r

Trump’s support rallies around his flag in the Midwest

Republicans continue to give the US president high marks for his handling of coronavirus




r

Elmhurst: neighbourhood at centre of New York’s Covid-19 crisis

Funeral homes are full in working class section of Queens where immigrants pursue American dream




r

The road to recovery

The US requires a co-ordinated response on Covid-19 testing and getting people back to work




r

Trump should leave virus response to the experts

Formation of regional coalitions offers a path to a staggered exit




r

Trump cheers as anti-lockdown protests spread

Conservative activists vow to step up street demonstrations against business closings




r

A fridge full of booze is a lockdown hazard

Addiction experts say Covid-19 could tip heavy drinkers into full-blown alcoholism




r

Trump suspends key routes to US immigration for 60 days

President says restrictions will apply to green card applicants aiming for permanent residency




r

Trump demands Harvard returns federal aid funds

Elite university comes under fire for taking $9m in assistance while having a huge endowment




r

Trump bans green card applications for 60 days

US president assessing need for further moves to reduce immigration




r

Can Congress save US small businesses? FT reporters answer your questions

Laura Noonan and Lauren Fedor respond to your queries on the state of SBA rescue funds




r

Coronavirus bursts the US college education bubble

Soaring fees, worthless degrees and dicey investments have hurt the economy




r

Precarity, not inequality is what ails the 99%

Our predicament is that wealth has become the only apparent source of safety




r

​Waiting is the hardest part

US students and institutions of higher learning are facing uncertain futures




r

The American Confederacy is rising again under Trump

Over decades the Republican party has reconfigured itself into the party of the white and the South




r

How coronavirus broke America’s healthcare system

The US spends $3.6tn a year on health. Why does the pandemic threaten so many of its hospitals?




r

Why the courts stand between me and a haircut

In America, lawsuits are the way we make up new rules in a crisis




r

For-profit US care homes ‘decimated’ by coronavirus

Rising number of low-paid staff are contracting Covid-19 or leaving posts as death toll mounts




r

Premature US reopening plays Russian roulette with workers

The less well-off will be the most exposed to Covid-19 infection




r

Kim Jong Un's sister in the spotlight

Succession spotlight on younger sister Kim Yo Jong




r

The record-breaking US economic recovery in charts

Longest expansion in modern American history is also the weakest




r

Greek bond yields drop below US Treasuries

Rally in Greece’s sovereign bonds comes after election victory for centre-right party




r

US House passes 2-year budget deal despite Republican opposition

Agreement raises spending by $320bn but has limited offsetting budget cuts




r

Ten charts that tell the story of 2019

The FT’s pick of the year’s best visual journalism, from extreme weather patterns to signs of a growing surveillance society




r

How map makers will win the 2020 US election

The FT's Alan Smith investigates gerrymandering, using tiddlywinks and a salamander




r

Coronavirus: Dollar stores, Clorox make shortlist of stock winners amid rout — as it happened




r

Lockdown lifestyle: changing internet habits during the pandemic  

Local news sites are experiencing a resurgence and streaming is more popular than ever




r

Global coronavirus death toll could be 60% higher than reported

Mortality statistics show 122,000 deaths in excess of normal levels across 14 countries analysed by the FT




r

Loosening lockdowns: tracking governments’ changing coronavirus responses | Free to read

From business closures to movement restrictions, some countries’ policies show first signs of easing




r

Coronavirus tracked: has your country’s epidemic peaked? | Free to read

Find any country in the customisable version of the Covid-19 trajectory charts




r

Asian trade may reopen one link at a time

Putting up barriers to travel is proving much easier than taking them down




r

How a Wuhan lab became embroiled in a global coronavirus blame game

Donald Trump’s claims that the Wuhan Institute of Virology was source of outbreak belie scientific evidence




r

Coronavirus economic tracker: latest global fallout

Pandemic is causing the biggest disruption in decades to economies across the world




r

We risk a return to 1970s stagflation

The death of inflation has been exaggerated and after the pandemic we may need it




r

Why the US-China trade deal is now at risk of falling apart

Many in Washington say Trump’s mini-deal with Beijing was a vehicle for political boasts




r

Domestic tourists provide Chinese economy with a boost

After months of lockdown, citizens are keen to move around but not across borders




r

EU draws criticism over consent to China censorship of coronavirus article

Beijing edits European opinion piece published in Chinese state-controlled media




r

China exports rebound in April on new Asian demand

Factories reopen but economy still faces challenges from weak services sector




r

Jan Dalley interviews Sir Nicholas Serota

Arbus in Aberdeen, Long in Lakeland - Tate director Sir Nicholas Serota talks to FT arts editor Jan Dalley about next year’s Artist Rooms programme of touring exhibitions. In its past two years, the scheme has drawn tens of thousands of visitors in towns throughout the UK to shows by Beuys, Ruscha, Woodman, Hirst and others – but how easily can the model be replicated elsewhere? Jan Dalley interviews Sir Nicholas Serota in his office at Tate.  


See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.




r

Shadow Catchers at the V&A

Shadow Catchers, the latest exhibition at London’s Victoria & Albert Museum, is a showcase for ‘camera-less’ photography – where images are captured directly on photographic paper without the use of a camera. Deputy arts editor Neville Hawcock and Francis Hodgson, the FT’s photography critic, discuss the ideas behind the exhibition, and the works of the five contemporary artists on show, with the show’s curator, Martin Barnes.  


