A Cathartic Watch
Entertainment musts from Elizabeth Bruenig
Entertainment musts from Elizabeth Bruenig
After wildfires come devastating landslides.
Liberal education and career training aren’t mutually exclusive.
On a day dedicated to peace, the British capital is consumed by competing symbols.
Watch the full episode of Washington Week With The Atlantic, November 10, 2023
The comedian's newest show, The Curse, is weird and off-putting, yet intensely compelling.
Why do Americans smile so much?
A conversation with the legendary comedian and filmmaker about what annoys him, how you know when something is funny, and his theory about John Lennon
Season by season, For All Mankind has become less a tale of an alternate future than a meditation on historical memory.
Scientists have spent years cryopreserving coral in the hopes of restoring reefs. For the first time, some unfrozen specimens have reached adulthood.
I was a patsy, a sucker, a fool.
In the primary race, low blows have been flying—including about candidates’ footwear.
The selfie camera has gotten too good.
In the short term, indirect rule of Gaza by the Palestinian Authority is worth considering.
The Marvels is pleasurably lightweight, its story unburdened by the off-screen drama of the studio that made it.
The math isn’t adding up.
PinkPantheress, one of Gen Z’s most exciting new stars, harnesses the sound of intelligent artificiality on her new album.
To explain how the world works, authors have to break down complicated systems—without being boring.
They’re better off but not feeling it—which could be a really big political problem.