![A black-and-white photograph of the Murdoch family in 1987, with (from left to right) Lachlan, James, Anna, and Rupert.](https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/qXNGbCJ_TJfLKnSzSNaitTkvAu8=/384x13:2638x1516/210x140/media/img/2025/02/GettyImages_107360397_4.nertralpop/original.jpg)
Growing Up Murdoch
James Murdoch on mind games, sibling rivalry, and the war for the family media empire
James Murdoch on mind games, sibling rivalry, and the war for the family media empire
How regime change happens in America
Trump is getting substantial pushback, both from the courts and from other pockets of civic life.
Republicans are just fine with Elon Musk gutting the government
How far can the Trump administration bend U.S. research before it breaks?
A short story
Trump’s renaming of the Gulf of Mexico is not triumphant but pathetic.
Blink twice if you need help, Mr. Mayor.
He used the constitution to shatter the constitution.
Even the smallest odds of an impact sound alarming, but scientists’ ability to calculate them is actually good news.
They helped him in pursuit of profit. Many ended up in concentration camps.
Other countries have demonstrated three possible paths—not all of which lead to good endings.
If the president gets his way, the strong, not international lawyers, will write the rules.
Can anything satisfy the guests of The White Lotus?
The first intriguing Marvel sequel in years quickly wastes its potential.
Lessons from the pandemic and its aftermath