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See our Newsletters >
    • Wong Maye-E / AP

      2015: The Year in High-Stakes Handshakes

      Diplomacy: It’s all in the wrist.

      • The Editors
      • Dec 31, 2015
  • More Top Stories
    • The Atlantic
      More Top Stories

      A 2016 TV Preview

      A guide to the returning hits and new shows on network, cable, and streaming services

      • David Sims
      • Dec 28, 2015
    • 145 / Tom Grill / Ocean / Corbis
      More Top Stories

      Why Are Digital-Privacy Apps So Hard to Use?

      ​Protecting your data usually means navigating a miserable user experience.

      • Kaveh Waddell
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • More Top Stories

      2015: A Year of Unlikable Female Characters in Books

      Several novels this year starred female protagonists as flawed and interesting as literature’s most memorable male characters.

      • Koa Beck
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Damian Dovarganes / AP
      More Top Stories

      The War Over the War on Crime

      New York’s police commissioner is feuding with his predecessor over whether the city is manipulating statistics.

      • David A. Graham
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Eric Gay / AP
      More Top Stories

      The Split Between the States Over Guns

      Owners of firearms will have more rights in Texas and fewer rights in California in the new year, thanks to the nation’s deepening cultural divide.

      • Russell Berman
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Andrew Harnik / AP
      More Top Stories

      The Carson Campaign’s Year-End Collapse

      Two top aides resigned from the Republican candidate’s team on Thursday, dealing the latest blow to a troubled effort.

      • David A. Graham
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • The Atlantic
      More Top Stories

      How DEA Agents Took Down Mexico’s Most Vicious Drug Cartel

      And how this helped give rise to the criminal empire of Chapo Guzmán

      • David Epstein/ProPublica
      • Dec 17, 2015
    • Mary Altaffer / AP / Zak Bickel / The Atlantic
      More Top Stories

      Who Gets Excluded From the Modern Economy?

      Experts on banking and labor markets offer their reasons for optimism and pessimism going into 2016.

      • Rebecca J. Rosen, Adrienne Green, Li Zhou, Gillian B. White, and Joe Pinsker
      • Jan 1, 2016
  • Notes
    First thoughts, running arguments, stories in progress

    • Track of the Day: 'Knights of Cydonia'

      • Chris Bodenner
      • Jan 1, 2016
    • Orbital View: New Year, Same Planet

      • Marina Koren
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Track of the Day: 'After Midnight'

      • Chris Bodenner
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • What We're Following This Afternoon

      • Marina Koren
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

      Like a Rolling Millennial

      • David A. Graham
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Brian Snyder / Reuters

      Gaffe Track: Bush's Katrina

      • David A. Graham
      • Dec 31, 2015
  • Global
    • Maxim Smeyev / Reuters
      Global

      The World According to Russia

      A documentary on state television gives a glimpse of Vladimir Putin’s philosophy.

      • Jeffrey Tayler
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Cathal McNaughton / Reuters
      Global

      What Makes a Country Legalize Abortion?

      The political science of a volatile issue—and why Ireland could be next

      • Heather Horn
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Ahmed Jadallah / Reuters
      Global

      A Massive Hotel Fire in Dubai

      Flames tore through a 63-story skyscraper as revelers gathered for New Year's Eve celebrations.

      • Matt Ford
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Francois Lenoir / Reuters
      Global

      The Heightened Security for New Year’s Eve Around the World

      Cities across the globe have dispatched thousands of police officers to patrol festivities amid fears of terrorist attacks.

      • Marina Koren
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Dado Ruvic / Reuters
      Global

      A Foiled New Year’s Eve Terrorist Plot in Turkey

      Officials detained two suspected Islamic State militants who had planned attacks on New Year celebrations.

      • Marina Koren
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • U.S. Navy / Reuters
      Global

      ISIS, China, and the New Way of War

      A new form of conflict emerged in 2015—from the Islamic State to the South China Sea.

