How a Tiny Endangered Species Put a Man in Prison
How a night of drunken mischief led to the death of a rare endangered fish and a rare prosecution.
How a night of drunken mischief led to the death of a rare endangered fish and a rare prosecution.
Paige Blankenbuehler High Country News Apr 2019 20min Permalink
It’s much less scientific—and more prone to gratuitous procedures—than you may think.
Ferris Jabr The Atlantic Apr 2019 30min Permalink
Michael Lewis is the author of several bestselling books and the host of the new podcast Against the Rules.
“I think anything you do, if it’s going to be any good, there’s got to be some risk involved. I think the reader or the listener will sense that you were taking chances and it will excite them. So, you never want to do the same thing twice, and you don’t want to cling to something because it’s the safe thing. I try to keep that in mind. Ok, I started with this, but if I push off shore clinging to this life raft or this floatation device and I get way out of swimming range of the beach, but I find this more interesting flotation device, have the nerve to jump from one to the next. You never know where it’s going to lead.”
Thanks to MailChimp, Going Through It, Green Chef, and Pitt Writers for sponsoring this week's episode.
Apr 2019 Permalink
More than 250 people have died since 2011 taking pictures of themselves in dangerous locations.
Kathryn Miles Outside Apr 2019 15min Permalink
In 2005, the painting sold at auction for $1,000. Its most recent price? $450 million.
Matthew Shaer New York Apr 2019 35min Permalink
What happened when Pete Buttigieg tore down houses in Black and Latino South Bend.
Henry J. Gomez Buzzfeed Apr 2019 30min Permalink
The U.S. military prison’s leadership considered Mohamedou Salahi to be its highest-value detainee. But his guard suspected otherwise.
Ben Taub The New Yorker Apr 2019 50min Permalink
Navigating the sewers of London and summiting the peaks of Paris with a group of urban explorers.
Matthew Power GQ Mar 2013 25min Permalink
Scandals. Backstabbing. Resignations. Record profits. Time Bombs.
Nicholas Thompson, Fred Vogelstein Wired Apr 2019 40min Permalink
On the death of David Carr.
Erin Lee Carr The Cut Apr 2019 10min Permalink
How pop-up tax preparers make billions off the poor.
Gary Rivlin Mother Jones Mar 2011 15min Permalink
“Every generation gets its own Keanu Reeves, except every generation’s Keanu Reeves is this Keanu Reeves.”
Alex Pappademas GQ Apr 2019 25min Permalink
The neck-and-neck race that electrified the 1982 Boston Marathon.
John Brant Runner's World Apr 2004 30min Permalink
A profile of Tiger Woods at 21.
Charles P. Pierce GQ Mar 1997 25min Permalink
A journalist goes undercover in Blackwell’s Island Insane Asylum.
Nellie Bly New York World Oct 1887 2h25min Permalink
The psychology behind our limitations of reason.
Elizabeth Kolbert New Yorker Feb 2017 10min Permalink
A few miles north of San Francisco, off the coast of Sausalito, is Richardson Bay, a saltwater estuary where roughly one hundred people live out of sight from the world. Known as anchor-outs, they make their homes a quarter mile from the shore, on abandoned and unseaworthy vessels, doing their best, with little or no money, to survive.
Thea Hunter was a promising, brilliant scholar. And then she got trapped in academia’s permanent underclass.
Adam Harris The Atlantic Apr 2019 20min Permalink
Two Dominican families, their lawyer, and a quest for ancestral riches that may not exist.
Joe Nocera Bloomberg Businessweek Apr 2019 30min Permalink
An interview with the novelist.
Isaac Chotiner New Yorker Apr 2019 10min Permalink
After two months in the hospital, a mother finally got to take her premature baby home. Then she spent five years trying to convince him to eat.
Tahmima Anam The Guardian Apr 2019 35min Permalink
Friends and their plans, big and small.
Joel Tomfohr Vol. 1 Brooklyn Apr 2019 Permalink
Local communities are taking the world’s largest polluters to court. And they’re using the legal strategy that got tobacco companies to pay up.
Brooke Jarvis The New York Times Magazine Apr 2019 20min Permalink
You learn to believe in your child’s existence. What happens when she’s killed by a piece of your daily environment?
Jayson Greene Vulture Apr 2019 25min Permalink
What happens when you put a classroom on wheels and park it in the poorest neighborhoods of San Francisco?
Elizabeth Weil California Sunday Mar 2019 25min Permalink