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HOW MRNA TECHNOLOGY COULD CHANGE THE WORLD COVID-19 VACCINES LEAVE IMMUNOCOMPROMISED PEOPLE Angus R. Shamal / Gallerystock. In early March 2020, Rick Phillips, 63, and his wife, Sheryl Phillips, quietly cloistered themselves in their Indianapolis home. They swore off markets, movie THE ATLANTICLATESTPOLITICSDAVID FRUMCROSSWORD PUZZLEMAGAZINEPOPULAR The Atlantic covers news, politics, culture, technology, health, and more, through its articles, podcasts, videos, and flagship magazine. DAILY ONLINE CROSSWORD PUZZLE The Atlantic’s crossword puzzle gets a little more challenging every day, with the biggest puzzle on Sunday. Puzzle Picker. ON OFF PÅ AV Sur De. Friday, May 14, 2021. by Caleb Madison. Thursday RUSSELL MOORE’S EXIT FROM THE SOUTHERN BAPTIST CONVENTION “This is an earthquake,” a prominent Christian writer told me. The publication of an extraordinary February 24, 2020, letter by Russell Moore, one of the most influential and respected THE CAPITOL RIOTERS WON The Capitol Rioters Won. Although some Republican leaders deplored their violence, most have come to support the rioters’ claim that Trump’s defeat meant the election was inherently illegitimate. MICROCHIPPED VACCINES: A 15-MINUTE INVESTIGATION I got my first COVID-19 vaccine recently. The whole experience was tremendously routine: I showed my registration, stood in a waiting area, saw a nurse, got the jab, waited 15 minutes in case of WHY BASEBALL ISN’T FUN ANYMORE It was the fun strike. The culprit this time was the arrival of the internet, and the dawning awareness that baseball was being played at dial-up speed. The unhittable Atlanta Braves dork Greg WHY YOU SHOULD WAIT OUT THE WILD HOUSING MARKET How wild is the U.S. housing market right now? So wild, half of the houses listed nationwide in April went pending in less than a week. So wild, one poll found that most buyers admitted to bidding WHAT ARE NO-VAXXERS THINKING? Updated at 10:07 a.m. ET on May 4, 2021. S everal days ago, the mega-popular podcast host Joe Rogan advised his young listeners toskip the COVID-19
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Why Confederate lies live on, Black America’s origin stories, Red Cross quarantine ships, Brett Kavanaugh, and new fiction from Morgan Thomas. Plus the Appalachian Elvis, Richard Wright, post CLASSICS AT PRINCETON WILL SUFFER WITHOUT LATIN OR GREEK By ending a requirement that classics majors learn Greek or Latin, Princeton risks amplifying racism instead of curing it. About the author: John McWhorter is a THE ‘POSE’ FINALE WAS A BITTERSWEET HOMECOMING Pray Tell has been a central figure in Pose, which spent three seasons following a group of Black and Latinx queer and transgender people navigating New York City life in the ’80s and ’90s.In WHY BASEBALL ISN’T FUN ANYMORE It was the fun strike. The culprit this time was the arrival of the internet, and the dawning awareness that baseball was being played at dial-up speed. The unhittable Atlanta Braves dork Greg A POEM BY W. S. MERWIN: UNKNOWN BIRD A poem by W. S. Merwin, published in The Atlantic in 1999. W. S. Merwin was a man of many callings. He was an incredibly prolific poet—he won the Pulitzer Prize twice, along with nearly every CAN COVID-19 VACCINES PREVENT LONG COVID? The clinical trials, for any of the vaccines, had no answers: None set out to study the safety and efficacy of the shots in this population. And although long COVID is a chronic and debilitating THE ATLANTICLATESTPOLITICSDAVID FRUMCROSSWORD PUZZLEMAGAZINEPOPULAR The Atlantic covers news, politics, culture, technology, health, and more, through its articles, podcasts, videos, and flagship magazine. MICROCHIPPED VACCINES: A 15-MINUTE INVESTIGATION I got my first COVID-19 vaccine recently. The whole experience was tremendously routine: I showed my registration, stood in a waiting area, saw a nurse, got the jab, waited 15 minutes in case of DAILY ONLINE CROSSWORD PUZZLE The Atlantic’s crossword puzzle gets a little more challenging every day, with the biggest puzzle on Sunday. Puzzle Picker. ON OFF PÅ AV Sur De. Friday, May 14, 2021. by Caleb Madison. Thursday WHY YOU SHOULD WAIT OUT THE WILD HOUSING MARKET How wild is the U.S. housing market right now? So wild, half of the houses listed nationwide in April went pending in less than a week. So wild, one poll found that most buyers admitted to bidding I’M NOT SCARED TO REENTER SOCIETY. I’M JUST NOT SURE I May 30, 2021. About the