding force in the Allman Brothers Band for decades, helping to define Southern rock. He died at 80.
N.H.L.: The board of governors approved the Arizona Coyotes' move to Salt Lake City. College football: Colorado coach Deion Sanders scoffed at the number of Buffaloes players entering the transfer portal, asking, "What are we losing?"
Taylor Swift's new album, "The Tortured Poets Department," is out today, and fans who want to own a physical copy have no shortage of options. On Swift's website, you can buy vinyl, CD, and even cassette versions. She offered autographed LPs, though those quickly sold out. One retailer is selling four separate CDs, each with a different bonus track. As streaming cuts into the sales of records, many artists are trying to lift revenues by marketing albums as collectibles. "The music industry is trying to figure out how to maximize superfans and give them more of what they want," Dan Runcie, an industry analyst, said. More on Swift
Top matzo, bread or bagels with Joan Nathan's homemade whitefish salad. Listen to new songs from Olivia Rodrigo and others. Upgrade your backyard. Relax and let a robot vacuum do the work. Take our news quiz.
Here is today's Spelling Bee. Yesterday's pangram was inkblot. And here are today's Mini Crossword, Wordle, Sudoku, Connections and Strands. Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox. Reach our team at themorning@nytimes.com.
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