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The Highlight

A digital magazine unpacking the big ideas changing our present and shaping our future.

Welcome to the Escape Issue of The Highlight
The Highlight

Escapist summer reads, including: The girl who wanted to ride bulls with the boys, the true crime search for a missing father, a respite from work, and the future of clubbing.

By Vox Staff
The bull rider
Features

She wanted to ride with men in one of the world’s most dangerous sports. She had a lot more than her competition to be worried about.

By Steven Leckart
The man without a name
Science

Robert Ivan Nichols simply disappeared from his average, 1960s Midwestern life — until, using DNA, sleuths uncovered the truth. But were they digging where they shouldn’t have been?

By Katya Cengel
“For the first time in my life, I had money in my savings”: Workers on the relief of the $600 weekly benefit
Politics

How Covid-19 unemployment benefits changed these workers’ lives.

By Michael Waters
Is this the end of clubs?
Features

Farewell (for now) to dark rooms, flashing lights, sweaty bodies, and escapism.

By Lavanya Ramanathan
The unexpected joy of the worst summer of our lives
The Highlight

Covid-19 made my world small and bleak. But I still found solace in the quietest places.

By Christine Mi
After revealing in a sermon that she is trans, a Baptist pastor is fired by the church
The Highlight

As Christian congregations grapple with LGBTQ acceptance, Junia Joplin hoped that candidly telling her story would help her keep her job.

By Emily St. James
Coronavirus is making us all socially awkward
The Highlight

“Insinuation anxiety” — or fear of suggesting that other people are untrustworthy — is making every drinks date or meet-up in the park feel fraught.

By Rebecca Jennings
The enduring appeal of The Office in a crumbling world
Culture

How a nation engulfed by economic precarity turned a TV show about workplace drudgery into an aspirational fantasy.

By Emily St. James
Welcome to the Work Issue of The Highlight
The Highlight

Small business was already risky — then came Covid. Plus: distracted at work, swaddling ourselves in “The Office,” and 2020 grads on their prospects.

By Vox Staff
Whatever happened to the summer job?
The Highlight

How seasonal gigs became a nostalgic relic of the past for many of today’s young people.

By Rainesford Stauffer
Meet the 2020 grads entering the bleakest economy in decades
The Highlight

“I think about it every day, maybe even every hour.”

By Michael Waters
Why you can’t help screwing around while working from home
Features

For remote employees, meetings and deep work are now coupled with online shopping, soothing puzzles and video games, and an array of other distractions.

By Eleanor Cummins
The end of the American dream
Features

Covid-19 relief loans have dried up or never arrived. Customers aren’t returning. What comes next for your neighborhood wine shop, bodega, nail salon, or art gallery may be “an extinction-level” event.

By Laura Entis
A likely culprit in Covid-19 surges: People hell-bent on ignoring social distancing orders
The Highlight

Turbulent reopenings and partisan mask wars have only highlighted the nation’s preoccupation with personal liberty above all — even a deadly pandemic.

By Eleanor Cummins
A trans Christian minister came out in a sermon. Now, she’s bracing for what comes next.
The Highlight

The church has not easily embraced those like Junia Joplin. Could telling her story help her keep her job?

By Emily St. James
Monument Avenue is Richmond’s racist row. Will tearing it down redeem a city?
The Highlight

For generations, a single street paying homage to Robert E. Lee and his Confederate allies has upheld Richmond’s racist foundations. Change is coming.

By Ian Millhiser
Welcome to the Romance Issue of Vox’s The Highlight
The Highlight

The insular world of romance novels shunned black and queer writers. Then those writers started speaking up. Plus: Weddings in quarantine, a comic about true love, and more.

By Vox Staff
A history of racism imploded the romance publishing world. Can it change?
Culture

Romance Writers of America represented one of the sexiest and most lucrative genres in books. But writers of color say it didn’t represent them.

By Constance Grady
Virtual weddings were no gimmick for these couples
Culture

Stripped-down ceremonies, no families and no open bar, but these newlyweds loved the intimacy. It “boiled it down to what was most meaningful to us,” says one groom.