author: Tim Kreider is a writer and columnist. He is the author of the essay collection We Learn Nothing. This post-pandemic summer is T. D. JAKES ON HOW WHITE EVANGELICALS LOST THEIR WAY Emma Green. May 31, 2021. Earl Gibson III / Getty. Bishop T. D. Jakes is one of the most famous pastors in America. His multi-thousand-member Dallas megachurch, the Potter’s House, is EATING CICADAS IS GREAT UNTIL YOU TASTE THEM Eating cicadas just makes sense, even for someone like me, who’s been a stalwart vegetarian since basically the last time they appeared, in 2004. They’re a bountiful and easy-to IF THE LAB-LEAK THEORY IS RIGHT, WHAT'S NEXT? If the Lab-Leak Theory Is Right, What’s Next? We know enough to acknowledge that the scenario is possible, and we should therefore act as though it’s true. About the author: Daniel Engber is WHY CONSERVATIVES WANT TO CANCEL THE 1619 PROJECT Nikole Hannah-Jones is an award-winning Black journalist. She is also one of the developers of the 1619 Project, a journalistic examination of slavery’s role in shaping the American present. KIDS DON'T NEED MASKS OUTSIDE About the author: Lucy McBride is a practicing internist in Washington, D.C. She is the author of a COVID-19 newsletter. I am a primary-care doctor, and the parents I talk with are deeply THE ATLANTICLATESTPOLITICSDAVID FRUMCROSSWORD PUZZLEMAGAZINEPOPULAR The Atlantic covers news, politics, culture, technology, health, and more, through its articles, podcasts, videos, and flagship magazine. MICROCHIPPED VACCINES: A 15-MINUTE INVESTIGATION I got my first COVID-19 vaccine recently. The whole experience was tremendously routine: I showed my registration, stood in a waiting area, saw a nurse, got the jab, waited 15 minutes in case of DAILY ONLINE CROSSWORD PUZZLE The Atlantic’s crossword puzzle gets a little more challenging every day, with the biggest puzzle on Sunday. Puzzle Picker. ON OFF PÅ AV Sur De. Friday, May 14, 2021. by Caleb Madison. Thursday WHY YOU SHOULD WAIT OUT THE WILD HOUSING MARKET How wild is the U.S. housing market right now? So wild, half of the houses listed nationwide in April went pending in less than a week. So wild, one poll found that most buyers admitted to bidding I’M NOT SCARED TO REENTER SOCIETY. I’M JUST NOT SURE I May 30, 2021. About the author: Tim Kreider is a writer and columnist. He is the author of the essay collection We Learn Nothing. This post-pandemic summer is T. D. JAKES ON HOW WHITE EVANGELICALS LOST THEIR WAY Emma Green. May 31, 2021. Earl Gibson III / Getty. Bishop T. D. Jakes is one of the most famous pastors in America. His multi-thousand-member Dallas megachurch, the Potter’s House, is EATING CICADAS IS GREAT UNTIL YOU TASTE THEM Eating cicadas just makes sense, even for someone like me, who’s been a stalwart vegetarian since basically the last time they appeared, in 2004. They’re a bountiful and easy-to IF THE LAB-LEAK THEORY IS RIGHT, WHAT'S NEXT? If the Lab-Leak Theory Is Right, What’s Next? We know enough to acknowledge that the scenario is possible, and we should therefore act as though it’s true. About the author: Daniel Engber is WHY CONSERVATIVES WANT TO CANCEL THE 1619 PROJECT Nikole Hannah-Jones is an award-winning Black journalist. She is also one of the developers of the 1619 Project, a journalistic examination of slavery’s role in shaping the American present. KIDS DON'T NEED MASKS OUTSIDE About the author: Lucy McBride is a practicing internist in Washington, D.C. She is the author of a COVID-19 newsletter. I am a primary-care doctor, and the parents I talk with are deeplyTHE ATLANTIC
The Atlantic covers news, politics, culture, technology, health, and more, through its articles, podcasts, videos, and flagship magazine. POPULAR - THE ATLANTIC The Atlantic covers news, politics, culture, technology, health, and more, through its articles, podcasts, videos, and flagship magazine. THE CAPITOL RIOTERS WON The Capitol Rioters Won. Although some Republican leaders deplored their violence, most have come to support the rioters’ claim that Trump’s defeat meant the election was inherently illegitimate. WHY CAN'T IMMIGRANTS LEARN ENGLISH? Olga Khazan. June 4, 2021. Kamil Krzaczynski / Getty. “Speak English!” can be one of the cruelest things for an immigrant to hear. It can sound simultaneously like a demand for instant ALL STORIES BY ROBERTO TALLARITA Roberto Tallarita is a senior fellow in law and economics and an associate director of the program on corporate governance at HarvardLaw School.
EATING CICADAS IS GREAT UNTIL YOU TASTE THEM Eating cicadas just makes sense, even for someone like me, who’s been a stalwart vegetarian since basically the last time they appeared, in 2004. They’re a bountiful and easy-to HOW GOP STATE LEGISLATURES ARE REMAKING THE COUNTRY June 3, 2021. It’s not just voting rights. Though this year’s proliferation of bills restricting ballot access in red states has commanded national attention, it represents just one stream in THE REAL TWIST OF 'MARE OF EASTTOWN' The Real Twist of Mare of Easttown. In the HBO show’s finale, the impulses to care and to crime-solve collide. But the miniseries has thoughtfully explored how the two aren’t always mutually PODCAST: DEALING WITH POST-PANDEMIC TRAUMA Podcast: Dealing With Post-pandemic Trauma. The Atlantic staff writer Ed Yong talks with James Hamblin and Maeve Higgins about the ways,large and
HOW MRNA TECHNOLOGY COULD CHANGE THE WORLD The malaria vaccine uses self-amplifying RNA, or saRNA, which is subtly distinct from the mRNA technology used by Moderna and Pfizer.The vaccines
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DAILY ONLINE CROSSWORD PUZZLE The Atlantic’s crossword puzzle gets a little more challenging every day, with the biggest puzzle on Sunday. Puzzle Picker. ON OFF PÅ AV Sur De. Friday, May 14, 2021. by Caleb Madison. Thursday IF THE LAB-LEAK THEORY IS RIGHT, WHAT'S NEXT? If the Lab-Leak Theory Is Right, What’s Next? We know enough to acknowledge that the scenario is possible, and we should therefore act as though it’s true. About the author: Daniel Engber is EATING CICADAS IS GREAT UNTIL YOU TASTE THEM Eating cicadas just makes sense, even for someone like me, who’s been a stalwart vegetarian since basically the last time they appeared, in 2004. They’re a bountiful and easy-toJUNE 2021 ISSUE
Why Confederate lies live on, Black America’s origin stories, Red Cross quarantine ships, Brett Kavanaugh, and new fiction from Morgan Thomas. Plus the Appalachian Elvis, Richard Wright, post THE ROAD TO POLITICAL VIOLENCE About the author: Peter Wehner is a contributing writer at The Atlantic and a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. He writes widely on political, cultural, religious, and national WHY CONSERVATIVES WANT TO CANCEL THE 1619 PROJECT Nikole Hannah-Jones is an award-winning Black journalist. She is also one of the developers of the 1619 Project, a journalistic examination of slavery’s role in shaping the American present KIDS DON'T NEED MASKS OUTSIDE Although emergency-use authorization for the Pfizer vaccine was granted this week for 12-to-15-year-olds, kids in this age group and younger ones don’t need to wait for freedom through shots THE ATLANTICLATESTPOLITICSDAVID FRUMCROSSWORD PUZZLEMAGAZINEPOPULAR The Atlantic covers news, politics, culture, technology, health, and more, through its articles, podcasts, videos, and flagship magazine. MICROCHIPPED VACCINES: A 15-MINUTE INVESTIGATION I got my first COVID-19 vaccine recently. The whole experience was tremendously routine: I showed my registration, stood in a waiting area, saw a nurse, got the jab, waited 15 minutes in case of WHY YOU SHOULD WAIT OUT THE WILD HOUSING MARKET When people leave multimillion-dollar houses in, say, Los Angeles to plunk down $1 million on a house that was worth $500,000 a year ago,they turn a
IF THE LAB-LEAK THEORY IS RIGHT, WHAT'S NEXT? If the Lab-Leak Theory Is Right, What’s Next? We know enough to acknowledge that the scenario is possible, and we should therefore act as though it’s true. About the author: Daniel Engber is THE ROAD TO POLITICAL VIOLENCE About the author: Peter Wehner is a contributing writer at The Atlantic and a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center. He writes widely on political, cultural, religious, and national EATING CICADAS IS GREAT UNTIL YOU TASTE THEM Eating cicadas just makes sense, even for someone like me, who’s been a stalwart vegetarian since basically the last time they appeared, in 2004. They’re a bountiful and easy-to WHY CONSERVATIVES WANT TO CANCEL THE 1619 PROJECT Nikole Hannah-Jones is an award-winning Black journalist. She is also one of the developers of the 1619 Project, a journalistic examination of slavery’s role in shaping the American present DAILY ONLINE CROSSWORD PUZZLE The Atlantic’s crossword puzzle gets a little more challenging every day, with the biggest puzzle on Sunday. Puzzle Picker. ON OFF PÅ AV Sur De. Friday, May 14, 2021. by Caleb Madison. ThursdayJUNE 2021 ISSUE
