Tuesday, November 30

The addictive lure of Brooklyn’s last bingo parlors.


/ / Jan 2004
via via J. Michaud

A profile of Larry David, with a focus on his years as a struggling stand-up. “I was hoping that somehow I could get some kind of cult following and get by with that.”


/ / Nov 2010
via via GMSTR

What happened to the minds behind Napster, Gnutella, WinAmp, and BitTorrent after their creations irrevocably changed business and culture.


/ / Nov 2010

A lifetime worth of little scams adds up.


Monday, November 29

The unedited transcript of an interview with Julian Assange for the cover story of Forbes‘ December issue. His next target? A major U.S. bank.


/ / Dec 2010

Its editors still live in different cities, still work different careers, and still treat Boing Boing as a (lucrative) hobby.


via via A. Lange

A globe-trotting, pre-CCTV profile of architect Rem Koolhaas.


DecorMyEyes is a online eyewear store with an unusual business plan; the owner harasses and intimidates customers who complain in order to get negative reviews posted across the web, in turn making his website more visible to Google searchers.


/ / Nov 2007

“Twenty-two years after being sent to prison for an unspeakable crime he did not commit, Calvin Willis walked out a free man, the 138th American exonerated by DNA evidence. He has won his freedom, yes, but how does a falsely accused man reclaim his life?”


The apparatus of counterinsurgency and occupation has funneled billions of dollars into Afghanistan, and much of it has ended up in the hands of insurgents. For those who have profited—be it through aid, extortion, corruption or legitimate business—there is very little incentive to bring the conflict to an end.


Sunday, November 28

The latest WikiLeaks unveiling has exposed more than 250,000 sensitive messages from American diplomats. Among the revelations: the plan for a unified Korea, the Chinese government’s hacking strategy, and negotiations with countries for housing Gitmo detainees.


In 1976, newly appointed Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens voted to reinstate capital punishment in the United States. Thirty years later, he argued that it’s unconstitutional. Here, he explains why he changed his mind.