Continue to the TheAtlantic.com
Advertisement
  • Study: Men's Biceps Predict Their Political Ideology
  • Who Are China's 'Reborn' Children?
  • The Everest Team That Dosed Two Sherpas With Amphetamines
  • 'Men Build Boats Because They Can't Have Babies'
  • Politics
    • Top Stories
    • There Was No Surge in IRS Tax-Exempt Applications in 2010
    • How Obama Contributes to His Own Aura of Scandal
    • The IRS's Bizarre Parsing of the Word 'Targeted'
    • 3 Followups on 3 'Scandals'
    • Obama Goes on the Offensive, Hold the Charm
    • The Biggest Obama Scandals Are Proven and Ignored
  • Business
    • Top Stories
    • Why American Colleges Are Perpetuating Inequality
    • How to Design the Perfect Tax on Hipsters
    • A Simple Graph That Should Silence Austerians and Gold Bugs Forever
    • This Is the Biggest Mistake 60-Year Old Men Make About the Economy
    • College Is Going Online, Whether We Like It Or Not
    • College Enrollment Is Falling Faster Than We Thought (Good News!)
  • Tech
    • Top Stories
    • Is This Virtual Worm the First Sign of the Singularity?
    • Can the Company That Built the Future Survive It?
    • The First Team to Summit Everest Experimented With Amphetamines
    • The Time Exxon Went Into the Semiconductor Business (and Failed)
    • 2,060 Minutes: Gordo Cooper and the Last American Solo Flight in Space
    • The Uncanny Face Model They Made With Richard III's Skull
    • Sponsor Content
    • Helping Doctors Keep Up With Medical Breakthroughs
    • DEBATE
    • Infinite Fossil Fuel?
  • Entertainment
    • Top Stories
    • The Lightweight Appeal of Star Trek Into Darkness
    • Meet the Troubled Teens of the Cannes Film Festival
    • The Office Finale: As Bizarre and Brilliant as Its Start
    • If You're in Redlands, Calif. on May 18 ...
    • A Name Change for the Redskins: Unpopular, Insufficient, and Necessary
    • The Quietly Radical Insight of Frances Ha: A Rom-Com Doesn't Need Romance
    • Pop Theory
    • Smart, fun / fun, smart
    • Will the '70s Be as Unkind to Don Draper as They Were to Real-Life Mad Men?
    • 1book140
    • TheAtlantic.com's reading club
    • 1book140's Great Gatsby Month: Read the Book and Watch All Four Films
    • Track of the Day
    • Track of the Day: 'Somebody Loves You'
  • Health
    • Top Stories
    • Ask Alison: Age Hangups, Cheap Weddings, and Respectable Breakups
    • Insanity: Rise of the Supercharged Workout
    • Understanding Salt
    • Study: Men's Biceps Predict Their Political Ideologies
    • How All Millennials Think About Pregnancy
    • When to Do Surgery on a Child With 'Both' Genitalia
    • Sponsor Content
    • Using Watson to Help Respond to Health Care's Challenges
    • Study of the Day
    • Study: Men's Biceps Predict Their Political Ideologies
    • Dr. Hamblin's Emporium of Medicinal Wonderments
    • During Pregnancy, I've Stopped Having to Shave My Legs—Why?
  • Sexes
    • Top Stories
    • How to Make the U.S. a Better Place for Caregivers
    • Angelina Jolie Is Still a Woman
    • Chick Lit Is Dead, Long Live Farm Lit
    • 'Overspending Has Become a Modern Form of Mating Deception'
    • Is He Cheating? A 1950s Guide
    • Is Sex Still Sexy?
  • National
    • Top Stories
    • Why Private Schools Are Dying Out
    • Misunderstanding the 'Connection' Between Race and IQ
    • What We Mean When We Say 'Race Is a Social Construct'
    • The Social Construction of Race
    • The Cardinal and the Prime Minister
    • What Commencement Speeches Leave Out
  • Global
    • Top Stories
    • Amid Ethnic Tension in Turkey, Some Syrian Refugees Return to a War Zone
    • Chatting in Code on Walkie-Talkies in Pakistan's Tribal Areas
    • 'Kite Runner' Author on Writing, Afghanistan, and His New Book
    • In Italy, Austerity Is Served on Homemade Bread
    • Republicans and Millennials Are More Likely to Find Syria on a Map
    • How Iran Benefits From an Illicit Gold Trade With Turkey
    • The Democracy Report
    • Social and political change around the world
    • Eurovision's Shady Connections to Uzbekistan's Oppressive Regime
  • China
    • Top Stories
    • Who Are China's 'Reborn' Children?
    • Japanese Mayor's 'Forced Prostitution Was Necessary in WW2' Gaffe Re-Opens Old Wounds in Asia
    • The Accidental Prime Minister of Tibet
    • The Largest Building in the World Will Be Built ... Where, Exactly?
    • 'Eating Bitterness': Hardship and Opportunity for Rural Women in China
    • What Is China Doing Right?
  • Magazine
    • In This Month's Issue
    • What If We Never Run Out of Oil?
    • How Not to Die
    • In Defense of Henry Kissinger
    • The Atheist Who Strangled Me
    • How to Tell a Joke on the Internet
      • Subscribe
      • Renew
      • Give a Gift
      • Digital Editions
  • Like The Atlantic
    Share This Page
  • Follow The Atlantic
    Follow @TheAtlantic
    Share This Page
    Tweet
  • Follow The Atlantic
    On LinkedIn
    Share This Page
  • Special Reports
  • Video
  • Photo
  • Ebook
  • Newsletters
  • If You're in Redlands, Calif. on May 18 ... James Fallows