Why Confederate lies live on, Black America’s origin stories, Red Cross quarantine ships, Brett Kavanaugh, and new fiction from Morgan Thomas. Plus the Appalachian Elvis, Richard Wright, post KIDS DON'T NEED MASKS OUTSIDE In Israel, more than 60 percent of adults are fully vaccinated (kids under 16 are not), and cases in kids have fallen 99 percent since January. Even before we entered this new phase, researchersTHE ATLANTIC
The Atlantic covers news, politics, culture, technology, health, and more, through its articles, podcasts, videos, and flagship magazine. POPULAR - THE ATLANTIC 3 hours ago · The Atlantic covers news, politics, culture, technology, health, and more, through its articles, podcasts, videos, and flagship magazine. THE REAL TWIST OF 'MARE OF EASTTOWN' The Real Twist of Mare of Easttown. In the HBO show’s finale, the impulses to care and to crime-solve collide. But the miniseries has thoughtfully explored how the two aren’t always mutually REPUBLICANS AGREE ABOUT VOTER FRAUD Conservatives have long complained about election shenanigans, especially in urban areas. Historically, there is evidence that major fraud once occurred, but changes toJUNE 2021 ISSUE
Why Confederate lies live on, Black America’s origin stories, Red Cross quarantine ships, Brett Kavanaugh, and new fiction from Morgan Thomas. Plus the Appalachian Elvis, Richard Wright, post THE COUNTRY IS ON THE CUSP OF A NEW ERA According to The New York Times, James will be sending two of her office’s prosecutors to join the team of Cyrus Vance Jr., the Manhattan DA. With this news, Donald Trump, those around him, and PODCAST: DEALING WITH POST-PANDEMIC TRAUMA Podcast: Dealing With Post-pandemic Trauma. The Atlantic staff writer Ed Yong talks with James Hamblin and Maeve Higgins about the ways,large and
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Why Confederate lies live on, Black America’s origin stories, Red Cross quarantine ships, Brett Kavanaugh, and new fiction from Morgan Thomas. Plus the Appalachian Elvis, Richard Wright, post WHY YOU SHOULD WAIT OUT THE WILD HOUSING MARKET How wild is the U.S. housing market right now? So wild, half of the houses listed nationwide in April went pending in less than a week. So wild, one poll found that most buyers admitted to bidding I’M NOT SCARED TO REENTER SOCIETY. I’M JUST NOT SURE I About the author: Tim Kreider is a writer and columnist. He is the author of the essay collection We Learn Nothing. This post-pandemicsummer
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NO ONE KNEW WHY EMINEM WAS AT THE OSCARS “Lose Yourself” was not celebrating any anniversary, nor gaining new relevance. But it did pass the time okay.Spencer Kornhaber
12:43 PM ET
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The mystified faces of celebrity audience members spoke to the ambush that this was.Mario Anzuoni / Reuters*
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Regardless of whether your sweater’s stained with spaghetti, don’t dawdle. Eminem has told youand told
you again: Opportunity knocks once in a lifetime, and you must answer. Ope! Scratch that. New rule. You get two shots. The second comes 17 years after the first. Last night’s Oscars were surprisingly surprising. _Parasite_’sBest Picture win
hinted that Hollywood’s premier awards-giver can—plot twist—recognize
quality across lines of nationality, race, and language. Today, a more inexplicable mystery lingers: Why did Eminem make an overlong ceremony longer by rapping a hit from the early George W. Bush era? Midway through the show, a montage about movie music culminated in suspiciously lengthy clips from the 2002 film _8 Mile_. Then the 47-year-old Eminem, hat pulled low, appeared in the flesh with an orchestra-slash–rock band for a solid, po-faced rendition of “Lose Yourself” in full. Play The Atlantic Crossword Our mini puzzle gets bigger and more challenging each day. See if you can solve your way through the week.Play!
