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The Atlantic
The Atlantic
April 13, 2026
‘Euphoria’ Season 3: A Reunion No One Wants to Attend
On the teen drama’s third season, adulthood brings only more misery.
The Atlantic
April 13, 2026
Illiberalism Is Not Inevitable
Recent electoral developments in Hungary demonstrate that authoritarian governance models are not predetermined to succeed indefinitely. Whe...
The Atlantic
April 12, 2026
Hungary Has Ousted an Autocrat
Viktor Orbán had support from Moscow and Washington, but not from his own people.
The Atlantic
April 12, 2026
‘SNL’ Goes to Space—And Returns With Pranks
A goofy sketch captured the grandeur of the Artemis II mission, but also something bittersweet.
The Atlantic
April 12, 2026
Seven Documentaries for Fans of Fiction
Anybody who enjoys an engrossing story will appreciate these movies about real life.
The Atlantic
April 12, 2026
The Looming College-Enrollment Death Spiral
After many decades of democratization, higher education could once again become a luxury good.
The Atlantic
April 12, 2026
Why Did Gretchen Whitmer Go Soft on Trump?
The Michigan governor doesn’t sound like “Big Gretch” anymore.
The Atlantic
April 11, 2026
The Thrill of Childhood Rituals
The joy of playing tag and creating secret languages has persisted across time and place.
The Atlantic
April 11, 2026
The Iran War Is Putting Pressure on Europe
Panelists joined to discuss the effects of the conflict on America’s allies, and more.
The Atlantic
April 11, 2026
The Romance of the Gas-Station Sign
A few glowing roadside numerals set the national mood.
The Atlantic
April 11, 2026
A Shot to Lose Weight, Then a Pill to Keep It Off
America has a new GLP-1 playbook.
The Atlantic
April 11, 2026
Iran Could Be America’s Next Vietnam
Let’s hope so.
The Atlantic
April 10, 2026
Iran Has the Upper Hand in the Upcoming Negotiations
Turning the cease-fire into a longer stalemate is a matter of political will.
The Atlantic
April 10, 2026
JD Vance’s Future Depends on Iran’s Goodwill
The war was intended to change Iran’s political future. In the end it may change America’s.
The Atlantic
April 10, 2026
Steven Soderbergh’s ‘The Christophers’ Pulls Off an Emotional Heist
“The Christophers” starts as the tale of a forgery, but ends as an intimate meditation on art.
The Atlantic
April 10, 2026
donald trump is no longer a chad
The Iran war sparked an epic social-media trolling contest.
The Atlantic
April 10, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, April 10, 2026: Soccer Stars
What Brazilian soccer virtuoso came to the United States to play three seasons for the New York Cosmos before retiring in 1977?
The Atlantic
April 10, 2026
The Books Briefing: The Writers Who Can’t Let Go of the South
Southern experiences and traditions can be deeply compelling, even exotic, to Americans who live in other areas.
The Atlantic
April 10, 2026
How Fake People Became Real Influencers
AI avatars are redefining influence and trust online.
The Atlantic
April 10, 2026
Viktor Orbán Could Actually Lose Sunday’s Hungarian Election
The Hungarian leader faces an energized opposition—and questions about whether he would accept defeat.
The Atlantic
April 10, 2026
How Alito Became the Angry Man of the Supreme Court
A quiet, bookish justice’s political leanings have become ever more overt.
The Atlantic
April 10, 2026
A Different Moon From the One We’ve Known
NASA’s Artemis II mission is bringing home a view of the moon unlike any humanity has seen before.
The Atlantic
April 10, 2026
The Iran War Showed a New Side of Pope Leo
Don’t call him the quiet pope anymore.
The Atlantic
April 10, 2026
Photos of the Week: Solar Eclipse, Amazon Monument, Titanic Bonfire
Blossoming cherry trees in Germany, a fertility and harvest festival in Poland, a horse harness parade in England, a Tomb-Sweeping Day festi...
The Atlantic
April 10, 2026
Are Your Summer Travel Plans Doomed?
Airports are suffering a perfect storm of actual problems and passenger anxieties.