Probably Not the Best Way to Handle a Scandal

In the midst of multiple uproars, the president is remaining aloof and disengaged. By David Rohde

The Lightweight Appeal of Star Trek Into Darkness

As before, the cast is lively, the plot ridiculous, and the action nearly nonstop. By Christopher Orr

Are We Close to Producing Digital Life?

An update on the singularity By Alexis C. Madrigal

The Office Ends as It Began

Bizarrely and brilliantly By Kevin Fallon
‹ ›
Probably Not the Best Way to Handle a Scandal The Lightweight Appeal of Star Trek Into Darkness Are We Close to Producing Digital Life? The Office Ends as It Began
  • So Who Lied to ABC News About the Benghazi Emails?
  • Republicans Want to Slow Down the Scandals
  • Former Chechen Rebel Investigated in Boston
Subscribe and Give a Free Gift
  • Subscribe
  • Renew
  • Give a Gift
  • Digital Editions
  • A Claim Debunked: There Was No Surge in IRS Tax-Exempt Applications in 2010

    So as an excuse for improper handling of Tea Party applications, that's really not going to work.

    Garance Franke-Ruta
  • A Newcomer's Guide to the 3 Obama Scandals

    Three dissimilar episodes, one of which is very bad.

    James Fallows
  • America's Most Bikeable Neighborhoods

    ... a list in which California and Wisconsin clean up.

    Richard Florida
  • Why Anxiety Is on the Rise in China

    Economic growth has raised living standards throughout the country -- but stress levels have risen too.

    Liz Carter
  • What Commencement Speeches Leave Out

    Want to change the world? En route to curing cancer, how about remembering to vote and go to jury duty?

    Andrew Guthrie Ferguson
  • The Thing That Made The Office Great Is the Same Thing That Killed It

    Its TV-as-catharsis approach to the monotony of office work was groundbreaking.

    Kevin Craft
  • Sponsor Content Presented by IBM

    WellPoint Uses Watson to Help Respond to Health Care's Challenges

    By learning to read like a human, Watson makes sense of medical data in ways that traditional computing can't.

    Lori Beer, Executive Vice President, WellPoint
  • Why American Colleges Are Becoming a Force for Inequality

    Higher education should be closing the gap between the rich and the poor. But college economics are driving them further apart

    Josh Freedman

In Focus

2013 National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest


  • James Fallows

    If You're in Redlands, Calif. on May 18 ... 12:02 AM ET
  • Garance Franke-Ruta

    Fauna: This Is Not an Indoor Cat May 17, 2013
  • Alexis C. Madrigal

    The Time Exxon Went Into the Semiconductor Business (and Failed) May 17, 2013
  • Megan Garber

    2,060 Minutes: Gordo Cooper and the Last American Solo Flight in Space May 17, 2013
  • Matthew O'Brien

    This Is the Biggest Mistake 60-Year Old Men Make About the Economy May 17, 2013
  • Ta-Nehisi Coates

