Erik Tarloff - Authors - The Atlantic

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Erik Tarloff

Erik Tarloff

Erik Tarloff is a novelist, screenwriter, and journalist. He has contributed speeches to Bill Clinton, Al Gore and others on a pro bono basis. More

Erik Tarloff has written extensively for the screen, both large and small (multiple episodes of M*A*S*H, All in the Family, The Bob Newhart Show, The Jeffersons, and many others too numerous and/or forgettable to mention). He has published two novels, Face-Time and The Man Who Wrote the Book. He was on the book-reviewing team at Slate, in addition to writing many other articles for that site about music and politics and divers other topics. He has been a contributing editor to the British magazine Prospect, and has published extensively in a wide variety of other newspapers and magazines. He contributed on a pro bono basis to speeches for former President Bill Clinton, former Vice President Al Gore, and other political figures.
Of Course Rupert Murdoch Isn't Fit to Run a Company

Of Course Rupert Murdoch Isn't Fit to Run a Company

Two unsettling thoughts on U.K. lawmakers' condemnation of the media mogul… More »

Why Romney's Relationship With GOP Voters Is Like an Arranged Marriage

Why Romney's Relationship With GOP Voters Is Like an Arranged Marriage

They may have flirted with other, spicier candidates, but Republican voters will return to the one who is stable, reasonable, and thoroughly unexciting.… More »

And Now It's Newt's Turn

And Now It's Newt's Turn

The former Speaker for the House may enjoy support as an alternative to Mitt Romney, but one way or another, he will be brought down by the party establishment… More »

The Occupation

The Occupation

Public protest isn't about anything as mundane as ten-point programs and lists of demands… More »

My Father Was a Communist

My Father Was a Communist

In the 1950s, the author's father was interrogated by the House Un-American Committee and blacklisted by his profession. Years later, too many Americans fail to grasp the moral of his story.… More »

What Obama Can Learn From Harry Truman

What Obama Can Learn From Harry Truman

If he wants to win reelection in 2012, the president will have to stand for something. He needs to get angry -- eloquently angry.… More »

How Obama Can Win the Politics of the Debt Ceiling and Still Lose

How Obama Can Win the Politics of the Debt Ceiling and Still Lose

Obama made the better argument Monday night, but that doesn't mean he's going to come out on top once the battle over the deficit winds down… More »

Newbies and True Believers Bedevil Debt-Ceiling Negotiations

Newbies and True Believers Bedevil Debt-Ceiling Negotiations

Some Republicans are having a hard time distinguishing the serious part of politics from the posturing, just like in 1995… More »

The Art of Book-to-Film Adaptations

The Art of Book-to-Film Adaptations

Charlie Kaufman's "Adaptation" and Fowles's "The French Lieutenant's Woman" prove there are creative ways to recreate books on screen… More »

Of Mosques and Marriage

Of Mosques and Marriage

Some controversies, like Don't Ask Don't Tell, warrant debate, while others -- like gay marriage and the Cordoba House -- don't… More »

The Funniest 4 Minutes in the History of Television?

The Funniest 4 Minutes in the History of Television?

A clip from the BBC comedy TV series "Not Only...But Also" ushered in a new type of humor—one that has no purpose or logic… More »

Hominids in Love

Hominids in Love

We're more like Neanderthals than we thought.… More »

When Great Art Happens to Bad People

When Great Art Happens to Bad People

Can we judge a book, opera, or symphony by its creator's racist, sexist, or anti-Semitic views?… More »

Getting Scary Out There

What we shall take as a given is the incredible vacuity of the opposition. By now, everyone is surely familiar with the dishonest, fear-mongering arguments peddled by opponents of health care reform; it shouldn't be necessary to rehearse (or refute) them here. I don't mean to suggest there weren't reasonable arguments to be made, merely that, by and large, and for whatever reason, they weren't. Instead, the other side chose the route of hyperbole and hysterical…… More »

Only a Draw?

Only a Draw?

What a chess match teaches us about health reform, Obama, and his presidency… More »

Reading Philip Larkin 100 Years From Now

Reading Philip Larkin 100 Years From Now

The world has changed a lot since the poet wrote his seminal "Annus Mirabilis." Why 22nd-century audiences might be confused when they read it.… More »

Middle East Partisans

Middle East Partisans

About a decade ago, when I was a frequent contributor to Slate, two horrifying events occurred in the Middle East that occasioned a great deal of commentary in the magazine's free-form, unrefereed letters-to-the-editor feature, "The Fray." One involved Israeli soldiers repeatedly firing their rifles at a young unarmed Palestinian boy in the West Bank as he desperately scrambled to find cover. The other involved the lethal bombing of a Tel Aviv pizza parlor where a…… More »

Meg Whitman's Campaign Spots

Meg Whitman, the former eBay CEO, is running for the Republican nomination for governor of California. Armed with a considerable personal fortune, she shot out of the starting blocks early, inundating the airwaves--both radio and television--with advertising. These spots are entirely content-free, total pablum, but that hardly makes them noteworthy; most campaign ads have lacked anything resembling substance at least since it was morning in America. These do,…… More »

Classical Cadenzas

Here's an example of a moment with which every classical music lover is familiar: There comes a point in virtually every concerto from the classical period when the orchestra comes to a sudden halt and the soloist takes flight with a couple of minutes of difficult (or at least difficult-sounding) passage-work interspersed with fragments of melody derived from what's been previously heard. This music usually culminates in an extended trill, after which the…… More »

Citizens United

Somewhere along the line, right wingers stopped complaining about "New Deal judges"--presumably because an actual FDR-appointed judiciary had largely passed from the scene--and began assailing "activist judges" instead. There was a certain logic to it; by 1968, the appointment power had been in liberal hands for 20 28 of the previous 28 36 years, and therefore, any judicial activism on display was likely to have been liberal activism.But it was also a canard, an…… More »

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