      • Peter Pomerantsev
      • Dec 29, 2015
    • Hernán Piñera / Flickr
      Global

      A New Year’s Eve Plot and Arrests in Belgium

      The federal prosecutor’s office said two people were arrested in connection with a plot to stage attacks around the New Year’s celebration.

      • Krishnadev Calamur
      • Dec 29, 2015
    • All Stories Are the Same

      From Avatar to The Wizard of Oz, Aristotle to Shakespeare, there’s one clear form that dramatic storytelling has followed since its inception.

      • John Yorke
      • Jan 1, 2016
    • Mario Anzuoni / Reuters

      Remembering Natalie Cole

      The American singer died Thursday at the age of 65.

      • Marina Koren
      • Jan 1, 2016
    • Brendan McDermid / Reuters

      New Year, New Wages

      On January 1st, laws raising the minimum wage in 12 states go into effect.

      • Bourree Lam
      • Jan 1, 2016
    • Carlos Barria / Reuters

      Obama's New Year's Resolution on Gun Violence

      The president said Friday he will meet with the U.S. attorney general to consider executive action on firearms.

      • Marina Koren
      • Jan 1, 2016
    • Bob Daugherty / AP

      Ronald Reagan’s Disarmament Dream

      How Reagan’s fantasy about—and Mikhail Gorbachev’s fear of—space weapons ruined a plan to eliminate the entire U.S. and Soviet nuclear arsenals.

      • Jacob Weisberg
      • Jan 1, 2016
    • Fabrizio Bensch / Reuters

      Who’s Afraid of Mein Kampf?

      As Hitler's infamous book enters the public domain, its history shows that censorship can't stop dangerous ideas.

      • Steven Luckert
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Video: A Gym for Mindfulness

      Exploring how meditation is done at a new studio in Manhattan.

      • James Hamblin, Nicolas Pollock, and Jaclyn Skurie
      • Dec 31, 2015
  • Video
    • Video

      This Is What It’s Like to Read Lips

      On the messy and imprecise process of using one sense to do the work of another

      • Nadine Ajaka
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Video

      Capturing Domestic Violence on Film

      Donna Ferrato on her ethnographic approach to documenting dangerous relationships

      • Nadine Ajaka
      • Dec 28, 2015
    • Video

      Can I Overdose on Vitamin D?

      A question for The Atlantic’s in-house doctor

      • James Hamblin, Nicolas Pollock, and Jaclyn Skurie
      • Dec 17, 2015
    • Video

      A Young Moroccan Woman’s Journey to Become a Surfer

      How a 17-year-old is pushing boundaries in her community

      • Greyson Korhonen
      • Dec 29, 2015
    • Video

      One Young Man’s Failed Journey to America

      A story of an unexpected detour and seeking a new path

      • Greyson Korhonen
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Video

      America’s First Spear-Hunting Museum

      When you don’t find hunting difficult, try a spear.

      • Daniel Lombroso
      • Dec 22, 2015
  • Most Popular

    • All Stories Are the Same

      From Avatar to The Wizard of Oz, Aristotle to Shakespeare, there’s one clear form that dramatic storytelling has followed since its inception.

      • John Yorke
      • Jan 1, 2016
    • The Economics of Tidying Up

      Months after publication, Japanese home-organization guru Marie Kondo's book about de-cluttering has reached peak interest. Behavioral science may explain the appeal.

      • Bourree Lam
      • May 13, 2015
    • The Force Awakens and a Critical Turnaround

      A few final thoughts on J.J. Abrams’s film, nostalgia, and the expectations game

      • Christopher Orr
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • What ISIS Really Wants

      The Islamic State is no mere collection of psychopaths. It is a religious group with carefully considered beliefs, among them that it is a key agent of the coming apocalypse. Here’s what that means for its strategy—and for how to stop it.

      • Graeme Wood
      • Feb 15, 2015
    • This Is the Average Man's Body

      Graphic renderings of modern males

      • James Hamblin
      • Oct 10, 2013
  • Culture
    • Lucasfilm
      Culture

      The Force Awakens and a Critical Turnaround

      A few final thoughts on J.J. Abrams’s film, nostalgia, and the expectations game

      • Christopher Orr
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Paul Spella / Zachary Bickel / The Atlantic
      Culture

      The Best Book I Read This Year

      The Atlantic’s editors and writers share their favorite titles—new, classic, or somewhere in between.

