Getting caught is the second-worst thing that can happen. [View in Browser]( [Esquire Sunday Reads]( [Sex and the Married Man: Portrait of a Serial Adulterer]( Sex and the Married Man: Portrait of a Serial Adulterer Adultery is a mirror all married people look into, a line to step up to and decide whether to cross. It is a mirror as well of the times in which we live, of the places where we look for grace. Where once we found solace in our dazzling contradictions, in the way we pick ourselves up from the pratfalls we take, now comfort flows in a colder vein, in the stern, conscientious energy with which we purge temptation in the first place, in the vigilant avoidance of danger. And so if, in the 1950s, adultery was a sin, and in the â70s an avocation, in the â90s it is in danger of becoming a disease. The therapeutic vision of life, after all, makes no room for monsters, for architects of their own grotesqueries. As if somehow we could do without them. Now adulterers are victims, too. [Read the Full Story]( [MORE FROM ESQUIRE]( [Oppenheimer Is Terrifying, But Irresistible]( Oppenheimer Is Terrifying, But Irresistible Short of Tom Cruise, thereâs been no more vocal advocate for the theatrical experience than Christopher Nolan in recent years. Heâs penned impassioned op-eds, battled with studios over release strategy, and his movies have consistently boosted the box office's bottom line. Nolan, though, is not just a champion of theatersâbut one of their greatest beneficiaries. His latest, Oppenheimer, is, if not his best film, certainly among his grandest spectaclesâone made many times more powerful if witnessed in the largest, loudest venue possible. As you might expect in a movie about the father of the atomic bomb, there is a greatâand I do mean greatâexplosion in Oppenheimer. But in this three-hour biopic, itâs not just the booms and blasts that are worthy of IMAX. It is Cillian Murphyâs oceanic eyes bulging out of his chainsmokerâs cheekbones. It is the alien emptiness of the New Mexico desert. And it is, perhaps most of all, Ludwig Göranssonâs relentless score. The fireworks in this movie are constant, if not always literal. [Read the Full Story]( [The Five Best Rappers of All Time]( The Five Best Rappers of All Time If you want the intelligentsia up in arms about aesthetics and the merits of conscious rap, broach the subject over dinner. You want to hear a Harlem barbershop hella vociferous with avowed expertise, mention some list compiled by a music mag. You want to lose the lionâs share of a few nightsâ sleep, pay serious consideration to ranking one yourself. That was me over a few days in April as I prepared my list of the five all-time greatest rappers. Rap music was born in the Bronx. Many of its pioneers were former members of crews or gangs and used battling as an alternative to actual violence as well as a way to foster esteem. Rap has remained the most competitive music genre, one whose artists tout themselves as the biggest, best, greatest. The âtop five dead or alive.â And that aggressive spirit makes it ripe for ranking. [Read the Full Story]( [A Closer Look at 3 of Rolex's Coolest 2023 Releases]( A Closer Look at 3 of Rolex's Coolest 2023 Releases When founder Hans Wilsdorf came up with the name âRolexâ in 1908, he couldnât have known the resonance that otherwise meaningless word would have a century later. By 1931, when the brand registered its iconic crown logo, he probably had some idea. Wearing those five points on your wrist is a sign, for many, that youâve made it. And every new Rolex is a potential way to realize the dream. This year, the company introduced nine watches at Genevaâs annual Watches and Wonders show. Here are the three weâre most keen to wear, each guaranteed to capture a place in your imaginationâand maybe your collection, too. [Read the Full Story](
[The Life, DeathâAnd Afterlifeâof Literary Fiction]( The Life, DeathâAnd Afterlifeâof Literary Fiction Those of you who are reading this essay, let me ask you, right awayâis your smart phone next to you? Or is it in your hand? Are you reading this on your phone, swiping up the paragraphs, swipe, swipe, swipe, wondering how far you're going to have to swipe to actually finish this thing? (Just so you know, itâs gonna take a lot of swiping.) Or are you reading on your computer screen, as I've been writing this on mine? I happen to know youâre not reading this in a print magazine. Ha! And ouch! Can you read anything at all from start to finish, ie. an essay or a short story, without your mind being sliced apart by some digital switchblade? Without your seeking distraction as a form of entertainment, or entertainment as a form of distraction? Or is all of this just ordinary life in the internet era, with your every thought and feeling and perception being diverted or fractured or dissolved or reiterated endlessly with utter normality in a digitalized world to which nearly all of us are fixated, or might we say, addicted? Did you ever even know a different world? [Read the Full Story]( [It's Time to Listen to John Boyega. Again.]( It's Time to Listen to John Boyega. Again. Itâs taken Boyega a while to be able to comfortably flex. After a youth spent anchoring a stupendously profitable blockbuster franchise, heâs proved himself as a performer who can seemingly do anything, onscreen or off. He made headlines for speaking frankly about how Disney sidelined his Star Wars character. The experience was brutal, but made him want to bring his most unfettered self to his work. These days, he has more control over his career than ever before and considers himself a collaborator with the directors he works with now. He has also actively defied being typecast, most recently starring as a bank-robbing Marine vet in last yearâs Breaking and as a nineteenth-century West African monarch in the Viola Davisâled The Woman King. His latest character, Fontaine, is the grounding force in a trippy universe where Black people are being lied to in multiple dimensions. The role immediately thrilled Boyega, a lover of dark humor and provocation. Lately heâs been taking big swings to fuel big ambitions, and filmmakers, producers, castmates, and audiences instinctively trust his choices. He could do anything, but what he most wants is an eclectic Joaquin Phoenixâ or Tilda Swintonâtype range. Somehow when Boyega makes this comparison, itâs not remotely obnoxiousâhe comes off as both confident and totally likable. He is not what he calls âtoxic humble.â [Read the Full Story]( Follow Us [Unsubscribe]( | [Privacy Notice/Notice at Collection]( esquire.com
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