-
Today's Doonesbury
-
The Explainer
-
The Slate Book Review
-
The Future of Food
How changes in technology and farming will change the way we eat.
-
The Evolution of Everyday Objects
-
Mad Men
-
Slate Goes to the Movies
-
No More Strapless Wedding Gowns!
They're unflattering, unsophisticated, and annoyingly ubiquitous.
By Katherine Goldstein
-
The Crisis in American Walking
-
Death in Yellowstone
-
Permanent Record
The surprising stories I uncovered in a trove of report cards from the 1920s.
By Paul Lukas
-
Where’s _why?
What happened when one of the most unusual, beloved programmers disappeared.
By Annie Lowrey
-
The Conversion
How, when, and why Mitt Romney changed his mind on abortion.
By William Saletan
-
The Greatest Paper Map of the U.S.
-
Slate Writers on Facebook and Twitter
Follow John Dickerson, Emily Yoffe, and the rest of your favorite Slate writers on social media.
TOP STORIES
- Wednesday, June 20, 2012
-
-
The Culture Gabfest, “Curb Appeal” Edition
Listen to Slate's show about fakery on HGTV’s House Hunters, human-animal zoobiquity, and Carly Rae Jepsen’s irresistible hit song “Call Me Maybe.”
-
The Gay Parents Study
Have the study’s funders manipulated the findings for their own political gain?
-
DREAM On
America needs much bigger, bolder immigration reform—for low-skilled workers, not just supergeniuses—to boost the economy.
-
How Do You Keep Your Life Running Smoothly?
Tell Slate your operations secrets.
-
Our Man in Baghdad
Brett McGurk was the perfect choice to be U.S. ambassador to Iraq: smart, experienced, and plugged in. So who was behind the campaign to smear his name?
-
Fire the Bail Bondsmen
Let's amend the Constitution to put them out of business.
-
The Folly of Rio
This week’s Earth Summit will try to tackle global warming. Meanwhile, poor people are dying from air pollution and dirty water.
-
How To Stop Science Alienation Syndrome
Split K-12 science education into two tracks, for majors and nonmajors.
-
Sitcoms of a Certain Age
Cedric the Entertainer’s comfy The Soul Man: Another TV Land comedy that could’ve been made 20 years ago.
-
Where You’re From and Where You’re @
Azealia Banks, A$AP Rocky, TNGHT, and the end of hip-hop regionalism.
-
The Gambler and the Scientist
A day at the races teaches us about our unscientific notions of “science literacy.”
-
Playing Double Jeopardy
How to strengthen the Constitution's protection against being tried twice for the same crime.
-
Fashion Photography
Once you’ve shot beautiful models using fancy equipment, there’s no going back to snapshots of friends.
-
The Rise of the Fork
Knives and spoons are ancient. But we’ve only been eating with forks for a few centuries.
- Tuesday, June 19, 2012
-
-
Where is Mitt Romney’s Faith?
Romney doesn’t want to talk about his religion. But fellow Mormons say his faith is what would make him an especially effective president.
-
Why Did Jonah Lehrer Plagiarize Himself?
Because he stopped being a writer and became an idea man.
-
Minding Their Own Beeswax
How busy are bees, really?
-
Maps: Agriculture in the U.S. and Around the World
Where do most farmers live? Which countries feed the world?
-
Ugh, You’re Probably a Directionator
One Direction’s teen fans love the British boy band—and hate the poseurs. A lesson in pop fandom in the age of Tumblr.
-
Abolish the Death Penalty and the Supermax, Too
Updating the ban against cruel and unusual punishment.
-
The Five Misconceptions About Teaching Math and Science
American education has not declined and other surprising truths.
-
Drugs for Grades
The tame, constricted rebellion that is Adderall addiction.
-
Why Are Poland Spring Bottles So Crinkly?
They used to be much sturdier.
-
"This Is the Favorite Poem"
Hear Mike Wallace read Robert Browning’s “My Last Duchess.”
-
Why I Love Surface
The company’s new tablet could be the iPad rival the tech world desperately needs.
-
- Monday, June 18, 2012
-
-
The Jury Is Out on a Date
Are jurors allowed to hook up with plaintiffs or defendants?
-
Hang Up and Listen: The All Greek to Me Edition
Slate’s sports podcast on the NBA Finals, the U.S. Open, and Euro 2012.
-
Does Your Writing Style Have a Fingerprint?
Listen to Slate’s show about the surprising way mathematicians can determine authorship.
-
Me or the Dog
In a live chat, Prudie advises a woman whose boyfriend wants her to give away her cocker spaniel.
-
Test-Tube Piggies
How did the guinea pig become a symbol of science?
-
Europe’s Responsibility Trap
The world got the Greek election outcome it wanted. So why are the markets freaking out?
-
Dear Prudence: Novelist Drawing Too Much on Real Life?
A weekly Dear Prudence video.
-
A Bill Seeking To Regulate Use of the Word Vagina
It’s time for the government to stop women from using anatomically correct terms.
-
Infinite Jest! Live! On Stage! One Entire Day Only!
Twenty-four hours watching the Berlin theatrical adaptation of David Foster Wallace’s magnum opus.
-
Are You Better Off Than You Were 10 Years Ago?
Will 2012 be a referendum on four years of Obama, or on a decade of Republican rule?
-
The Afterlife of Cheap Clothes
Where do your Target bargains go when you get tired of them? The Salvation Army. Rag bins. And Africa.
-
The Future of Cookbooks
They’ll go extinct. And that’s OK.
-
In Praise of Wooden Spoons
They’re practical. They have a rich cultural history. And they last forever.
-
The Kickstarter Recession
If crowdfunding is too successful, the economy may suffer in surprising ways.
-
- Sunday, June 17, 2012
-
-
A Conversation With Lena Dunham, Part 2
Meghan O’Rourke talks with the creator of Girls about the season finale, Sex and the City, and why Shoshanna is like that.
-
The Agony of Banning Ecstasy
A former adviser to the U.K. government says the ban on drugs is hampering neuroscience.
-
We Don’t Need More Scientists—We Need Better Ones
A chemist responds to Slate’s David Plotz’s claim that not enough students are going into science and engineering.
-
- Saturday, June 16, 2012
- Friday, June 15, 2012
- Thursday, June 14, 2012