In January 2011, Sharmin T.M. Kent wrote about Oprah launching her own television network, Oxygen.
The year you were born, Bruno Bettelheim wrote about the importance of play to the development of children.
In June 1999, Geoffrey Wheatcroft wrote about the emergence of the English middle class under the governments of Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair.
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Love & Basketball was released in 2000.
In August 2015, Joe Pinsker wrote about the site's paid editors.
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The conflicts and displacements touched off around the world by the attacks have been reverberating for the majority of your life. “This ‘war’ [on terrorism] will never be over,” wrote James Fallows, a few years after the towers fell.
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In October 2014, Allen McDuffee wrote about sexism in tennis.
In June 2013, Olga Khazan wrote about Spain being the most accepting country in the world when it comes to homosexuality.
Goran Tomasevic / Reuters
When 26-year-old Mohamed Bouazizi set himself on fire, he ignited a tinderbox of protests that continue to roil the Middle East, and kindled the beginnings of democracy in Tunisia.
In December 2015, Robinson Meyer wrote about why scientists had accepted this fact.
The Atlantic is here to help you process it, in stories like these: