How a Carnival Dance Group Prepares to Take to the Streets

On London’s east side, a group of young dancers prepares for the carnival festival in Hackney. Their carefree energy and excitement is captured perfectly in this short film by Nick David and Jack Flynn. “Carnival for me, is the best time of the year,” says one participant. “Danci … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

A Weekend of Protest

Over the past few days, thousands and thousands of citizens around the world marched through the streets of cities and towns, voicing their opposition to, or support for, dozens of issues. From anti-Trump protests in the U.S., U.K., and Mexico, to anti-brutality demonstrations in … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

A Border Wall by 2020? Doubt It

The construction of a massive wall along the border of the United States and Mexico is one of President Donald Trump’s central campaign promises. And it’s a promise he intends to keep.Within days of taking the oath of office in January, Trump began laying the groundwork for the c … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Sage, Ink: Martin Shkreli at Harvard

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@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Milo Yiannopoulos and the Myth of the Gay Pedophile

In the comment that cost him his book deal and speaker slot at the Conservative Political Action Conference, the Breitbart journalist and right-wing provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos defended “relationships in which those older men help those young boys to discover who they are.”In t … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

My Lifelong Frizz-Ease Addiction

You can tell the exact year I discovered Frizz-Ease by looking at my school portraits. One year there was a mop of curls atop my head; the next there was a shellacked helmet. I'm smiling, bigger than I ever have before, thanks to John Frieda’s famous product. Looking back at that … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Why So Many Young Doctors Work Such Awful Hours

The path to becoming a doctor is notoriously difficult. Following pre-med studies and four years of medical school, freshly minted M.D.s must spend anywhere from three to seven years (depending on their chosen specialty) training as “residents” at an established teaching hospital … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Escaped Alone Finds Comfort at the End of the World

The cosiness of the setup of Caryl Churchill’s Escaped Alone is entirely disarming. Mrs. Jarrett (Linda Bassett), walking down the street, sees an open door leading into a garden, sitting in which are three women she’s seen before. They invite her to join them, and the four begin … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Only Thing, Historically, That's Curbed Inequality: Catastrophe

Calls to make America great again hark back to a time when income inequality receded even as the economy boomed and the middle class expanded. Yet it is all too easy to forget just how deeply this newfound equality was rooted in the cataclysm of the world wars.The pressures of to … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Why Some Apps Use Fake Progress Bars

In a fit of productivity, I did my taxes early this year. They were a bit more complex than usual, so I set aside some time to click through TurboTax and make sure I got everything right. Throughout the process, the online tax-preparation program repeatedly reassured me that it h … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

American Jews Confront a Wave of Bomb Threats

The Nashville Jewish Community Center has now gotten so many telephone bomb threats that the dates run together, said Leslie Sax, the executive director. The first call came on January 9, when Nashville was one of the first 15 JCCs to get threats. The next call was January 18, ac … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The South African Building That Came to Symbolize the Apocalypse

It was 10 a.m. on a bright spring morning in Johannesburg, and just outside my apartment, the zombie horde was growing restless. They shrieked and wailed, clawing at their tattered gray clothes and surging toward the walls around them. As they thrashed against concrete and barbed … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Today's News: Feb. 21, 2017

—Elor Azaria, the Israel Defense Forces sergeant who was found guilty of killing a wounded Palestinian attacker, has been sentenced to 18 months in prison.—Several bomb threats were reported against Jewish Community Centers  across the U.S.—Milo Yiannopoulos, the controversial ed … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

‘With Such a People You Can Then Do What You Please’

Are Donald Trump’s latest attacks on the press really that bad? Are they that out-of-the-ordinary, given the famous record of complaints nearly all his predecessors have lodged? (Even George Washington had a hostile-press problem.)Are the bellows of protest from reporters, editor … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

How a True-Crime Podcast Became a Mental-Health Support Group

On the way to her first therapy appointment on a November morning in Lafayette, Louisiana, Windy Maitreme listened to her latest podcast obsession, My Favorite Murder. Maitreme works as an administrative assistant and struggles with anxiety and depression. Podcasts distract her f … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Using Historical Fiction to Connect Past and Present

Shanna Johnson, a middle-school language arts teacher in Grand Rapids, Michigan, had just begun teaching the historical-fiction novel Dragonwings when it took on added relevance during the 2016 presidential election.The book follows a young Chinese boy at the turn of the 20th cen … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Who's Afraid of a Big BAT Tax?

