The Corner

National Review

Don’t Wait ’Til Next Year

Jacob deGrom, New York Mets (Charles LeClaire/USA TODAY Sports)

For New York Mets fans, among whose sad company I count myself, last night’s ending of the 2022 season was sufficiently bitter that it is hard to process the perennial siren song of renewed hope: “Wait ’til next year!” Especially not when so much of the team’s fortunes are tied up in two brittle pitchers who will be 38 and 35 next year (Max Scherzer and Jacob deGrom), other key members of the pitching staff are headed to free agency and yet to re-sign, and a number of players had seasons they will be hard-pressed to repeat.

But here at National Review, there is always a next year, you don’t have to wait for it, and we are always bringing along new talent and prepared to repeat what we did last year. We’d like to sign up more readers, and renew existing readers, right now. That’s why we’re offering 60 percent off subscriptions to NRPlus. Subscribers don’t just get full access to the website without paywalls: You get online access to the magazine, vastly fewer ads that interrupt the site’s loading and reading experience, and opportunities to comment and to engage with our writers in our Facebook group and periodic in-person and telephonic subscriber-only events. And our mission remains the same as it has been in good years and bad for the conservative movement: in times of electoral and cultural victory and defeat, and in times of unity and times of division and debate.

Our roster is not just standing still. Whether it is podcasts, video features, NR Wire, or the work of columnists and editors or those joining us for shorter tenures as fellows and interns, NR always has an impressive crop of young writers coming along — just as it did when William F. Buckley started the magazine just before his 30th birthday, or back in the Nineties when Buckley hired a couple of promising youngsters named Rich Lowry and Ramesh Ponnuru. Look around our front page and see William F. Buckley fellow, Navy veteran, and Wisconsinite Luther Abel, news writer Brittany Bernstein, the indescribable Jack Butler, news editor Jack Crowe, education reporter Caroline Downey, staff writer and New Right specialist Nate Hochman, our fearless and indefatigable gender-beat writer Madeleine Kearns, ISI fellow Bobby Miller, Public Interest fellow Evan Myers, supply-chain expert and Rhodes fellow Dominic Pino, national-security correspondent and China expert Jimmy Quinn, media and enterprise reporter Isaac Schorr, and podcast manager and writer on delightful books Sarah Schutte — and more you’ll be hearing from soon. That’s a bumper crop of talent, ranging from the new arrivals to those who have become familiar fixtures to NR readers. It’s NR’s subscriber base that allows us to continue this, generation after generation.

So subscribe or renew now. Your support is essential to what we do, it’s a good deal for you, and it ensures that neither the readers nor the writers and editors of National Review need to worry about the team we will have on the field next year.

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