![A photograph of actor Daniel Radcliffe Sitting in a theater seat.](https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/Zvo8vQBHyx-EEJKJNutIYsHQ1bk=/45x247:2454x1853/210x140/media/img/2024/04/BoB_Heath_RadcliffeOpenerHP/original.png)
How Daniel Radcliffe Outran Harry Potter
He was the world’s most famous child star. Then he had to figure out what came next.
He was the world’s most famous child star. Then he had to figure out what came next.
The biodiversity police might just work.
Judge Juan Merchan sanctioned the former president for the first, and likely not the last, time.
What anti-racism workshops taught us
Too many leaders, on campus and in government, are failing to uphold the First Amendment rights they claim to champion.
Neel Mukherjee’s new novel explores the reality that no choice—particularly as a parent—is perfect.
The case for having the International Court of Justice hear two cases at once
Life is not measured by a moment. Focus on getting the big things right.
At its best, medicine will be a process of shared decision making, and doctors need to be prepared.
She may have forgotten that Americans love dogs more than they love politicians.
Congress is bungling tech regulation yet again.
Driving my old car has become a periodic deliverance back into the real.
We’re nowhere near peak stuff.
The funniest people on the planet think there’s no funnier person than Albert Brooks.
May not amount to much, actually
How can I apologize to him, but also explain that he makes me feel small?
A poem for Sunday
It’s full of minerals that could speed along the green-energy transition.
It all goes back to one man in the 1950s: a military-intelligence expert in psychological warfare.
Donald Trump is not a rational choice for conservative Republicans.