Critics at Large | The New Yorker

The Guilty Pleasure of the Heist

24 snips
Nov 13, 2025
A brazen jewel heist at the Louvre has captured public fascination. The hosts explore the delight of heist stories, from playful hypotheticals to iconic films like "Ocean's Eleven." They discuss how the internet has turned the heist into a viral sensation, showcasing memes and online creativity. Delving into Kelly Reichardt's "The Mastermind," they debate its critical reception and ponder why audiences root for heisters. The conversation ties heists to societal critiques, exploring our ambivalence toward institutions and the allure of rogue brilliance.
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ANECDOTE

Familiarity As Heist Leverage

  • Vinson Cunningham recounts knowing Macy's on 34th Street so well he'd plan a heist there, down to escalators and the fragrance floor.
  • He imagines an 'Italian job' style theft targeting clothes because they're easy to fence and sell quickly.
ANECDOTE

The Brazen Louvre Daytime Heist

  • The hosts summarize the Louvre heist: four masked men entered Galerie d'Apollon at 9:34 a.m. and stole eight pieces of crown jewels valued over $100 million.
  • They note comic details like a dented crown, a dropped piece, and security missteps that made the story wild online.
INSIGHT

Memes Shape Public Take on Heists

  • The internet turned the Louvre heist into a collective meme phenomenon, blending aesthetics and national character.
  • Naomi Fry and Vinson Cunningham highlight how Frenchness and cheeky brand responses amplified public fascination.
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