
Listen: College Football Needs to Follow Science, Not Money
As colleges send athletes back on the field, we’re learning more about how COVID-19 could have serious and long-lasting impacts on hearts in even the healthiest among us.

As colleges send athletes back on the field, we’re learning more about how COVID-19 could have serious and long-lasting impacts on hearts in even the healthiest among us.

What if Trump refuses to concede?

Your cold-month questions, answered

The Green Party’s 2020 nominee tells The Ticket he’s not running as a spoiler candidate. But he insists that Kanye West’s candidacy is a “Republican dirty trick.”

How wildfires make the virus more dangerous

We want vaccines. We want rapid tests. But when is fast too fast?

“It takes political leadership to fix this sort of moment,” Wisconsin’s lieutenant governor says. But Trump, he suggests, “is only making things worse.”

What the term actually means, and what it doesn’t

A COVID-19 survivor asks questions about her immunity and donating plasma.

Once the GOP leader in the largest state in the country, California Assembly Member Chad Mayes left the party—and he has a warning for Republicans around the country.

When events went online, they lost something indescribable. But did some of them gain something new?

How the pandemic is changing how we move—and could alter cities permanently

The Biden vice-presidential-nominee finalist discusses Trump’s pandemic response, Benghazi, and her family’s politics.

Is the pandemic changing science?

A cheap, easy excuse to be in nature

Senator Chris Coons discusses a Civilian Conservation Corps for the pandemic era.

Inside the quasi-authoritarian city-state in Florida where people are happily complying with the rules

Zombies, villagers, and Navy SEALs. An immunologist explains the immune system.

Long before Donna Shalala got to Congress, she was America’s longest-serving secretary of health and human services—and Anthony Fauci’s boss.

A fiscal cliff is coming.