      • The Editors
      • Dec 9, 2015
    • Laszlo Balogh / Reuters
      Culture

      Remembered: A Few Notable Deaths of 2015

      B.B. King, Grace Lee Boggs, Allen Toussaint, and 9 others who changed the world

      • Tom McNichol
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Shutterstock / Kara Gordon / Paul Spella / The Atlantic
      Culture

      The 50 Best Podcast Episodes of 2015

      A year’s worth of highlights from an increasingly vibrant genre

      • Laura Jane Standley, Devon Taylor, and Eric McQuade
      • Dec 22, 2015
    • The Atlantic
      Culture

      The Best Television Shows of 2015

      Staff selections from a year of great TV

      • The Editors
      • Dec 21, 2015
    • Paul Spella / Zak Bickel / The Atlantic
      Culture

      The Best Food Books of 2015

      The top cookbooks and culinary histories of the year

      • Corby Kummer
      • Dec 21, 2015
    • The Atlantic
      Culture

      The Best Movies of 2015

      The Atlantic’s film critic picks the top titles—and doles out some less conventional awards.

      • Christopher Orr
      • Dec 18, 2015
  • Business
    • John Shearer / Invision / AP
      Business

      Year in Review: The Biggest Stories About Gender Inequality at Work

      In 2015, companies and individuals made some strides toward tackling the wage gap, the rarity of paid leave, and professional sexism.

      • Li Zhou
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Carlo Allegri / Reuters
      Business

      December’s Best Reads: Money, Business, and Economics

      The month’s best stories from around the web

      • Gillian B. White
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Michael Buholzer / Reuters
      Business

      The U.S.’s ‘Strictest’ Equal-Pay Law Is About to Go Into Effect

      Starting in 2016, companies in California will be required to justify any pay disparities between men and women doing "substantially similar" work.

      • Bourree Lam
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • The Atlantic
      Business

      How Will the American Workforce Change?

      Experts on race, gender, and labor offer their reasons for optimism and pessimism going into 2016.

      • Rebecca J. Rosen, Li Zhou, Adrienne Green, Gillian B. White, and Alana Semuels
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Mario Anzuoni / Reuters
      Business

      How Many Poor Elderly Americans Will There Be in 2050?

      As the Boomers age, there are going to be a lot more people living in poverty.

      • Teresa Ghilarducci
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • The Atlantic
      Business

      What Would Make the Economy More Fair?

      Experts on business, labor, and corporate governance offer their reasons for optimism and pessimism going into 2016.

      • Rebecca J. Rosen, Joe Pinsker, Adrienne Green, Li Zhou, and Alana Semuels
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Max Whittaker / Reuters
      Business

      Will Inequality Ever Stop Growing?

      Experts on the economy and the labor market offer their reasons for optimism and pessimism going into 2016.

      • Rebecca J. Rosen, Adrienne Green, Li Zhou, Alana Semuels, and Joe Pinsker
      • Dec 29, 2015
  • Daily
    • Reuters
      Daily

      Subscribe to Our Afternoon Newsletter

      The Atlantic Daily: our wrap-up of notable news, ideas, and images—by email each weekday

    Get The Atlantic Daily delivered to your inbox.

  • Health
    • Ben Margot / AP
      Health

      The People Left Behind in the Fight Against HIV

      Advances in treatment haven’t made a difference for many of the most vulnerable patients in the U.S.

      • Barbara Feder Ostrov
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Santi Palacios / AP
      Health

      The Physiological Power of Altruism

      People who volunteer lead longer, healthier lives. Some public-health experts believe the time has come for doctors to recommend it alongside diet and exercise.

      • James Hamblin
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Lucas Jackson / Reuters
      Health

      How Doctors Are Experimenting With Cutting Health-Care Costs

      Small innovations are adding up to signal that providers and insurers are interested in saving money for patients.

      • Ester Bloom
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Bettmann / CORBIS
      Health

      Fresh Starts and Failed New Year’s Resolutions

      Resolutions often fail, but that doesn't make the New Year a bad time to say what you want from your life.

      • Julie Beck
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Zoran Milich / Corbis
      Health

      The Science Behind Vacation Constipation

      Why the holidays are a prime time for traveler’s constipation

      • Mollie Bloudoff-Indelicato
      • Dec 28, 2015
    • Reuters
      Health

      The Marijuana Breathalyzer’s Uncertain Future

      The test could help reduce the number of intoxicated drivers on the road—or it could turn up too many false positives to be useful.

      • Thor Benson
      • Dec 22, 2015
    • Toby Talbot / AP
      Health

      The FDA’s New Policy on Blood Donations From Gay Men

      The agency announced on Monday an historic shift in longstanding regulations.

      • Marina Koren
      • Dec 21, 2015
  • U.S.
    • Brian Snyder / Reuters
      U.S.

      A Year of Black Lives Matter

      As the protest movement evolves, activists face pushback and growing pains.

      • Clare Foran
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Paul Beaty / AP
      U.S.

      The Paranoid Style of American Policing

      When officers take the lives of those they are sworn to protect and serve, they undermine their own legitimacy.

      • Ta-Nehisi Coates
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Lucy Nicholson / Reuters
      U.S.

      The Sexual-Assault Charge Against Bill Cosby

      Pennsylvania prosecutors have charged the comedian with aggravated indecent assault in connection with a 2004 incident.

      • Marina Koren
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Eric Gay / AP
      U.S.

      Harris County Jails Prove Impervious to Reform

      Years after a federal investigation documented abuses in Houston-area lockups, a newspaper report finds that little has changed.

      • Conor Friedersdorf
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Kate Munsch / Reuters
      U.S.

      ‘Historic’ Floods in Missouri and Illinois

      Forecasters said Wednesday that areas along the Mississippi River should expect more rising water.

      • Marina Koren
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Noah Berger / Reuters
      U.S.

      San Francisco’s Self-Defeating Housing Activists

      Tech companies and workers are vilified while longtime homeowners who fight high-density growth continue to profit from rising rents and property values.

      • Conor Friedersdorf
      • Dec 29, 2015
    • Eduardo Munoz / Reuters
      U.S.

      The Laws and Rules That Protect Police Who Kill

      Despite the political pressure to prosecute cops in cases like Tamir Rice’s, the current system grants enormous leeway to officers who employ lethal force.

      • David A. Graham
      • Dec 29, 2015
  • Education
    • Mike Groll / AP
      Education

      The Math Class Paradox

      Mastering the subject has become less about learning and more about performance.

      • Jo Boaler
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • The Atlantic
      Education

      Can Schools Be Fixed?

      Experts on K-12 education offer their reasons for optimism and pessimism going forward.

      • Alia Wong, Adrienne Green, and Li Zhou
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • The Atlantic
      Education

      What Is the Future of Higher Education?

      Experts in the field offer their reasons for optimism and pessimism going forward.

      • Alia Wong, Adrienne Green, and Li Zhou
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Jim Vaiknoras / The Hechinger Report
      Education

      When Restorative Justice in Schools Works

      “People were afraid this was going to be a ‘hippy-dippy-granola, nobody’s-going-to-get-into-trouble’ concept.”

      • Emily Richmond
      • Dec 29, 2015
    • The Atlantic
      Education

      Education in 2015, Visualized

      Some of the most important issues of the year, from school discipline in elementary schools to students burdened with debt long after graduation.

      • Adrienne Green
      • Dec 28, 2015
    • Courtesy of Monument Academy
      Education

      The Rise of Urban Public Boarding Schools

      They’re designed to provide extra attention to students who suffer from trauma. But are they worth all the extra taxpayer dollars?

      • Erin Einhorn
      • Dec 26, 2015
    • Elaine Thompson / AP
      Education

      No Child Left Behind Is Gone, but Will It Be Back?

      The new law could mean it will still be business as usual.