By Lavanya Ramanathan
Best friends, a love story
Culture

“Wanna hear something super bitchy?” is a kind of love language.

By Alanna Okun and Aude White
The new rules of sex — in the pandemic
The Vox guide to navigating the coronavirus crisis

Health officials are urging lovers to stop kissing, and start improvising. But will we listen?

By Alex Abad-Santos
What it’s like to run a wedding chapel in Las Vegas
The Highlight

From drive-through ceremonies officiated by Elvis to couples a little too tipsy to make the biggest decision of their lives, the owner of Little Vegas Chapel has seen it all.

By Sarah Zlotnick
For Native Americans, voting rights were hard-won. Mail-in voting could undo the gains.
Whose vote counts?

Covid-19 has led states to adopt mail-in voting. But it can be a barrier to ballot access for Native groups.

By Ella Nilsen
Fights, naps, chaos, and cuddles: 4 dads on how the pandemic transformed their notion of fatherhood
Features

“I think, without question, this is the most time I’ve spent with my kids, ever.”

By Chris Chafin
Is it time to build feminist cities?
The Highlight

From woeful public transportation to dimly lighted streets, urban areas consistently fail women.

By Leslie Kern
Grounded by the pandemic, a once-busy traveler finds a new way to see the world
Features

With her passport collecting dust, a travel writer turns to friends to help illuminate a globe weathering the storm together.

By Sarah Khan
The US almost tore itself apart to get to 50 states. Can DC make it 51?
Explainers

As the federal response to protests in Washington over the death of George Floyd have added urgency to the quest for DC statehood, we look at why achieving that status has proven so complicated.

By Alan Greenblatt
The Highlight
New “call a senior” programs are sparking unexpected friendships during quarantineNew “call a senior” programs are sparking unexpected friendships during quarantine
The Highlight

Older people at risk of social isolation are finding new connections through their phones.

By Luke Winkie
The stark loneliness of digital togetherness
The Highlight

Zoom, FaceTime, and other video calls have become the sole way for some friends and family to connect during quarantine. But does it really bring us closer, or only highlight the distance?

By Laura Entis
Is this the end of productivity?
Features

Amid the pandemic, workers whose jobs once defined their lives are questioning what it was all for.

By Sam Blum
How to fight fear and anxiety when quarantine ends
The Highlight

The coronavirus pandemic has done a number on our mental health. We asked five psychologists for advice on emerging from our homes to a changed world.

By Eleanor Cummins
“I am considering myself an essential worker”: An imam on carrying out Muslim funerals amid the pandemic
The Highlight

As Covid-19 ravages families in New York, a religious leader offers comfort — and some semblance of tradition.

By Sarah Khan
The inescapable pressure of being a woman on Zoom
Explainers

Why are women bemoaning their hair, clothing choices, and more, even during a pandemic?

By Leslie Goldman
Welcome to the May issue of Vox’s The Highlight
The Highlight

A mysterious outbreak was spreading at Girlstown. But what was making the children sick? Plus: How we look on Zoom, considering the right age for a president, and more.

By Vox Staff
The Highlight
The haunting of GirlstownThe haunting of Girlstown
The Highlight

A mysterious outbreak. Hundreds of stricken schoolgirls. Was it an illness, or was something darker to blame?

By Daniel Hernandez
How to bake bread
The Highlight

On the existential comforts of coaxing yeast out of air, kneading, proofing, baking, and sharing.

By Emily St. James
The Trump administration is using the pandemic as an excuse to target immigrants  and asylum seekers
The Highlight

Nativist scapegoating and racist restrictions in the name of public health are nothing new. But this time, anti-migrant policy could have devastating effects.

By John Washington
My PTSD can be a weight. But in this pandemic, it feels like a superpower.
Politics

For the first time, it seems, the entire world knows what it’s like to live inside my head.

By Stephanie Foo
Why your pet is acting like a weirdo during quarantine, explained by animal behaviorists
The Highlight

The psychology behind your dog or cat’s new eating habits, constant whining, or extra-loud purring.

By Michael Waters