My Evening with Flaco the Owl Plus: a new cartoon from Liana Finck. The New Yorker sent this email to their subscribers on February 22, 2024. Plus: a new cartoon from Liana Finck.View in your browser|Update your preferences\xa0Today’s cartoon, by Liana Finck:“How can I tell this isn’t a scam?”Open in browser to share this cartoon »Buy a print »\u200aMore in Humor\u200aMy Evening with Flaco the OwlHe asked who I thought was more famous—him or Pizza Rat. I told him that Pizza Rat was probably long dead by now, and Flaco smiled.By\xa0Evan AllgoodIntroducing Four-Step AuthenticationTwo-step authentication is just too much of a security risk.By\xa0Nat GriffenI’ll Start This New Project Just as Soon as All Conditions in My Life Are PerfectWriters need a solid support system. That’s why I should wife up, have kids, and raise them perfectly. Then it’s book time, baby!By Alex Baia\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\u200aThe TheatreA Reflective “Sunset Baby” Dawns Off BroadwayDominique Morisseau revives her 2012 drama about a daughter, part revolutionary, part survivor, whose father devoted his life to the struggle for Black liberation.By Helen ShawCulture DeskThe Weirdest Night in PopA new Netflix documentary chronicles the dreamlike recording session for “We Are the World,” the 1985 charity single sung by a motley crew of America’s biggest pop stars.By Sarah LarsonUnder ReviewA Memoirist Who Told Everything and Repented NothingWhere Diana Athill excelled was at admitting, sans complaint or self-recrimination.By Hillary KellyBooksDid the Year 2020 Change Us Forever?TheCOVID-19 pandemic affected us in millions of ways. But it evades the meanings we want it to bear.By Adam GopnikYou’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.