Atlantic Re:think, The Atlantic's in-house creative studio, partnered with Google on a series of editorial magazines exploring the questions AI raises for science, policy, work, and culture. The goal was to create something that would sit comfortably next to The Atlantic's own journalism—thoughtful, reported, beautifully designed, and worth keeping.
I worked on the Re:think editorial team as a managing editor. Day to day, that meant shaping story lineups, editing long-form Q&As and features, coordinating writers, fact-checkers, designers, and client stakeholders—and holding a consistent editorial bar through multiple rounds of review.
Conversations with James Manyika (Google SVP, Research, Technology & Society) and Demis Hassabis (DeepMind CEO); a sidebar on responsible AI development; a feature on emerging norms for AI in science and culture.
A feature on AI-powered accessibility tools and what inclusive communication technology looks like in practice—from live transcription to ASL recognition. Plus a deep dive into AlphaFold and the future of drug discovery.
A conversation with Sal Khan on what happens when AI meets emotional intelligence in the classroom—and what that means for the future of learning at scale.
Working inside a studio like Re:think meant holding a journalistic editorial standard inside a client engagement. That standard is what I now bring to the coaches, executives, and brands I work with through my own practice.
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