Articles, radio, and podcasts about “Bringing Ben Home”
Benjamine Spencer is serving a life sentence for a violent crime he insists he didn’t commit. But he lacks biological evidence—and old-fashioned detective work may not be enough to clear his name.
January/February 2018 | The Atlantic
Open PDF version here
Photo: Nathan Bajar
Benjamine Spencer is the luckiest of the unlucky.
January 2021 | The Atlantic
Open PDF version here
Photo: Nathan Bajar
My reporting forced me to confront some bigger lessons about life, truth, and faith.
August 6, 2024 | The Atlantic
Open PDF version here
Photo: Harmon Li
Listen to the 90 minute, three-part Radio Atlantic series, which explores Spencer’s story.
Part 1: No Way Out
Part 2:Who Killed Jeffrey Young?
Part 3: How Innocence Becomes Irrelevant
February 2018 | Radio Atlantic
Photo: Nathan Bajar
Articles, radio, and podcasts about “Life Reimagined”
A midlife career shift can be good for cognition, well-being, and even longevity.
April 2016 Issue | The Atlantic
Open PDF here
Photo: Luci Guitiérrez
A midlife career shift can be good for cognition, well-being, and even longevity.
April 2016 Issue | The Atlantic
Open PDF here
Photo: Luci Guitiérrez
One secret to midlife happiness is being a rookie at something. Trying new things and failing keeps you robust. Also, to revive a midlife marriage, mix things up: Hike, go dancing or set out in an RV.
March 17, 2016 | NPR
Photo: retrorocket.
Click to listen or download the episode.
The midlife crisis is entrenched in American popular culture, but mostly, it doesn't exist in more than a mere 10 percent of the population. Here, five ways we misunderstand midlife.
March 14, 2016 | NPR
Photo: David Whittle
Click below to listen or download the episode.
You forget someone's name, or why you ran downstairs. Your brain is getting older, and the connections are weakening. But research shows the middle-aged brain is actually operating at its peak.
March 15, 2016 | NPR
Click below to listen or download the episode.
People between 45 and 65 may be the loneliest segment in the U.S. And researchers are using brain scans to show that friendships are vital to staying healthy and engaged in your middle years.
March 16, 2016 | NPR
Photo: Unsplash.
Click below to listen or download the episode.
Baby boomer marriage is in such crisis that researchers call it the Gray Divorce Revolution. Author Barbara Bradley Hagerty talks about why so many couples split, and why others have healthy marriages.
Click below to listen or download the episode.
One of the keys to staying happy in your career as the years go by is finding a purpose or meaning to it. Sometimes that means rethinking your job in your middle years.
Click below to listen or download the episode.
Years after my dramatic, unlikely conversion, it seemed God had gone silent.
We get by with a little help from our friends.
March 17, 2016 | The Washington Post
Photo: Brett Sayer (CC-BY-NC)
Articles, radio, and podcasts about “Fingerprints of God”
For much of the 20th century, mainstream science shied away from studying spirituality. Sigmund Freud declared God to be a delusion, and others maintained that God, if there is such a thing, is beyond the tools of science to measure. But now, some researchers are using new technologies to try to understand spiritual experience. I spent a year exploring the emerging science of spirituality for my book, Fingerprints of God. One of the questions raised by my reporting: Is an encounter with God merely a chemical reaction?
May 18, 2009 | NPR
Photo: Unsplash.
According to polls, there's a 50-50 chance you have had at least one spiritual experience — an overpowering feeling that you've touched God, or another dimension of reality. So, have you ever wondered whether those encounters actually happened — or whether they were all in your head? Scientists say the answer might be both.
Photo: Unsplash.
Scientists are making the first attempts to understand spiritual experience — and what happens in the brains and bodies of people who believe they connect with the divine. The field is called "neurotheology," and although it is new, it's drawing prominent researchers in the U.S. and Canada. Scientists have found that the brains of people who spend untold hours in prayer and meditation are different.
Photo: iStockphoto.com
Click below to listen or download the episode.
