
As I have done in every presidential cycle starting with 2000, I have a piece suggesting how we should view the two main candidates as debaters. For previous installments, see this from 2000, this from 2004, and this from 2008.
Part of the premise for the latest story is that there are years when debates don't really swing the election, since larger forces are in play. (Eg 1996, with Bill Clinton and Bob Dole, or 2008, with Obama and John McCain. Or 1964, 1968, and 1972, when debates just didn't happen.) There are others where the debates seem to have played a big role. The clearest case is 1980, when Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan were neck-and-neck until their only debate, just a week before election day. I lay out in the story why 2012 is shaping up as a debates-will-matter election, and what to watch for from both men. James Bennet explains the Atlantic's long approach to covering race and politics in his editor's note, and I have a video talking about some Romney and Obama speaking traits.
Another reason to see this issue is its physical version is the very striking cover photo and interior art. You will see what I mean. Photographer Alison Jackson explains the back story of these pictures in a video, and art director Luke Hayman of Pentagram tells more about the idea and how it was put into effect.

There is a lot more in the issue, about which I'll say more anon -- from culture to fiction to travel to this perfect encapsulation of the "Foxy Ladies," the mainly blond and (as the article explains) very carefully made-up female stars of the U.S. version of Chinese state media.
Pennington's [a Fox makeup artist] fascination with the women of Fox goes beyond makeup. "It's that little scowling look they give you when they're delivering the news," she continued. "It's like the bitchy girl in high school, [but] now she's your friend, and you hate the same people."Genius.
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