But sloggish New Yorker articles are not a recent invention.
I didn't mean to imply that I thought they were. Perhaps that didn't come out quite right because I had two other thoughts in my head as I was writing that. The first was the evident sorry state to which the magazine's much-vaunted fact checking has clearly fallen. The second was that when Mr. Shawn was the editor of
The New Yorker, Mr. Shawn
was the editor of
The New Yorker. He wasn't pursuing his own writing while he was also the titular editor of the magazine.
And, yes, articles were shorter during the Tina Brown regime, and, where appropriate, that was a good thing--and the magazine could benefit from somebody who knows how to pare down an article like the Merkel profile. There doesn't seem to be anybody around right now who knows how to do that sort of thing--how to edit.
And, sarcasm or not, don't forget that what's only mildly interesting to you may be fascinating to someone else.
I do find the Merket profile, as I said, interesting and informative; it's just too long and repetitive.