How Rahim Fortune depicts the beauty of a place and its people
We visit a rally in Dayton, Ohio, to find out.
The late psychologist gave the world an extraordinary gift: admitting his mistakes.
A conversation with Yasmin Tayag about rising pollen counts and the allergy apocalypse
The outsider candidate has money, a running mate, and a growing army of supporters determined to upend the election.
Shohei Ohtani and the future of sports betting
LaToya Ruby Frazier’s intimate, intergenerational portraits
Your repeated attraction to a certain “type” may come down more to psychological comfort than a mysterious connection.
https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2024/03/romantic-type-psychology/677889/?utm_source=feed
In Lisa Ko’s ambitious, messy novel, characters go to extreme lengths in search of a purposeful existence.
One man’s ambition has undermined Israel’s security and consumed its politics.
A New York appeals court threw him a lifeline—but the road ahead is long.
https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/archive/2024/03/trumps-lucky-break/677890/?utm_source=feed
Looking out from the harbor used to be an exercise in optimism.
Some of the top nature photography featured in this year’s competition
Authorities suddenly need answers to questions that few people were contemplating last night.
Thanks to AI, people may no longer feel the need to learn a second language.
New obesity drugs are remarkable. But few people realize how useful the old ones can be.
Vinson Cunningham’s new novel takes the reader back to a time when many thought the nation’s first Black president had an answer for every American ailment.
A group that formed during the pandemic to counter medical lies found that every lever it pulled on failed to produce the results it was hoping for.
No good legal reason exists to delay Donald Trump’s January 6 trial any further.
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2024/03/dc-trump-trial-speed/677862/?utm_source=feed
I didn’t know that college would be a factory of unreason.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2024/03/stanford-israel-gaza-hamas/677864/?utm_source=feed
Expect wild claims from supporters of the humiliated dictator.
The former president got his latest reprieve when a court reduced the $464 million bond in his fraud case.
Images of this year’s colorful Holi festivals from Nepal, India, Pakistan, Kenya, and the U.S.
https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2024/03/photos-holi-2024-festival-colors/677876/?utm_source=feed
Fraud. Hush money. Election subversion. Mar-a-Lago documents. One place to keep track of the presidential candidate’s legal troubles.
Hiring Ronna McDaniel as a contributor angered the network’s contributors, staff, and audience—and with seemingly no upside.