    The Social Construction of Race May 17, 2013
  • Jordan Weissmann

    College Enrollment Is Falling Faster Than We Thought (Good News!) May 17, 2013
  • Christopher Orr

    The Lightweight Appeal of Star Trek Into Darkness May 17, 2013
  • Olga Khazan

    Republicans and Millennials Are More Likely to Find Syria on a Map May 17, 2013
  • Conor Friedersdorf

    In Homage to The Office: What's the Worst Job You've Ever Had? May 17, 2013
  • James Hamblin

    How All Millennials Think About Pregnancy May 16, 2013
  • Derek Thompson

    A Simple Graph That Should Silence Austerians and Gold Bugs Forever May 16, 2013
  • Andrew Cohen

    This Is Congress's Chance to Rein In the War on Terror May 16, 2013
  • J.J. Gould

    The Amazing David Beckham Goal That Sent England to the 2002 World Cup May 16, 2013
  • Matt Schiavenza

    Who Are China's 'Reborn' Children? May 16, 2013
  • More

(sample)

(sample)

(sample)

(sample)

(sample)

(sample)

Video

More Video

Is He Cheating? A 1950s Guide
Share on Facebook
Tweet

Most Popular

1
2013 National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest
2
Is This Virtual Worm the First Sign of the Singularity?
3
Can You Teach Yourself Synesthesia?
4
The Ethics of Extreme Porn: Is Some Sex Wrong Even Among Consenting Adults?
5
Is Sex Still Sexy?
6
The Biggest Obama Scandals Are Proven and Ignored
7
What We Mean When We Say 'Race Is a Social Construct'
8
Paul Otellini's Intel: Can the Company That Built the Future Survive It?
9
The Lightweight Appeal of Star Trek Into Darkness
10
How Obama Has Contributed to His Own Aura of Scandal
  • There Was No Surge in IRS Tax-Exempt Applications in 2010 Garance Franke-Ruta
  • How Obama Contributes to His Own Aura of Scandal David Rohde
  • The IRS's Bizarre Parsing of the Word 'Targeted' Garance Franke-Ruta
More in Politics ›
  • Why American Colleges Are Perpetuating Inequality Josh Freedman
  • How to Design the Perfect Tax on Hipsters Matthew O'Brien
  • A Simple Graph That Should Silence Austerians and Gold Bugs Forever Derek Thompson
More in Business ›
  • Amid Ethnic Tension in Turkey, Some Syrian Refugees Return to a War Zone Jonathan Krohn
  • Chatting in Code on Walkie-Talkies in Pakistan's Tribal Areas Panthea Lee
  • 'Kite Runner' Author on Writing, Afghanistan, and His New Book Wajahat Ali
More in Global ›
  • Is This Virtual Worm the First Sign of the Singularity? Alexis C. Madrigal
  • Can the Company That Built the Future Survive It? Alexis C. Madrigal
  • The First Team to Summit Everest Experimented With Amphetamines Megan Garber
More in Technology ›
  • Why Private Schools Are Dying Out Chester E. Finn Jr.
  • Misunderstanding the 'Connection' Between Race and IQ Brink Lindsey
  • What We Mean When We Say 'Race Is a Social Construct' Ta-Nehisi Coates
More in National ›
  • Ask Alison: Age Hangups, Cheap Weddings, and Respectable Breakups Alison Agosti
  • Insanity: Rise of the Supercharged Workout Yiren Lu
  • Understanding Salt Travis M. Andrews
More in Health ›
  • How to Make the U.S. a Better Place for Caregivers Anne-Marie Slaughter
  • Angelina Jolie Is Still a Woman Eleanor Barkhorn
  • Chick Lit Is Dead, Long Live Farm Lit Emily Matchar
More in The Sexes ›
  • The Lightweight Appeal of Star Trek Into Darkness Christopher Orr
  • Meet the Troubled Teens of the Cannes Film Festival Jon Frosch
  • The Office Finale: As Bizarre and Brilliant as Its Start Kevin Fallon
More in Entertainment ›
  • Who Are China's 'Reborn' Children? Matt Schiavenza
  • Japanese Mayor's 'Forced Prostitution Was Necessary in WW2' Gaffe Re-Opens Old Wounds in Asia Minami Funakoshi
  • The Accidental Prime Minister of Tibet Olga Khazan
More in China ›

