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The Atlantic
The Atlantic
April 23, 2026
Trump Voters Like Marco Rubio More and More
And J. D. Vance less and less
The Atlantic
April 23, 2026
Life Isn’t Easy in the OnlyFans Economy
TV is finally considering the relentless, creative work of making a living online.
The Atlantic
April 23, 2026
Kidnapped in Iraq
I kept asking my captors Why?
The Atlantic
April 23, 2026
The Lost Promise of Stewart Brand’s Futurism
A new book by the creator of the Whole Earth Catalog sheds light on the compromises he made with the powerful.
The Atlantic
April 22, 2026
The Big Question the Fed-Chair Hearing Leaves Open
At yesterday’s confirmation hearing, Kevin Warsh remained tactically opaque.
The Atlantic
April 22, 2026
Everyone Wants to Win the MAHA Moms
Health-conscious mothers represent a significant demographic shift in consumer behavior and lifestyle choices. This emerging segment, often...
The Atlantic
April 22, 2026
On the Brink of Global Recession
The economist Adam Posen on the effect of the war in Iran on the world’s economy and the darkening economic outlook for the United States. P...
The Atlantic
April 22, 2026
Redistricting and Revenge
Republicans are very upset about gerrymandering.
The Atlantic
April 22, 2026
Photos: Reclaimed by Nature
On Earth Day, I wanted to share images of the incredible resilience of nature: the many ways that plants, animals, and natural processes rec...
The Atlantic
April 22, 2026
Hegseth to the Troops: We Are Bringing Back the Flu!
Grab your cough drops. We’re going to battle.
The Atlantic
April 22, 2026
A New Front in an Old Gerrymandering War
Virginia voters approved an aggressive Democratic redistricting plan.
The Atlantic
April 22, 2026
Eight Biographies That Bring Their Subjects to Life
Each is animated by the author’s love—for their subject, for language, and for pushing the boundaries of what the genre can do.
The Atlantic
April 22, 2026
It Doesn’t Matter Who Runs Apple
Fifteen years after Steve Jobs’s death, the company is a successful, if unexciting, powerhouse.
The Atlantic
April 22, 2026
Brace for the Plastic Price Hikes
The war in Iran could raise the consumer costs of car parts, toys, clothing, and more.
The Atlantic
April 22, 2026
The Iran Talks Are Making India Feel Small
Modi styled himself a global leader but can’t seem to get ahead of events in the Middle East.
The Atlantic
April 22, 2026
Today’s Atlantic Trivia: Black Comedy
What Black actress—the first to win an Academy Award—reportedly quipped that she would rather play a maid than be one?
The Atlantic
April 22, 2026
In These Books, Life Without Men Is No Fantasy
Stories about women cohabitating are proliferating—and are far from simply idyllic.
The Atlantic
April 22, 2026
How Democrats Can Lose Michigan, Again
What Abdul El-Sayed doesn’t get about Trump
The Atlantic
April 22, 2026
The Terrible Limbo Between the Emergency Room and a Hospital Bed
Patients are getting stuck in the emergency department for days while waiting for a spot in an inpatient ward.
The Atlantic
April 22, 2026
The Case of the Disappearing Scientists
Yes, it’s really happening. No, it’s not a foreign plot.
The Atlantic
April 21, 2026
Another Trump Cabinet Member Is Out
Lori Chavez-DeRemer was supposed to take the GOP in a more worker-friendly direction. Instead she is departing amid scandal.
The Atlantic
April 21, 2026
The Rise of the House Manager
More families who can afford it are hiring a “chief of staff for the home.”
The Atlantic
April 21, 2026
Elon Musk Is Taking the X Playbook to Starlink
The world’s richest man is accruing more power than ever before.
The Atlantic
April 21, 2026
Big Sky Democrats Battle Over ‘Poison’ Brand
Montana Democrats thought they found a novel way to win control of the U.S. Senate—until the party faithful started fighting back.
The Atlantic
April 21, 2026
The Rise of CliffsNotes Cinema
Hollywood is missing the point of the classics, again and again.
