I'm surprised you don't know Ben Taub. I thought we discussed him here ages ago.
I just went through a list of his articles for the New Yorker, and while several sounded mildly interesting they all sounded pretty dutiful and I wasn't tempted to click on them.
I think I've heard David Remnick described as a jerk elsewhere. I don't remember reading anything by him about Russia. He's on my list because whenever the editorial in The Talk of the Town appears above his name, I read it.
I once saw or heard him in a conversation with Jonathan Franzen where they observed that (then deceased) David Foster Wallace was never published in the
New Yorker. "Not for lack of trying," Remnick added, which struck me as gratuitous, snooty and dismissive of a writer I really like. Another time he equated something like concern for shared mother-father parenting as something of interest "to people who like artisanal cheese," which seemed to blow off what I consider an important issue as something trivial and elitist. (Remember our whole discussion about "artisanal"?

)
He writes a fair amount about Russia because he was a Moscow correspondent for the Washington Post for a while.
I don't recognize Leslie Jamison or Anne Applebaum.
Jamison is an essayist but not a staff writer. Turns out Applebaum writes for
The Atlantic -- oops!
(I did read Emily Nussbaum on "The Lost Boys," but only because the movie had Kiefer Sutherland and Jason Patric when they were both young and hot.
)
I have always liked Emily Nussbaum's writing, but when she retweeted a 2012 tweet of mine ("Like many writers, I have rituals. Before writing, I pour coffee, open the window by my desk, and attempt to read the entire internet."), helping it become by far my most retweeted tweet, she won my lifelong loyalty. It got retweeted 2,600 times, a number that to someone like, say, Kim Kardashian would be embarrassingly small, but was pretty thrilling for me. I saw it retweeted as recently as 2021. Some British radio comic retweeted it and a stranger formed a Twitter profile just to ask whether he was going to credit me! (It was the stranger's only tweet, and I never knew who it was.) The comic apologized and said he'd written it in a notebook and later saw it there and thought he'd made it up himself. So he apologized and discussed it on his radio show, thrilling me even more.
Like FRiend Lee, I'd add Elizabeth Kolbert and John McPhee.
Is McPhee still on the staff? Not saying he's not, but I would have put him in the category of Calvin Trillin.