Editorial*EXCLUSIVE* Amy Schumer spotted filming "Kinda Pregnant" on NYC streets after recently opening up about Cushing Syndrome diagnosis **WEB MUST CALL FOR PRICING**
EditorialCal Calamia, competing in a newly created category for nonbinary runners, crosses the finish line at the Chicago Marathon with a time of 2:58:50, in Chicago, Oct. 9, 2022. (Taylor Glascock/The New York Times)
EditorialA package of mifepristone pills, which blocks a hormone called progesterone that is necessary for a pregnancy to continue, at Hope Medical Group for Women, which continues to offer abortion services for now, in Shreveport, La., June 28, 2022. (Emily Kask/The New York Times)
EditorialA package of mifepristone pills, which blocks a hormone called progesterone that is necessary for a pregnancy to continue, at Hope Medical Group for Women, which continues to offer abortion services for now, in Shreveport, La., June 28, 2022. (Emily Kask/The New York Times)
EditorialThe supplement and hormone routine of Suhail al-Asaad, a top Palestinian bodybuilder, in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, March 2022. (Samar Abu Elouf/The New York Times)
EditorialA diversity of color on a stairwell at Magic City Acceptance Academy, a new public charter school, grades 6 through 12, that aims to be a welcoming place for students who are gay, straight, nonbinary, cisgender or transgender, in Homewood, Ala., April, 20, 2022. (Peyton Fulford/The New York Times)
EditorialA diversity of color on a stairwell at Magic City Acceptance Academy, a new public charter school, grades 6 through 12, that aims to be a welcoming place for students who are gay, straight, nonbinary, cisgender or transgender, in Homewood, Ala., April, 20, 2022. (Peyton Fulford/The New York Times)
Editorial*PREMIUM-EXCLUSIVE* Caitlyn Jenner proudly wears colors inspired by the Ukrainian flag after saying transgender NCAA champ Lia Thomas doesn't deserve win!
Editorial Orion, 17, who made the difficult decision to delay gender-affirming hormone treatment until this summer, when he turns 18, in Frisco, Texas, March 3, 2022. (Emil Lippe/The New York Times)
EditorialMost people think of melatonin as a natural nod-off aid, kind of like chamomile tea in pill form. Even the name of the popular dietary supplement sounds sleepy — that long “o” sound almost makes you yawn mid-word. But melatonin is also a hormone that our brains naturally produce, and hormones, even in minuscule amounts, can have potent effects throughout the body. (Dadu Shin/The New York Times)