Ninety percent of Americans say they pray — for their health, or their love life or their final exams. But does prayer do any good? For decades, scientists have tried to test the power of prayer and positive thinking, with mixed results. Now some scientists are fording new — and controversial — territory.
May 21, 2009 | NPR
Photo: Unsplash.
Click below to listen or download the episode.
Is God all in our heads—a product of brain chemistry? Or is the human brain like a radio that can tune into the divine?
Feb. 7, 2019 | Medium
Photo: Amaury Gutierrez
If an anxious, ambitious television star who worries about a theoretical receding hair-line can find some relief, the book suggests, maybe you can, too. Guest interviewer Barbara Bradley Hagerty finds out how ABC's Dan Harris did it.
May 2015 | Interfaith Voices
Click here to listen or download episode.
Photo: prodigy130
Some say it's like the common cold, or a run-of-the-mill dry spell in an intimate relationship. There are times when people of faith feel, for a while, far from God. Guest host Barbara Bradley Hagerty sits down with two spiritual scholars to talk about their own experiences with "the dark night of the soul" and how they get through it.
November 2016 | Interfaith Voices
Click here to listen or download episode.
Photo: michael_swan.
We've all heard the stories about near-death experiences: the tunnel, the white light, the encounter with long-dead relatives now looking very much alive.
Scientists have cast a skeptical eye on these accounts. They say that these feelings and visions are simply the result of a brain shutting down.
But now some researchers are giving a closer neurological look at near-death experiences and asking: Can your mind operate when your brain has stopped?
Photo: iStock
Selected Stories
The condition has long been considered untreatable. Experts can spot it in a child as young as 3 or 4. But a new clinical approach offers hope.
Photo: Lola Dupre
NPR's Audie Cornish speaks with writer Barbara Bradley Hagerty about her piece in The Atlantic on the children who are psychopaths, new treatment strategies and the brain science driving it.
Photo: Freepik.
When one parent in a divorce has worked to prejudice the kids against the other parent, the last-ditch solution for some judges is to send the children to “reunification camp” with the mom or dad they can’t stand.
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Barbara Bradley Hagerty, a contributor for The Atlantic, about parental alienation, which can happen when one parent uses a child to get back at the other parent.
Photo: Freepik.
What new research reveals about sexual predators, and why police fail to catch them
Photo: Paul Spella/Katie Martin.
A university student assaulted multiple women before he faced any consequences for his actions. Why didn’t they come forward sooner?
July 15, 2019 | The Atlantic
Open PDF version here
Photo: Ken Wolter/Shutterstock.
Reporter Barbara Bradley Hagerty set out to investigate why police across the country often fail to catch serial rapists.
August 2019 | Today, Explained - Vox
Photo: Paul Spella / Katie Martin
Click below to listen to the episode.
A major investigation by The Atlantic finds that the police are still skeptical of women who report a rape. The reporter says a "subterranean river of chauvinism" is to blame.
Photo: Bill Smith (CC-BY 2.0)
Click below to listen to the episode.
"Rape - more than murder, more than robbery or assault - is by far the easiest violent crime to get away with." So writes Barbara Bradley Hagerty in a new article for The Atlantic in which she explores why the assailant goes free in 49 out of 50 rape cases. Hagerty talks with host Michael Krasny about her reporting and new information about sexual predators, including that serial rapists are far more common than previously thought.
July 2019 | Forum (KQED)
Photo: Paul Spella / Katie Martin
A bloodstain expert’s testimony helped put him in prison. But can forensic science be trusted?
Illustrations by Isabel Seliger
As long as there is easy access to guns, there’s no way parents, teachers, and other specialists can thwart every violent teenager.
May 21, 2018 | The Atlantic
Open PDF version here
Photo: Niv Bavarsky.
Looking for a specific article?
Can You Prove Your Innocence Without DNA?
Benjamine Spencer is serving a life sentence for a violent crime he insists he didn’t commit. But he lacks biological evidence—and old-fashioned detective work may not be enough to clear his name.
January/February 2018 | The Atlantic
Open PDF version here
Photo: Nathan Bajar