      • Melissa Tooley
      • Dec 24, 2015
  • In This Issue
    • Justin Renteria
      In This Issue

      What Was Volkswagen Thinking?

      On the origins of corporate evil—and idiocy

      • Jerry Useem
      • Dec 21, 2015
    • Gluekit / AP
      In This Issue

      Why America Is Moving Left

      Republicans may have a lock on Congress and the nation’s statehouses—and could well win the presidency—but the liberal era ushered in by Barack Obama is only just beginning.

      • Peter Beinart
      • Dec 21, 2015
  • Science
    • Jason Lee / Reuters
      Science

      What Facial Hair Says About Personality

      How beards and mustaches influence the way men are perceived

      • Olga Khazan
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Wasif Malik / Flickr
      Science

      The Storm That Will Unfreeze the North Pole

      It caps off a month—and year—of weird weather.

      • Robinson Meyer
      • Dec 29, 2015
    • Felipe Courzo / Reuters
      Science

      The Butterflies’ Great Migration

      Each year, a new generation of Monarchs flies south for the winter—but habitat loss is making the journey harder. An Object Lesson.

      • Sallie Lewis
      • Dec 29, 2015
    • Corbis
      Science

      Nature’s Warning Signal

      Complex systems like ecological food webs, the brain, and the climate all give off a characteristic signal when disaster is around the corner.

      • Natalie Wolchover
      • Dec 24, 2015
    • Larry Downing / Reuters
      Science

      What Chief Justice Roberts Misunderstands About Physics

      Science is not a separate realm that sits outside culture.

      • Thomas Levenson
      • Dec 23, 2015
    • Friedrich Georg Weitsch
      Science

      The Forgotten Father of Environmentalism

      Alexander von Humboldt revolutionized the Western conception of nature by describing it as an interconnected living web—and in doing so, inspired thinkers from Darwin to Thoreau.

      • Andrea Wulf
      • Dec 23, 2015
    • Krishnendu Halder / Reuters
      Science

      The Catfish Return

      City officials are hoping that a new influx of fish into the Chicago River will help cut down on water pollution.

      • Dawn Reiss
      • Dec 23, 2015
  • Politics
    • AP
      Politics

      Donald Trump and the Return of the 1920s

      America is again caught between nationalists longing for the glories of an imagined past, and activists invoking ideals the nation has never yet attained.

      • Richard Yeselson
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Andrew Harnik / AP
      Politics

      2015: The Year in Politics and Policy

      A roundup of some of our favorite stories that we published in the past year.

      • Tyler Bishop
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Steven Senne / AP
      Politics

      Watching Trump From the Cheap Seats

      The overflow room at Trump’s New Hampshire rally was packed to the gills—but low energy at best.

      • Sarah Smith
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • John Raoux / AP
      Politics

      The 2016 U.S. Presidential Race: A Cheat Sheet

      South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham announced on December 21 that he will drop out of the nomination battle.

      • David A. Graham
      • Dec 29, 2015
    • Dave Weaver / AP
      Politics

      The Iowa Caucus Gets an Upgrade

      Both parties are hoping a new app for tallying votes will smooth an election plagued by errors in 2012.

      • Russell Berman
      • Dec 29, 2015
    • Patrick Semansky / AP
      Politics

      2015: The Year in Race Relations

      From Ferguson to Charleston, longstanding problems erupted back into public view.

      • Tyler Bishop
      • Dec 29, 2015
    • New Hampshire magazine / The Atlantic
      Politics

      The Great Republican Revolt

      The GOP planned a dynastic restoration in 2016. Instead, it triggered an internal class war. Can the party reconcile the demands of its donors with the interests of its rank and file?

      • David Frum
      • Dec 21, 2015
  • Culture
    • The Atlantic
      Culture

      28 Movies to Look Forward to in 2016

      Amid the usual franchise fare and long-awaited sequels are a handful of original works to get excited about.

      • David Sims
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Bettmann / Corbis
      Culture

      Why Are So Few Film Critics Female?

      Fewer than 20 percent of Rotten Tomatoes-excerpted reviews are by women.

