A List of People Who Have No Business Being Younger Than Me Plus: a new cartoon from Nathan Cooper. The New Yorker sent this email to their subscribers on January 31, 2024. Plus: a new cartoon from Nathan Cooper.View in your browser|Update your preferences\xa0Today’s cartoon, by Nathan Cooper:“I’d like to thank the four hundred people who somehow managed to secretly turn this conspiracy into a championship.”Open in browser to share this cartoon »Buy a print »\u200aMore in Humor\u200aBonus Daily Cartoon: Art du JourThe hottest trend in painting is canned.By\xa0Barry BlittI’m Sick All Year Round, but I’m Also Ripped: Meet the Coughing Guy at Your GymI’m one neck muscle away from being unable to tilt my head down, and I’m not going to stop now just because you might catch what I have.By\xa0Eric FarwellA List of People Who Have No Business Being Younger Than MeIt should go without saying, but all of my present and future co-workers must be older than me.By Monica McDonough\u200aThis Week’s Caption Contest\u200aSubmit 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 . . .\u200aSee cartoons for purchase in our store »\xa0\u200aName Drop\u200aName 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?\xa0\u200aMore from The New Yorker\u200aLetter from VermontThe Rural Ski Slope Caught Up in an International ScamA federal program promised to bring foreign investment to remote parts of the country. It soon became rife with fraud.By Sheelah KolhatkarInfinite ScrollHow the Stanley Cup Went ViralThe canny marketing campaign behind the wildly popular tumblers.By Kyle ChaykaQ. & A.A Pediatrician’s Two Weeks Inside a Hospital in GazaNo space, no supplies, and harrowing life-and-death decisions.By Isaac ChotinerLetter from NepalConsider the VultureWe think of scavengers as gross—but they clean up nature’s messes, and they need saving.By Meera SubramanianYou’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.