The Atlantic
April 10, 2026
A Book That Shows How Republicans Went MAGA
A new book by an unremarkable Republican accidentally illuminates the process of GOP self-radicalization.
The Atlantic
April 10, 2026
This Is What Fully Automated School Looks Like
Asking ChatGPT to write an essay? How quaint.
The Atlantic
April 10, 2026
A Ye Comeback? Already?
The former Kanye West is making his bid to rejoin mainstream culture—with mixed results.
The Atlantic
April 9, 2026
J. D. Vance’s Focus as ‘Fraud Czar’ Comes With Baggage
He may come to regret his new title if Americans don’t like what he achieves.
The Atlantic
April 9, 2026
What Will Humanity Do With the Moon?
As the Artemis missions work to build a permanent lunar home, we should remember why we ever went up there in the first place.
The Atlantic
April 9, 2026
Reasons to be Hopeful in Iran
How a deal could change the country for the better.
The Atlantic
April 9, 2026
Claude Mythos Is Everyone’s Problem
What happens when AI can hack everything?
The Atlantic
April 9, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, April 9, 2026: Cities and Islands
The books of Nancy Lemann—including "The Oyster Diaries" and "The Ritz of the Bayou"—take place mostly in what city?
The Atlantic
April 9, 2026
The Biggest Hope for Curing Autoimmune Disease
Scientists could be getting close.
The Atlantic
April 9, 2026
The Art of the (New) Deal
What the murals of the Wilbur J. Cohen Federal Building can teach us about patriotism, propaganda, and beauty
The Atlantic
April 9, 2026
The Novelist Nancy Lemann's New Orleans Return
With her first new novel in more than 20 years, Nancy Lemann returns, yet again, to New Orleans and its eccentricities.
The Atlantic
April 9, 2026
China Watches Trump Blink
A blockade of Taiwan would hurt the global economy more than Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.
The Atlantic
April 9, 2026
Winners of the 2026 World Press Photo Contest
The winning entries of this year’s World Press Photo Contest were just announced. This year, according to organizers, 57,376 images were sub...
The Atlantic
April 9, 2026
Replicating the ‘Mississippi Miracle’ Won’t Be Easy
Phonics-based curriculum is only one part of how Mississippi went from worst to first in education. The other part is much harder to pull of...
The Atlantic
April 9, 2026
Virginia Democrats Go All-In on Gerrymandering (With Some Regrets)
They’re asking voters to ruthlessly gerrymander Virginia.
The Atlantic
April 9, 2026
Trump Is Wishcasting Victory in Iran
The president went from threatening that “a whole civilization will die” to claiming a “total and complete victory.” What does the already s...
The Atlantic
April 9, 2026
1979 Is the Year That Explains Donald Trump
And pretty much all of the 1980s do too.
The Atlantic
April 8, 2026
Pete Hegseth Is Trying to Resegregate the Military
“Color-blind and merit-based” now seems to be anything but.
The Atlantic
April 8, 2026
Trump’s Desperate Madman Ploy
Does Trump seem crazy? Sure. Credible, not so much.
The Atlantic
April 8, 2026
The Astronauts Are Studs
Strength, courage, expertise, wonder: NASA’s moon-mission crew has reset the bar for greatness.
The Atlantic
April 8, 2026
‘The Drama’ Is a Horror Story for Commitmentphobes
In “The Drama,” getting married is both the best and scariest thing a couple can do.
The Atlantic
April 8, 2026
The Most Transparent Presidency in History—And the Most Opaque
The paradox of recording Donald Trump’s time in office
The Atlantic
April 8, 2026
Ghostwriting Is Good, Actually
If you have a story to tell but not the skills to tell it, hire a professional.
The Atlantic
April 8, 2026
Trump's Iran Deal Gives Him Nothing He Wanted
U.S. declarations of victory ring hollow.
The Atlantic
April 8, 2026
What It Means to Be American
Fareed Zakaria and David Frum on whether they regret becoming American citizens. Plus: how 18 years of economic turmoil ushered in a new pop...- 1
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