Donald Trump is feeling good about taxes. In his gonzo press conference last Thursday, he assured Americans that “very historic tax reform” is absolutely on track and is going to be—wait for it!—“big league.” The week before, he told a bunch of airline CEOs that “big league” refo … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Mystery of the Ukraine Peace Plan

On Sunday, The New York Times reported that two associates of President Donald Trump, including Trump’s personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, presented a sealed envelope to then-National Security Adviser Michael Flynn containing a secret peace plan to resolve the three-year conflict in … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Trump Gets an Upgrade at National Security Advisor

Let me be as clear as I can be: The president’s selection of H.R. McMaster to be his new national security advisor is unambiguously good news. The United States, and the world, are safer for his decision.McMaster is one of the most talented officers the U.S. Army has ever produce … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Africa's Other Elephant Is Fading Fast

When Richard Ruggiero first saw the gold mine from the air, he was reminded of one of Dante’s circles of hell. It In the midst of Gabon’s Minkebe National Park—a huge protected area the size of Belgium—there was “a gaping hole in the forest more than half a mile wide and long.” O … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Today's News: Feb. 20, 2017

—The government of South Sudan said some 100,000 of its people are facing starvation, and on Monday it became the first country to declare a famine in six years.—The White House confirmed that Trump reassigned a senior National Security Council aide after he disagreed with the pr … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

‘Our Readiness for a Terrorist Attack Is Dangerously Low’

Monday marks one week since the resignation of National-Security Adviser Michael Flynn—a full week in which the National Security Council has not had a permanent head. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump has made national security a centerpiece of his agenda, justifying policies ra … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Chimamanda Adichie on What Americans Get Wrong About Africa

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is the author of books like Americanah and Half of a Yellow Sun. In this animated interview, the Nigerian-born author describes coming to America for college and being floored by how little her classmates knew about Africa. Cautioning against a single sto … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

When Leaking Is an Act of Patriotism

An administration in turmoil.  A president sometimes “absolutely out of his senses.” Panic over foreign terror; a lurch toward war; rumors of immigrant roundups; foreign meddling in American politics. Fear and despair over the American Republic, once seemingly favored of Heaven, … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Post-Human World

Famine, plague, and war. These have been the three scourges of human history. But today, people in most countries are more likely to die from eating too much rather than too little, more likely to die of old age than a great plague, and more likely to commit suicide than to die i … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Case for Shyness

The Heimlich maneuver, in the nearly 50 years since Dr. Henry Heimlich established its protocol, has been credited with saving many lives. But not, perhaps, as many as it might have. The maneuver, otherwise so wonderfully simple to execute, has a marked flaw: It requires that cho … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

There Is No American 'Deep State'

Over the last week, the idea of a “deep state” in the United States has become a hot concept in American politics. The idea is not new, but a combination of leaks about President Trump and speculation that bureaucrats might try to slow-walk or undermine his agenda have given it f … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Taiwan and the Trumpian Uncertainty Principle

Core to Donald Trump’s appeal, both at home and abroad, is that he doesn’t seem to care how he’s supposed to behave. He certainly doesn’t fuss over offending Chinese nationalist sensibilities. This perhaps explains, in part, his curious adventure in China-Taiwan diplomacy.On Dece … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

A Dangerous Time for the Press and the Presidency

At the dawn of a turbulent era in American history, an inexperienced but media-savvy President, early in his first term, was obsessing about negative press.John F. Kennedy, who had grown accustomed to compliant coverage, was running up against the limits of his power to control t … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Today's News: Feb. 19, 2017

—A car bomb exploded in a busy market in Somalia’s capital, Mogadishu, killing at least 30 people.—South Korea makes more arrests in connection with the death of Kim Jong-nam, the half-brother of North Korea’s leader Kim Jong-un, whose regime is now being blamed for the murder.—W … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

SpaceX Goes Two-for-Two on Launches This Year

Thirteen seconds before liftoff, a panicked voice on the livestream said, “hold, hold, hold!”And so SpaceX’s Falcon 9 launch on Saturday morning was scrubbed in the final seconds “out of an abundance of caution,” operators said, because of a potential problem in the rocket’s uppe … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Skin-Firming as Self-Flagellation

Slathering on lotion doesn’t seem quite as punishing as other steps in a beauty regimen. Nothing’s yanked out or burned off; no blood is shed or pain inflicted in the name of self-improvement. But the hours I’ve spent in the last decade rubbing “skin-firming” products onto my thi … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

What Could Reverse D.C'.s Intense School Segregation?