Sharing the Atlantic: What’s trending in Social

  • Previous
  • Next
  • Study: Why Pot Smokers Are Skinnier
    2013 National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest
    What We Mean When We Say 'Race Is a Social Construct'
    How to Walk Away
  • The Inventor of Mother's Day Disowned the Holiday, and So Should We All
    How Colleges Are Selling Out the Poor to Court the Rich
    So This Is How It Begins: Guy Refuses to Stop Drone-Spying on Seattle Woman
    Well, This Is Just Awful: 'Renting' Disabled People to Skip Lines at Disney World
  • How to Make the U.S. a Better Place for Caregivers
    Why American Colleges Are Becoming a Force for Inequality
    Is This the End of Eric Holder's Tenure at the Justice Department?
    The Biggest Obama Scandals Are Proven and Ignored
  • How Drug Companies Keep Medicine Out of Reach
    Angelina Jolie Is Still a Woman
    Insanity: The Rise of the Supercharged Home Workout
    Why People Keep Misunderstanding the 'Connection' Between Race and IQ
  • Study: Why Pot Smokers Are Skinnier
    2013 National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest
    What We Mean When We Say 'Race Is a Social Construct'
    How to Walk Away
  • The Inventor of Mother's Day Disowned the Holiday, and So Should We All
    How Colleges Are Selling Out the Poor to Court the Rich
    So This Is How It Begins: Guy Refuses to Stop Drone-Spying on Seattle Woman
    Well, This Is Just Awful: 'Renting' Disabled People to Skip Lines at Disney World
  • How to Make the U.S. a Better Place for Caregivers
    Why American Colleges Are Becoming a Force for Inequality
    Is This the End of Eric Holder's Tenure at the Justice Department?
    The Biggest Obama Scandals Are Proven and Ignored
  • How Drug Companies Keep Medicine Out of Reach
    Angelina Jolie Is Still a Woman
    Insanity: The Rise of the Supercharged Home Workout
    Why People Keep Misunderstanding the 'Connection' Between Race and IQ

ATLANTIC MEDIA

Atlantic Wire

  • Commuter Trains Collide in Connecticut
  • Michael Phelps Denies He's Planning a Comeback
  • Federal Speedy Trial Act Won't Apply to Dzhokhar Tsarnaev

More from Atlantic Wire

Atlantic Cities

  • Engineering Feat of the Day: A 7-Million Pound Building on 40-Foot Stilts
  • Does Living Near Fast Food Restaurants Increase Your Risk of Obesity?
  • New Hampshire Town Sues Parking Meter Vigilantes

More from Atlantic Cities

Quartz

  • American LNG exports get the go-ahead
  • The biggest mistake 60-year-old men make about the economy
  • A state-run monopoly is killing Mexico’s chances of oil independence

More from Quartz

National Journal

  • Obama's Troubles Could Put Massachusetts Senate Seat In Play -- Again
  • Explaining the Connection Between Obama's Health Care Law and the IRS
  • Good-Bye, MetroPCS: Only Verizon Now Opposes Net Neutrality

More from National Journal

Longreads

  • Maxed Out on Everest  |  National Geographic
  • Students, Professors: We Want Your Best College Longreads  |  Longreads
  • Longreads Member Exclusive: Someone Could Get Hurt (Chapter 1), by Drew Magary  |  Gotham Books

More from Longreads

Follow The Atlantic

  • App store
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Linkedin
  • Google Plus
  • Tumblr
  • RSS

E-Newsletters

  • Today's Top Stories
  • This Week
  • This Month
  • New at In Focus
  • Atlantic Cities
  • 5 Best Columns

Information

  • FAQ
  • Subscribe Help
  • Masthead
  • Store
  • Merchandise
  • Jobs
  • Privacy
  • Site Map
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Advertise
  • Advertising Guidelines
  • Press
  • Contact Us
  • Special Reports
  • Atlantic Scene
  • Ebook
  • Events
  • Atlantic Media

Subscribe

Get 10 issues a year and save 65% off the cover price

Copyright © 2013 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. All Rights Reserved. CDN powered by Edgecast Networks. Insights powered by Parsely .
Powered by the Parse.ly Publisher Platform (P3).