      • Katie Kilkenny
      • Dec 27, 2015
    • Mario Anzuoni / Reuters
      Culture

      The Case Against Colorblind Casting

      Its been praised as a way to make Hollywood more diverse. But when does acceptance become erasure?

      • Angelica Jade Bastién
      • Dec 26, 2015
    • The Weinstein Company
      Culture

      The Hateful Eight Is a Gory Epic in Search of Meaning

      Quentin Tarantino’s newest film is a dazzling, excessively vile post-Civil War western.

      • David Sims
      • Dec 25, 2015
    • USA Today Sports / Reuters
      Culture

      LeBron James: Player, Coach, or Both?

      The Cavaliers’ star is shattering the ages-old divide between athlete and decision-maker.

      • Robert O'Connell
      • Dec 24, 2015
    • Counterpoint
      Culture

      A Sinner Reimagines the Bible

      The latest novel from Mary Rakow, This Is Why I Came, could be called the “agnostic Gospels.”

      • Ann Hulbert
      • Dec 21, 2015
    • AMC / ABC / Comedy Central / HBO / USA / IGN / Zak Bickel / Paul Spella / The Atlantic
      Culture

      The Best Television Episodes of 2015

      Staff selections from a year of great TV

      • The Editors
      • Dec 18, 2015
  • Technology
    • Issei Kato / Reuters
      Technology

      How Champagne Became Iconic

      Separating champagne science from champagne dreams

      • Adrienne LaFrance
      • Dec 31, 2015
    • Utopian Raspberry - Modern Oasis Machine / Facebook
      Technology

      On the Question of Dog Pants

      An important contribution to one of the great disputes of our time

      • Robinson Meyer
      • Dec 29, 2015
    • Ilya Naymushin / Reuters
      Technology

      December’s Must-Reads: Science, Tech, and Health

      Stories not to miss from around the web this month

      • Adrienne LaFrance
      • Dec 28, 2015
    • Robert Pratta / Reuters
      Technology

      How the Internet of Things Limits Consumer Choice

      A recent dustup over smart light bulbs illuminates a larger problem.

      • Bruce Schneier
      • Dec 24, 2015
    • Victor Jorgensen / U.S. Navy / Reuters
      Technology

      What Makes Unforgettable Images So Memorable?

      A new study finds machines can be trained to predict, with astonishing accuracy, the photos and illustrations people will remember.

      • Adrienne LaFrance
      • Dec 24, 2015
    • Mary Altaffer / AP
      Technology

      Flying Business Class as a Millennial

      My bag, checked. My privilege, not so much.

      • Olga Khazan
      • Dec 23, 2015
    • Wikimedia
      Technology

      The Logo That Took Down a DARPA Surveillance Project

      Some of the military-technology agency’s images are disconcerting. Others are actually kind of cute.

      • Matt Kessler
      • Dec 22, 2015
  • In This Issue
    • Marco Goran
      In This Issue

      A Strategic Guide to Swearing

      “Swear, and swear often! But not if you want a promotion. Or if you’re prone to injury.”

      • Stephanie Hayes
      • Dec 21, 2015
    • Brian Stauffer
      In This Issue

      The Dark Hallways of Horace Mann

      What allowed sexual abuse to go unchecked at the prestigious private school in the 1970s?

      • Caitlin Flanagan
      • Dec 21, 2015
    • Kikim Media

      In Defense of Food and the Virtues of Eating ‘Healthy-ish’

      “Industries upon industries, even entire religions, have been predicated on the premise that eating (certain things) is bad and will kill you.”

      • Sophie Gilbert
      • Dec 30, 2015
    • Bassam Khabieh / Reuters

      A Year of Syria’s War Seen Through the Lens of Bassam Khabieh

      Several years ago, Bassam Khabieh was an IT administrator working in Damascus, Syria, near his hometown of Douma. Then, the Syrian war began. Soon, Khabieh picked up a camera and returned to Douma to document the effects of years of shelling and urban warfare.

      • Alan Taylor
      • Dec 30, 2015
More Stories

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