The Southeast's Power Grid Is Quietly Becoming an AI Story
Georgia Power's interconnection queue has grown sixfold in eighteen months. The line is almost entirely data centers, and the math no longer works without nuclear.
Georgia Power's interconnection queue has grown sixfold in eighteen months. The line is almost entirely data centers, and the math no longer works without nuclear.
Headline default rates remain near record lows. Inside the funds, mark-to-model accounting is doing a great deal of work.
A Tuesday-morning Senate Commerce subcommittee session previewed the regulatory fight of 2027.
One desk reports the day as it happens. The other takes the time stories deserve. Together, they are Pulse Chronicles.
Breaking news, market moves, and the political day — filed by ten editors from Atlanta, Washington, New York, and the coasts.
Deep features, investigations, and narrative reporting — in the tradition of the magazine Richard E. Spoon launched in 1986.
Pulse Chronicles is a revived masthead. The print operation founded by Richard E. Spoon in Atlanta in 1978 ceased active publication in the 2010s; the title, the print archive, and the operating company were transferred to the current ownership in 2025 with the mandate to relaunch it digitally. The newsroom is being assembled, the ~1,800-piece archive is being digitized and released in waves, and editorial voices listed on the masthead are being onboarded in parallel. We would rather be transparent about that than appear larger than we are. See the full transparency & verification page →
Two cuts are priced in. Three would require something to break.
A continuing resolution is the only path that avoids a shutdown, and the Speaker has the votes for neither.
The marketing is enterprise-first. The benchmarks tell a more interesting story.
Three companies now control more than 70% of the major-market lineups. The artists have noticed.
Twenty years after the first wave of layoffs, the survivors of three midsize metro papers tell what was lost and what, in places, is coming back.
Savannah is now the third-busiest container port in the United States. The state spent thirty years making sure of it.
Vision Video has outlasted the format, the chain stores, and three landlords. It will not outlast its lease.
Sony's flagship adds two grams of weight and two hundred dollars to a formula that already worked.
The seventh iteration of a cult object asks whether the cult was ever about the camera.
Smaller, cheaper, and unmistakably a Rivian. The waitlist is, again, the story.
What the July ballot question would actually fund — and what the fine print leaves out.
Sea-surface temperatures across the basin are running 1.2°C above the long-term average.
The largest single capital project in the city's history will run for a decade.
The masthead has carried more than three hundred names since founder Richard E. Spoon put out the first weekly broadsheet from a 12-person office on Edgewood Avenue.
Wave one of the digitized archive — roughly 1,800 pieces — is online now. Subsequent waves through 2027.
Richard E. Spoon's final letter to readers, written six months before his death.
On the year Borders closed, what was being lost, and what wasn't.
Bay St. Louis, Pass Christian, and the slow vocabulary of return.
Ten editors across four bureaus. The eighth Editor-in-Chief since 1978.
Join the founding-readers waitlist for early access to the morning briefing, members-only Chronicles features, and the digitized Vault.