Ta-Nehisi Coates discusses his experience writing the Black Panther comics with fans. Watch parts two and three.
Ta-Nehisi Coates met with fans at Phantom Comics in D.C.'s Dupont Circle to discuss his experience writing the Black Panther comics. You can watch parts one and three.
Ta-Nehisi Coates sits down with Black Panther comics fans at D.C.'s Phantom Comics to answer questions about his experience writing Marvel's revamped series. You can watch parts one and two.
In the heart of Washington, D.C., Keya Chatterjee and her family live off the energy produced from a single solar panel. It started in 2006, when Chatterjee and her husband had a fight with their electrical company. They were so tired of the astronomical bills that they stopped power to their home and spent the entire winter living without heating or electricity—essentially camping in their own home. After a frigid few months, they installed the solar panel and returned to Pepco, but now they supply energy to the grid rather than using it. Today, Chatterjee's life runs on solar energy, she takes public transportation everywhere, and she's figured out how to live with as little consumption as possible.
One in five of us will get skin cancer in our lifetime. For some, the idea of preventing wrinkles is a more powerful behavioral motivator than preventing cancer. In this “Ask Jim” episode of If Our Bodies Could Talk, senior editor James Hamblin answers a reader question about wrinkling skin and breaks down the psychology of SPF.
This video is part of a new interactive feature where we respond to viewers' questions. Write to askjim@theatlantic.com.
Decades of authoritarian one party rule have perhaps reduced one man's ability to question authority as a Chinese bloke awaiting the birth of his child was erroneously whisked in for a haemorrhoidectomy.…
A drone was involved in a near-miss with a Flybe passenger flight on approach to Newquay Airport on Tuesday, putting the aircraft's 62 passengers and crew at risk.…