See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.




r

Simon Schama on beasts and beastliness in contemporary art

From formaldehyde sheep to giant horses, Simon Schama - in this recording of his FT Frieze week lecture - traces contemporary animal attractions to great works in the history of art  


See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.




r

Jan Dalley and Peter Aspden discuss A History of the World in 100 Objects

As the final object is revealed, FT arts editor Jan Dalley talks to Peter Aspden about the significance of the BBC Radio 4 series 'A History of the World in 100 Objects' presented by Neil MacGregor, director of the British Museum.  


See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.




r

Contemporary British art and the cult of celebrity

It's been a big week for contemporary British art. First the opening of the British Art Show 7 in Nottingham, then the second instalment of Newspeak at the Saatchi Gallery in London. To round it off, on Sunday Channel 4 will show “Modern Times”, the fifth in its series The Genius of Britain, this time presented by Janet Street-Porter. Peter Aspden, FT arts writer, and John Lloyd, FT television columnist, discuss art and celebrity: Charles Saatchi, Damien Hirst and the inimitable Janet Street-Porter. FT art critic Jackie Wullschlager reports on the British Art Show. Does it really represent the art of the nation? Produced by Griselda Murray Brown  


See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.




r

Chekhov on the small screen

How best to celebrate Chekhov's 150th anniversary? Sky Arts 2 have chosen to mark the occasion with "chekhov: comedy shorts" - four one-act plays transposed to the small screen, with a cast of well-known comedians including Johnny Vegas and Steve Coogan. But do they make good television? In this week's arts podcast, Neville Hawcock, the FT's deputy arts editor, talks to the paper's theatre critic, Sarah Hemming, and television columnist, John Lloyd, about the venture.  


See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.




r

Pop stars of a certain age

The music scene is currently awash with aging rockers and pop groups re-united. Take That, complete with Robbie Williams, will tour next year; space rockers Hawkwind, formed in 1969, tour the UK next month; while Lemmy, born 1945, is currently taking the stage with Motorhead. Whatever happened to “hope I die before I get old”? Aren’t they old enough to know better? Neville Hawcock, deputy arts editor, talks to Peter Aspden, the FT’s arts writer, and Richard Clayton, who regularly reviews pop for the paper.  


See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.




r

New opera: does it exist?

Is the operatic tradition defunct? Where and how should new operas be put on? And which are the great modern operas? On the opening of Alexander Raskatov's A Dog's Heart at the Coliseum in London, Jan Dalley, FT arts editor, puts these questions to Andrew Clark, the paper's chief classical music critic, and Nicholas Payne, former director of The Royal Opera, the English National Opera and Opera North. Plus, Martin Bernheimer, the FT's classical music critic in New York, discusses what he sees as the conservatism of American opera-goers.  


See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.




r

Miami Basel: the rise of Latin American art

As the ninth Art Basel Miami Beach takes place this week, Andres Schipani discusses the growing presence of Latin American collectors and galleries at the international art fair. He is joined by Mark Spiegler, director of Art Basel Miami Beach; Tim Marlow from London's White Cube gallery; Elizabeth Neilson, who heads the London-based Zabludowicz Collection; and Henrique Faría from Venezuela's Faría Fábregas gallery.  


See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.




r

The artist as businessman

Is it acceptable for an artist to have his work produced by others? And what are the implications of the artist as businessman on conceptual art as we know it? As a new generation of artists openly declare themselves marketing men, FT arts editor Jan Dalley discusses the business of art with Jackie Wullschlager, FT visual arts critic, and Peter Aspden, FT arts and culture writer.  


See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.




r

Does farce matter?

Slapstick; sexual jealousy; and mistaken identity. At its best, farce can be sublime – its intricate plotting and sheer silliness combining to blissful comic effect. But should we take farce seriously, or is is mere lowbrow entertainment? What makes a good farce, and how should a director approach it? On the opening of Georges Feydeau’s 1907 farce 'A Flea in Her Ear' at the Old Vic in London, Jan Dalley puts these questions to its distinguished director, Sir Richard Eyre, who was artistic director of the National Theatre for a decade, and to Sarah Hemming, the FT's theatre critic. Produced by Griselda Murray Brown.  


See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.




r

Classical ballet and contemporary dance

As the Royal Ballet rehearses Christopher Wheeldon's 'Alice in Wonderland', its first new full-length ballet in 15 years, Peter Aspden talks to Royal Ballet principal Tamara Rojo, Sadler’s Wells artistic director Alistair Spalding and FT critic Clement Crisp. Does 'Alice' represent a return to traditional values? Are ballet companies doing enough to encourage new work? And, what is the relationship between classical ballet and contemporary work? Produced by Griselda Murray Brown  


See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.




r

Sky Atlantic, Boardwalk Empire and the state of TV drama

The launch of Sky Atlantic on February 1 – the result of Sky's exclusive five-year deal with HBO - raises questions about British and American television drama. Is the US - with cult series like The Sopranos, Mad Men and now Boardwalk Empire - enjoying a Golden Age of TV drama? What about Britain? Has its Golden Age been and gone? Jan Dalley, FT arts editor, is joined by Mark Duguid, senior curator of the British Film Institute National Archive, Huw Kennair-Jones, Sky1’s commissioning editor for drama, and John Lloyd, the FT’s television columnist. Produced by Griselda Murray Brown  


See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.