The mystified faces of celebrity audience members spoke to the ambush that this was. In Idina Menzel’s furled brows,
you could see a nation’s worth of mental catalogs being frantically flipped through to sort out what was happening. Yes, it was that old song from your gym playlist, and yes, it was on the Oscars stage, and no, it had not been advertised, and no, there was no real explanation.MORE STORIES
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THE REAL MESSAGE OF JANELLE MONÁE’S OSCARS PERFORMANCEShirley Li
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THE BEST SPEECH OF OSCARS NIGHTDavid Sims
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HOW JOAQUIN PHOENIX DISRUPTED AWARDS SEASONSophie Gilbert
“Lose Yourself,” from _8 Mile_, in which Eminem semi-autobiographically starred as a Detroit battle rapper, won the Academy Award for Best Original Song in 2003. It was the first hip-hop track to ever do so. Back then, Eminem was at the height of his early-dominance phase, and he opted not to show for the Oscars. Last night, he tweeted outthe old video
of Barbra Streisand presenting the trophy, which his collaborator Luis Resto had accepted with a speech tenderly praising the “good heart” of the emcee whose violent lyrics had terrified a generation of parents. In between, Eminem went through hiatuses and misfires, followed by a string of hugely selling but sourly discussed “comebacks” over nearly a decade and a half. The latest of those comebacks arrived earlier this month: _Music to Be Murdered By _became his 10th consecutive album to debut at No. 1 (a feat no one else has ever achieved). Though fans worship his new material, it seems telling that on one of the largest televised stages imaginable he performed not a recent song but rather one from two decades ago. Really, though, the Oscars spot highlighted Eminem’s stealthy cultural persistency. He still sells more reliably than almost anyone else in popular music, and his old music sounds as good as it ever did. As last night’s performance wore on, the faces of Oscars audience members transformed from disoriented to engaged, and head bobs testified to an undeniable fact: “Lose Yourself” still slays. The guitar riff encases the listener in biker leather. The terms _pied piper _and _Mekhi Phifer_ found their ultimate possibleuses.
Does this song connect in some manner that especially fits this present moment? Was the audience being psyched up for a tough election year, or for Joaquin Phoenix’s vegan manifesto,
or … something? No. The performance was about the Oscars itself, and its ever-more-urgent need for conversation and excitement. In its second year without a host, the show’s lack of a coherent point of view or discernible agenda became even more glaring. The producers replaced banter with a slate of musical performances—an understandable bet, given how much buzz Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper’s gently raunchy take on “Shallow” generated last year. The problem was that such buzz was not likely to flare up from any of the stately songs nominated this year (including one from Eminem’s “Uncle Elton,” whom he posed within a backstage
re-creation of a heartwarming 2001 momentthat,
somehow, failed to end homophobia forever). The Oscars therefore supplemented its soundtrack by enlisting the theoretically more current sounds of rap and R&B. At the top of the show, Janelle Monáe remixed her catalog to address the 2019 class of films. Midway through, the actor Utkarsh Ambudkar rapped a recap of the awards given out. Both musicians—as well as a diverse slate of presenters—conveyed that the Academy would like to appear more inclusive than its nominationsactually are.
Eminem’s “Lose Yourself” does not carry any such social message, even if his Trump-era work has been boldlypolitical
.
He’s probably just the most popular star with the most popular film-related song that the Oscars could book right now. His scowl and trail of controversies, in fact, helped sell a super-safe product: a motivational classic that almost everyone can bop along to. Well, everyone except for Martin Scorsese, who appeared to sleep through the performance. Perhaps he dreamed of an Oscars that knew exactly what it wanted to do and how to do it. We want to hear what you think about this article. Submit a letter to the editor or write to letters@theatlantic.com.Spencer Kornhaber
is a staff
writer at _The Atlantic,_ where he covers pop culture and music.Connect Twitter
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