Dear Therapist: No One Wants to Host My In-Laws for the Holidays
My husband’s parents are divorcing, and they are worried about being alone.
My husband’s parents are divorcing, and they are worried about being alone.
Dialogue from these movies and TV shows has been used by companies such as Apple and Anthropic to train AI systems.
Thirty-four felony convictions. Charges of fraud, election subversion, and obstruction. One place to keep track of the president-elect’s legal troubles.
The X exodus is weakening a way for conservatives to speak to the masses.
And what I got wrong about the 2024 election
The Biden administration tried to address the country’s health problems, with only modest success.
Tremendous power is flowing to tech and finance magnates.
Group fitness classes aren’t just about exercise.
To read a book in college, it helps to have read a book in high school.
The incoming president wants to do things his voters have not embraced.
Greg Abbott is taking a stand to protect his state’s right to let children die in the Rio Grande, and four justices of the Supreme Court are encouraging him to do so.
The Atlantic has chosen 65 gifts for bringing more merriment, adventure, and wonder to the ones you love.
Pete Hegseth considers himself to be at war with basically everybody to Trump’s left, and it is by no means clear that he means war metaphorically.
Lucy Calkins was an education superstar. Now she’s cast as the reason a generation of students struggles to read. Can she reclaim her good name?
Some of the top and winning images from this year’s landscape-photography competition
Economists aren’t telling the whole truth about tariffs.
Jake Paul is an emblem of a generation starving for purpose while gorging on spectacle.
Revenge on the military is just the start of it.
You don’t have to become a Buddhist monk to realize the value of contemplating hard questions without clear answers.
I know I sound naive, but this wasn’t like a “normal” affair.