A trailblazing satirist who battled racial injustice in America
‘Donald Trump’s rise to power has transformed the GOP into the party of cacophony’
‘You don’t throw down shots of liquor with Tabasco in them unless there is a lot on your mind. I would think that the same goes for people who came out to cheer Trump’
The UK is tightening rules on sexist stereotyping in ad campaigns. Critics argue recruitment in the industry must change too
The tennis champion triumphs again over a spicy Mexican lunch in Manhattan
A rock-and-roll artist who overcame misfortune and became a key US cultural figure
‘As the president tries to crack down on immigration, he runs into countervailing market forces’
Marketers fear ‘racist’ Trump supporters, says head of Hispanic advertising group
Components in the proposal include a World Soccer Hall of Fame Museum
Republican football club owner has reputation for working behind scenes
Seminole tribe trying to turn around US president’s old Atlantic City haunt
He’s a divorced adulterer who ran a gambling empire, so how did America’s Moral Majority get so evangelical about Donald Trump?
A rival-turned-friend, David Cordish is the president’s kind of dealmaker
‘Courtship often involves meetings over meals, where culinary obstacles to intimacy abound’
Country’s once-largest retailer warns over its future, reflecting wider problems across the sector
Six towers north of Miami created a lucrative model for Porsche and Armani buildings
A young woman’s fatal accident points to the realities of some lower paid jobs in the US
Immigration message resonates with some in New York’s African-American community
Woody Johnson, veteran Republican donor, is a controversial figure in US sports world
Just days before his inauguration, controversies over his business affairs and other issues threaten to derail his agenda
A tumultuous news conference focused on the president-elect’s old and new roles
US firearm sales doubled under Obama but retailers are now offering discounts
Banks’ heirs apparent have a funny way of falling out of favour, writes Gary Silverman
The writer talks about how ‘the marketplace for politicians did something as weird as the marketplace for securities’
Seat-of-the-pants style results in unusual political and diplomatic encounters
International Edition