League on Fire
The curious rise and spectacular crash of the Alliance of American Football, a new league that went under in just eight weeks.
The curious rise and spectacular crash of the Alliance of American Football, a new league that went under in just eight weeks.
Conor Orr Sports Illustrated May 2019 15min Permalink
Sloane Crosley is the author of I Was Told There’d Be Cake and How Did You Get This Number. Her latest essay collection is Look Alive Out There.
“The more extreme things get in reality, the more extreme escapism has to be. It’s like Game of Thrones or bust. But in reality, I think that part of what I’m trying to do with this book — or in anything I write — is to give permission to be mad about little things. Just because there’s all of this, someone still slid their hand down a subway pole and touched you. Or somebody bumped into you. There are still these minor indignities and infractions that occur consistently. And I think there’s some sort of robbing if you tell yourself, Well, I’m not going to be mad about this because of the political landscape that we’re in.”
Thanks to MailChimp, Squarespace, The Great Courses Plus, and Pitt Writers for sponsoring this week's episode.
May 2019 Permalink
“This baby was unviable, basically. That’s what they say. They say that the baby is ‘incompatible with life.’”
Jia Tolentino Jezebel Jun 2016 35min Permalink
Exposure to the internet did not make us into a nation of yeoman mind-farmers (unless you count Minecraft). That people in the billions would self-assemble, and that these assemblies could operate in their own best interests, was … optimistic.
A dark journey Into the world of a man gone wild.
Leif Reigstad Texas Monthly May 2019 25min Permalink
On the revolutionaries, highly-paid negotiators, former spies, foreign businessmen and their families, who all played roles in the massive Colombian kidnap and ransom industry during its 1990s heyday.
William Prochnau Vanity Fair May 1998 20min Permalink
My wife is not a terrorist.
Matt Rivers, Lily Lee CNN May 2019 20min Permalink
The city of New York is suing a Long Island woman for making NYPD T-shirts. But is it really about money or controlling the brand?
Kaitlyn Tiffany The Goods May 2019 10min Permalink
A bulletin from our climate future.
David Wallace-Wells New York May 2019 40min Permalink
The roots musician is inspired by the evolving legacy of the black string band.
John Jeremiah Sullivan New Yorker May 2019 35min Permalink
On losing your mom.
Ruth Margalit New Yorker May 2014 10min Permalink
What happens when a great deal of cocaine suddenly washes up on the shores of a very small island.
Matthew Bremner The Guardian May 2019 20min Permalink
Ideas on labor and capital have remained fixed while the means of production grow ever more alienating.
Marilynne Robinson Harper's May 2019 25min Permalink
On the curious life of Archibald Butt, confidant to President Taft and tragic victim of the sinking Titanic.
As much as the narrative of Butt’s heroism meant to the family, to the White House, to the military, it seems all too cinematic. The reality is that the experience was probably a great annoyance to him, right up until the moment it became a nightmare.
Will Stephenson The Believer Apr 2019 30min Permalink
How well-meaning donations end up fueling an unproven, virtually unregulated $2 billion stem cell industry.
Caroline Chen ProPublica May 2019 30min Permalink
A co-founder makes the case for government intervention.
Chris Hughes New York Times May 2019 25min Permalink
An unexpected visitor—a camel—helps a woman cope with personal and political turmoil.
Vineetha Mokkil Gravel Magazine May 2019 10min Permalink
How Trumpism operates on the knowledge that some people can get away with anything, and how it offers a false promise to extend that privilege to white kids everywhere
Alex Pareene The Baffler May 2019 20min Permalink
How the most expensive and unstoppable invasive plant crisis inspires madness and panic.
Henry Grabar Slate May 2019 20min Permalink
Christine Kenneally has written for The New Yorker, The New York Times, and The Monthly. Her 2018 Buzzfeed article, “The Ghosts of the Orphanage,” was nominated for a National Magazine Award.
"I understood that the abuse was a big part of the story. But the thing that really hooked me and disturbed me and I wouldn’t forget was the depersonalization that went on in these places. It wasn’t just that the records had been lost along the way. It became really clear that the information was intentionally withheld, and it was all part of just this extraordinary depersonalization that happened to these kids.”
Thanks to MailChimp and Pitt Writers for sponsoring this week's episode.
May 2019 Permalink
A confrontation with masculinity gone awry.
Wil S. Hylton New York Times Magazine May 2019 50min Permalink
A very Florida investigation.
Rebecca Woolington, Justin Trombly Tampa Bay Times May 2019 20min Permalink
The need for a new letter on an old manual machine leads the author to the shop of Martin Tytell — repairman, historian, and high priest of typewriters.
Ian Frazier The Atlantic Nov 1997 25min Permalink
On July 11, 2002, the researchers revealed that they had synthesized the polio virus, which had been wiped out in the US in 1979. It was the first time a virus had been created from scratch with synthetic DNA. The work was funded by the Pentagon in part to establish whether terrorists could pull off such a feat. The answer was yes.
David Kushner Wired May 2019 15min Permalink
For a period of time in 2013, the Times reported this year, a full half of YouTube traffic was “bots masquerading as people,” a portion so high that employees feared an inflection point after which YouTube’s systems for detecting fraudulent traffic would begin to regard bot traffic as real and human traffic as fake. They called this hypothetical event “the Inversion.”