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Trivia / The New Yorker

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    • In The French Dispatch, the titular magazine (or at least, the French arm of the Liberty, Kansas Evening Sun) is a dead ringer for The New Yorker. It covers a wide range of topics both mundane (student protests, art biographies) to curiously specific (French police cuisine and the shootouts involving it, fistfights at art shows, chess as a form of protest), has a very specific, novelistic approach to its subjects (down to the pretentious punctuation and layout of The New Yorker), cartoons and covers that vary between relevant to the topic at hand or stupid puns, and, of course, covers things far beyond their American city.
    • Only Murders in the Building borrows the typography and layout of The New Yorker's magazine covers for its designs, and wouldn't feel out of place in a true crime article or a genre fiction story that the magazine has published before.


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