Losing Laura
Laura Levis did everything she could to save herself when an asthma attack began. How could she have been left to die just outside the emergency room?
Laura Levis did everything she could to save herself when an asthma attack began. How could she have been left to die just outside the emergency room?
Peter DeMarco Boston Globe Nov 2018 50min Permalink
A reporter encounters the echoes of family and the struggle for civil rights in Mississippi.
Nikole Hannah-Jones ProPublica Jul 2014 30min Permalink
What prison does to a person.
Leslie Jamison Oxford American Apr 2013 25min Permalink
Why doctors hate their computers.
Atul Gawande New Yorker Nov 2018 35min Permalink
Piecing together the quiet, lonely life of Kathryn Norris.
Michael Kruse Tampa Bay Times Jul 2011 10min Permalink
When the apocalypse comes, survivors (and aliens!) will be happy that Martin Kunze built this place.
Michael Paterniti GQ Oct 2018 20min Permalink
Thomas Sweatt torched D.C. for decades and was finally jailed for killing one person. During a year-long correspondence from prison with a reporter, he confessed there were more.
Dave Jamieson Washington City Paper Jun 2007 50min Permalink
For two decades, domestic counterterrorism strategy has ignored the rising danger of far-right extremism. In the atmosphere of willful indifference, a virulent movement has grown and metastasized.
Janet Reitman New York Times Magazine Nov 2018 50min Permalink
Saudi Arabia thought a bombing campaign would quickly crush its enemies in Yemen. But three years later, the Houthis refuse to give up, even as 14 million people face starvation.
Robert F. Worth New York Times Magazine Oct 2018 35min Permalink
Cardinal Bernard Law knew as early as 1984 John Geoghan was molesting children. The priest would not be defrocked for 14 years.
Kristin Lombardi Boston Phoenix Mar 2001 25min Permalink
A profile of the billionaire influencer.
Katie Baker The Ringer Nov 2018 35min Permalink
A month-long tour inside L.A.’s cultish world of wellness.
Rosecrans Baldwin GQ Nov 2018 35min Permalink
A daughter investigates her father’s belief that the government is subjecting him and thousands more to to mind control.
Jean Guerrero Wired Oct 2018 25min Permalink
The Venezuelan maestro of the Los Angeles Philharmonic conjures joy in difficult times.
Brian Phillips New York Times Magazine Nov 2018 20min Permalink
Ghostly stories and family tragedies.
Julia Dixon Evans Monkeybicycle Oct 2018 Permalink
A courageous tribe, a colossal foe, and a terrifying ocean voyage.
Doug Bock Clark The Atavist Magazine Oct 2018 30min Permalink
“I’ve increasingly become aware of how much of my reputation in Taiwan is built on the knowledge of my New York upbringing.”
Brian Hioe Popula Oct 2018 10min Permalink
The true story of a ring of thieves who stole millions of dollars’ worth of luxury watches—and the special agent who brought them down.
Amy Wallace GQ Oct 2018 25min Permalink
Joe Hagan is a correspondent at Vanity Fair and the author of Sticky Fingers: The Life and Times of Jann Wenner and Rolling Stone Magazine.
“It’s the story that begins with John Lennon on the cover of Rolling Stone in 1967 and ends with Donald Trump in the White House. In many ways the book takes you there, I wanted it to. It takes you through the culture as it metastasizes into what it is now. It had a lot to do with a sense of the age of narcissism. The worship of celebrity. Jann was very into celebrity, and worshipful of it and glorifying it and turning it into a thing and eventually celebrity displaces a lot of the ideas they originally started with in my estimation. That was a narrative thread that I began to pull in the book.”
Thanks to MailChimp, Skagen, Screen Dive podcast, Stoner podcast, and Pitt Writers for sponsoring this week's episode.
Oct 2018 Permalink
How an economic war has pushed millions to the brink of starvation.
Declan Walsh New York Times Oct 2018 25min Permalink
On the radical tableside evangelism of Father Divine.
Vince Dixon Eater Oct 2018 20min Permalink
A four-part investigation of brothers William and James ‘Whitey’ Bulger. One was president of the Massachusetts Senate for 17 years. The other was on the lam for 16 years before being captured.
Christine Chinlund, Dick Lehr, Kevin Cullen The Boston Globe Sep 1998 1h15min Permalink
Sissel Tolaas is a star in the world of smells. Her methods are not always subtle.
An electrician’s odd plot to make $607,933.50.
Thomas Rogers Businessweek Oct 2018 10min Permalink
She raced cars when few women dared. But more than trophies or prize money, it was the zen of driving that pulled her in. This is the story of Denise McCluggage, America’s once-fastest woman.