U.F.C. Fighter on How to Avoid Being Swept Off Your Feet Plus: a new cartoon from Sarah Kempa. The New Yorker sent this email to their subscribers on April 10, 2024. Plus: a new cartoon from Sarah Kempa.View in your browser|Update your preferences\u200a\xa0Today’s cartoon, by Sarah Kempa:“The time machine is a success, but unfortunately it can only go back four years to the last election.”Open in browser to share this cartoon »Buy a print »\u200aMore in HumorRejected Girl Scout CookiesJumbo Samoas, the Thinnest Possible Mints, and other cookies that didn’t make the cut.By\xa0Ella Quittner and Olivia de RecatSix Things Millennials Have in Common with Dr. Frasier Crane (No. 5 Will Drive You Into a Deep Depression)O.K., so obviously you want to skip to No. 5. Please don’t. It’ll hurt you.By\xa0Reuven PerlmanU.F.C. Fighter on How to Avoid Being Swept Off Your FeetThe Eye Gouge: The eye gouge prevents love at first sight by ending their sight. This is why the Three Stooges never got laid.By Evan Waite\u200aThis Week’s Caption ContestSubmit a caption.Play to win.You be the judge.Help us pick three finalists by rating submissions.The final three.Help select the winning caption.\xa0The winner.See who won (finally).\u200aOne More from the Cartoon Archives . . .See cartoons for purchase in our store »\u200aName DropName DropName Drop,The New Yorker’sTrivia GamePlay a quiz from our archive: Can you guess the identity of a notable person—contemporary or historical—in six clues?\u200aMore from The New YorkerThe New Yorker DocumentaryCrashes and Community in “Demolition”In Alec Sutherland’s short film, upstate New York’s demolition derbies are a loud, brutal, deeply physical antidote to the isolation of digital life.By The New YorkerOnward and Upward with the ArtsMaggie Rogers’s Journey from Viral Fame to Religious StudiesThe singer-songwriter’s sudden celebrity made her a kind of minister without training. So she went and got some.By Amanda PetrusichBooksThe Truth Behind the Slouching EpidemicFrom the onset of the twentieth century, poor posture has been associated with poverty, bad health, and even civilizational decadence. But does the real problem lie elsewhere?By Rebecca MeadOur Local CorrespondentsThe Ex-N.Y.P.D. Offcial Trying to Tame New York’s TrashThe city has lived in filth for decades. Can Jessica Tisch, a scion of one of the country’s richest families, finally clean up the streets?By Eric LachYou’re receiving this e-mail because you signed up for Daily Humor fromThe New Yorker. Was this e-mail forwarded to you?Sign up.\xa0Manage your preferences|View our privacy policy|Unsubscribe\xa0Send feedback|Share e-mail\xa0Copyright © Condé Nast 2024. One World Trade Center, New York, NY 10007. All rights reserved.