The Story of Symphony of the Seas, the Largest and Most Ambitious Cruise Ship Ever Built
How to create a floating city.
How to create a floating city.
Oliver Franklin-Wallis Wired (UK) Apr 2018 15min Permalink
A trip to Scotland and an investigation of enduring belief.
“I remember reading about the deathbed confession, and how strangely sad it made me, even though I had not, at that point, believed in the monster for years. How much sadder, I wondered, would it make those who still believed in the existence of a monster in Loch Ness?”
Tom Bissell VQR Aug 2006 35min Permalink
“This isn’t an essay about clothes, exactly, nor is it about fashion, quite. It is about women and clothes and something that happens between them that we could think of as a kind of third rail of female experience.”
Rosemary Hill London Review of Books Apr 2018 25min Permalink
Pitcairn Island is impossibly remote, populated by descendants of a ship of British mutineers. Their population would not be revealed to the outside world until allegations of a culture of child molestation and rape that led back generations.
Laura Parker, William Prochnau Vanity Fair Jan 2008 45min Permalink
On Montana’s Flathead Indian Reservation, basketball is about much more than winning.
Abe Streep New York Times Magazine Apr 2018 35min Permalink
Inside the worst U.S. maritime disaster in decades.
William Langewiesche Vanity Fair Apr 2018 40min Permalink
The story behind Tony Kushner’s examination of AIDS and homosexuality.
Isaac Butler, Dan Kois Slate Jun 2016 1h5min Permalink
A car trip north ends in a terrifying slide off the highway.
John Seabrook New Yorker Apr 2018 25min Permalink
On the eve of his 26th WrestleMania appearance, friends, colleagues, and victims of the WWE’s longest-reigning superstar talk about the making of the Undertaker.
Thomas Golianopoulos The Ringer Apr 2018 20min Permalink
Thousands of internal documents help explain how, through brutality and bureaucracy, the Islamic State stayed in power for so long.
Rukmini Callimachi The New York Times Apr 2018 30min Permalink
Two friends wait out a storm in Waffle House on their way to uncertainty.
Sarah Boudreau Longleaf Review Apr 2018 15min Permalink
The playwright’s forgotten son.
Suzanna Andrews Vanity Fair Sep 2007 25min Permalink
North Carolina’s Alexander County is a Southern Baptist stronghold. It’s also home to Mitchell Gold, an outspoken gay rights activist and the CEO of one of the region’s largest employers.
Tiffany Stanley Washington Post Apr 2018 35min Permalink
“Didion was one of the boys, clearly, in the sense that men had noticed her writing and wanted to publish her. But she also couldn’t quite fit into their regime.”
Michelle Dean Buzzfeed Mar 2018 20min Permalink
Tom Bissell is a journalist, critic, video game writer, and author of The Disaster Artist: My Life Inside The Room, the Greatest Bad Movie Ever Made. His latest book is Magic Hours.
“I kind of have come around to maybe not as monkish or fanatical devotion to sentence idolatry as I was when I was a younger writer, earlier in my career. I think I’m coming around to a place where a lot of middle-aged writers get to, which is: I tried to rewire and change the world with the beauty of language alone—it didn’t work. Now how about I try to write stuff that’s true, or that’s not determined to show people I am a Great Writer. Like a lot of young writers, you’re driven by that. Then at a certain point you realize A) you’re not going to be the Great Writer you wanted to be, and B) the determination of that is completely beyond your power to control, so best that you just write as best you can and as honestly as you can, and everything else just sort of becomes gravy.”
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Apr 2018 Permalink
Shortly after winning the Nobel Peace Prize, King sat for what would be the longest interview he ever gave to the press.
“A strong man must be militant as well as moderate. He must be a realist as well as an idealist. If I am to merit the trust invested in me by some of my race, I must be both of these things.”
“One cannot be in my position, looked to by some for guidance, without being constantly reminded of the awesomeness of its responsibility. I live with one deep concern: Am I making the right decisions?”
Martin Luther King Jr., Alex Haley Playboy Jan 1965 1h5min Permalink
Inside one of America’s most corrupt police squads.
Jessica Lussenhop BBC Apr 2018 35min Permalink
And I fear what it has become.
David Joy New York Times Magazine Apr 2018 20min Permalink
Daniel Mallory Ortberg on coming out as trans.
Heather Havrilesky The Cut Mar 2018 15min Permalink
A love letter and the jacked up emotions of reality TV.
Lucas Mann The Paris Review Apr 2018 15min Permalink
In his work with the White House, is Mohammed bin Salman driving out extremism, or merely seizing power for himself?
Dexter Filkins New Yorker Mar 2018 45min Permalink
On photographer Garry Winogrand and the unedited archive of more than half a million exposures he left behind.
Jacob Mikanowski The Awl Jun 2013 15min Permalink
On the floating villages of the Mekong River and the ethnic Vietnamese who have populated them for generations and are still considered “foreigners” by their Cambodian neighbors.
Ben Mauk New York Times Magazine Mar 2018 30min Permalink
The teenager told police all about his gang, MS-13. In return, he was slated for deportation and marked for death.
Hannah Dreier ProPublica Apr 2018 30min Permalink
The case against decluttering.
Mireille Silcoff Literary Review of Canada Mar 2018 10min Permalink