The Atlantic
April 21, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, April 21, 2026: Deadly Sins
What sum results from adding together the numbers of deadly sins, bodily humors, and signs of the zodiac?
The Atlantic
April 21, 2026
Why Justin Bieber Played YouTube Onstage for Thousands of People
The pop star transformed the normal act of browsing your laptop into something interesting—and unsettling.
The Atlantic
April 21, 2026
Andrew Durbin's biography of Peter Hujar and Paul Thek
A new biography brings the the late photographer’s relationship with the artist Paul Thek to vivid life.
The Atlantic
April 21, 2026
An Extra-Embarrassing White House Correspondents’ Dinner
Why is Donald Trump breaking bread with the “enemy of the people”?
The Atlantic
April 21, 2026
All the World Has Stage Fright
What happens when performance anxiety becomes a way of life
The Atlantic
April 21, 2026
Losing My Daughter, and Myself
The person I was died at the exact moment my child did.
The Atlantic
April 21, 2026
Robert Rauschenberg’s Penchant for Invention and Spectacle
In 2007, he and Merce Cunningham put a new twist on a famous 1981 sculpture.
The Atlantic
April 21, 2026
Have Accommodations Become an Unfair Advantage in Higher Education?
Readers respond to our January 2026 issue.
The Atlantic
April 20, 2026
The Aides Keeping the President in the Dark
Donald Trump’s advisers are treating him like he can’t handle the reality of the war in Iran. They might be right—but that fact is a danger...
The Atlantic
April 20, 2026
The End of the Argument ad Orbánum
America is more resilient than the pessimists think.
The Atlantic
April 20, 2026
Fare Gate Society
Some cities are realizing that the only way to provide high-quality public services is through designs that keep disorder out.
The Atlantic
April 20, 2026
The ‘Weaponization Working Group’ Makes Its First Move
A new DOJ report purports to show bias under the Biden administration—and fails spectacularly.
The Atlantic
April 20, 2026
Why Americans Hate a Cheater
Monogamy is one of the last bipartisan ideals—even if people struggle to live up to it.
The Atlantic
April 20, 2026
Atlantic Trivia for April 20, 2026: Free Bread
What restaurant introduced its now-famous complimentary offering in 1992 under the straightforward name Hot Cheese Garlic Bread?
The Atlantic
April 20, 2026
Who Owns ‘Let Them’?
Years before Mel Robbins published her best-selling self-help book, a struggling writer posted a poem with a similar message.
The Atlantic
April 20, 2026
What I Learned About Billionaires at Jeff Bezos’s Private Retreat
For the richest men on Earth, everything is free and nothing matters.
The Atlantic
April 19, 2026
Photos: Out Among the Cherry Blossoms
Recent images of people enjoying themselves on warm spring days, among groves of flowering cherry-blossom trees in cities and parks across t...
The Atlantic
April 19, 2026
A 13,000-Mile Mission for One Beautiful Loaf
A conversation with Caity Weaver about a completely scientific, totally exhaustive search for America’s best free bread.
The Atlantic
April 19, 2026
Asking the Wrong Questions About Hasan Piker
The problem isn’t whether to engage with influencers, but how to.
The Atlantic
April 19, 2026
The California Governor’s Race Is a Debacle
The capital of Blue America can’t find a Democrat to lead it.
The Atlantic
April 18, 2026
The President and the Pope
Panelists joined to discuss Trump’s attacks on Pope Leo XIV for his comments about the war in Iran.
The Atlantic
April 18, 2026
How to Revive the Art of Hanging Out
Modern life makes it harder to seek out places to just be, but it’s not impossible.
The Atlantic
April 18, 2026
A Beguiling Film About the Downsides of Pop Stardom
Mother Mary offers a spooky spin on what it takes to stay famous.
The Atlantic
April 18, 2026
Can Turning Off Your Phone Bring You Closer to God?
Pastor John Mark Comer has won a massive following by preaching about the ills of technology.
The Atlantic
April 18, 2026
The Film From 1969 That Explains Contemporary America
The Sorrow and the Pity has lessons for how authoritarianism takes root.- 1
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