Last week, a group of Washington, D.C., parents and teachers stopped Betsy DeVos, the new secretary of education, from entering a D.C. middle school. Several conservative pundits compared DeVos, an outspoken school-choice advocate, to Vivian Malone and James Hood, the black stude … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Ohio, Where Muslim and Christian Refugees Form 'Impossible' Friendships

Stepping out of an apartment complex into a warm Ohio night, Nashwaan Saddoon got into an old minivan and drove through Toledo to a hookah joint called Rocket Lounge. Sitting beside him was his friend, Amjad Arafeh. The two men had met only five months earlier, but they lived in … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Your 2017 Oscars Crash Course

As Hollywood’s biggest night looms and the Academy Award predictions pour in, you may find yourself feeling out of the Oscars loop. Maybe you don’t like awards shows but are being dragged to a viewing party. Perhaps you aren’t sure about this year’s controversies, or maybe you ha … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

A Brief History of America’s ‘Love-Hate Relationship’ With Immigration

Donald Trump’s executive orders on immigration—banning travelers from seven Muslim-majority countries and casting a wide net on undocumented immigrants—have prompted nationwide protests and, in the case of the ban, legal challenges. But while Trump’s immigration plan is more rest … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

A Rabbi Defends the Johnson Amendment

All religion involves some politics. As the partisanship heats up even classical religious bromides take on an undiplomatic edge. A biblical reference to ‘welcoming the stranger’ in the current climate, seems to favor one political position over another. ‘Righteousness exalts a n … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Donald Trump's Great Escape

MELBOURNE, Fla.—After four miserable weeks of being locked up in presidential prison—starved of affection, suffocated by bureaucracy, tormented by the press—Donald Trump made a break for it Saturday.Touching down just before sunset here in the heart of Trump Country, the presiden … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Trump Returns to the Campaign Trail

After his first four weeks in office, Donald Trump left the the White House for Florida, where he soaked up the cheers of thousands of adoring fans. It has not been an easy month for Trump, with a federal judge blocking his travel ban, the resignation of his national security adv … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

What Do You Know ... About Animal Accidents?

Katie Martin / The AtlanticIn this week’s Atlantic coverage, our writers explored how humans collide with nature, what scientists can learn from genealogy, the technology for spreading bad news, what Americans think about universal health care, the history of an overlooked space, … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

'Before, Putin Was Unpredictable; Now It's Trump'

Well, that didn’t last long. As President Donald Trump wrapped up his fourth week in office, the romance between him and Russian president Vladimir Putin seemed to have cooled suddenly. The week began with the resignation of National Security Adviser Michael Flynn amid revelation … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Americans at Work: The Gig Economy

This week, our “Americans at Work” photo essay features photographs of the everyday lives of millennial freelancers living in Los Angeles made by photographer Jessica Chou: “A full-time job with one employer has been the norm for decades, but in recent years, the gig economy has … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Today's News: Feb. 18, 2017

—Trump’s first four weeks in office have been marked by leaks, the resignation of his national security advisor, and general tumult, but Saturday he’s leaving the White House for a campaign-trail rally in central Florida.—At least two people have died in Southern California, wher … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Stuck in an American Retail Job With a Foreign MBA

Coming to the U.S. can knock immigrants’ careers off track for years. For new arrivals, integration is often an important part of achieving financial stability, as studies of upward and downward economic mobility have documented.Deepak Singh grew up in northern India. He had a ba … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

How Would Immortality Change the Way We Live?

Terror management theory, as Atlantic writer Olga Khazan explains in this video, posits that whenever you remind someone of dying, they try to manage their fear by regaining a sense of control. What would the benefits be to living forever, and consequently, not fearing death? Wou … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Fences and Fake News: The Week in Pop-Culture Writing

Why Fences Should Win the Best Picture OscarNosheen Iqbal | The Guardian“It’s theatrical cinema—the film is confined to a handful of backdrops inside the Maxson home and backyard; all the flourishes and drama unfurl from Wilson’s dense, poetic dialogue, a gift to both Washington … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Should We Die?

“So, you don’t want to die?” I asked Zoltan Istvan, then the Transhumanist candidate for president, as we sat in the lobby of the University of Baltimore one day last fall.“No,” he said, assuredly. “Never.”Istvan, an atheist who physically resembles the pure-hearted hero of a Sov … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

How Voter ID Laws Discriminate

For all the fervor of the current debate over voter ID laws, there’s a startling lack of good data on their effects. As of the 2016 election, 33 states have a voter identification law, with 12 of those considered “strict” requirements.After the 2013 Shelby County v. Holder Suprem … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago