Fiction Pick of the Week: "Good Looking Out"
The psychology, interactions, and sadness of a fringe NBA player.
The psychology, interactions, and sadness of a fringe NBA player.
Richard Chiem The Fanzine Jan 2018 15min Permalink
“Your dreams always have to be big. And mine were huge.”
Chris Heath GQ Jan 2018 45min Permalink
The story of one journalist’s giant salary and why his company could no longer pay it.
Silvia Killingsworth The Awl Jan 2018 15min Permalink
Seth Wickersham is a senior writer for ESPN. His latest article is "For Kraft, Brady and Belichick, Is This the Beginning of the End?"
“You want to write about something real. I hate stories that are, the tension of the story is, talk radio perception versus the reality that I see when I’m with somebody. I can’t stand those stories because to me, you’re just writing about the ether versus a real person, and that’s not a real tension to me. The inner tensions are the best tensions. You can’t get to them with everybody, but you try.”
Thanks to MailChimp and Mubi for sponsoring this week's episode.
Jan 2018 Permalink
How infighting splintered a group of players once unified in the movement started by Colin Kaepernick.
Howard Bryant ESPN Jan 2018 15min Permalink
Flying straight from the future.
Ian Frazier New Yorker Jan 2018 25min Permalink
What happens when you get evicted.
Joseph Williams Curbed Jan 2018 15min Permalink
Two men. Five days. Five boroughs. Five 140.6-mile triathlons.
Bill Bradley Deadspin Jan 2018 15min Permalink
A 13-year-old girl was declared brain-dead, but her family disagreed. Her case challenges the very nature of existence.
Rachel Aviv The New Yorker Jan 2018 35min Permalink
A 5-part series on how drug lords make billions smuggling gold to the U.S. for your jewelry and phones.
Jay Weaver, Nicholas Nehamas, Jim Wyss, Kyra Gurney Miami Herald Jan 2018 55min Permalink
The outsized legacy of the emo rapper who always said he would die young.
John Jeremiah Sullivan GQ Jan 2018 20min Permalink
A day after William Faulkner’s funeral and a few weeks before James Meredith became the first African-American student to register at the University of Mississipi, the author arrived in Oxford to cover the Dixie National Baton Twirling Institute.
Terry Southern Esquire Feb 1963 15min Permalink
A 4-year-old girl was the sole survivor of a U.S. drone strike in Afghanistan. Then she disappeared.
May Jeong The Intercept Jan 2018 40min Permalink
Ray Bowman and Billy Kirkpatrick, who began boosting together as teenagers, were arrested only twice during their prolific partnership. The first time was for stealing 38 records from a K-Mart in 1974. The second arrest came in 1997. In between, Bowman and Kirkpatrick robbed 27 banks, including the single biggest haul in United States history: $4,461,681 from the Seafirst Bank in suburban Tacoma.
Alex Kotlowitz New Yorker Jul 2002 20min Permalink
Franklin Chang Díaz immigrated to the U.S. at 18, became an astronaut, tied the record for most spaceflights, and now might hold the key to deep space travel.
Katy Vine Texas Monthly Jan 2018 20min Permalink
An investigation into widespread denial, inaction, and information suppression of sexual assault and violence allegations at Michigan State.
Paula Lavigne, Nicole Noren ESPN Jan 2018 25min Permalink
Fishing gear can pose a deadly threat to whales—and to those who try to save them.
Sasha Chapman Hakai Jan 2018 20min Permalink
On RuPaul and Drag Race.
Jenna Wortham New York Times Magazine Jan 2018 25min Permalink
Inside the world of dark tourism, where for just $2,500 you too could be responsible for a geopolitical calamity.
Kent Russell Huffington Post Highline Jan 2018 50min Permalink
Two sisters; a grotesque religious ritual.
Julie C. Day Split Lip Magazine Jan 2018 15min Permalink
Humanity has 30 years to find out.
Charles C. Mann The Atlantic Jan 2018 25min Permalink
It was burned and sunk to hide the crime. Now its probable remains have been located.
Ben Raines al.com Jan 2018 20min Permalink
Nathan Thornburgh is the co-founder and co-publisher of Roads & Kingdoms.
"You have to remain committed to the kind of irrational act of producing journalism for an uncaring world. You have to want to do that so bad, that you will never not be doing that. There’s so many ways to die in this business."
Thanks to MailChimp, Mubi, and Rise and Grind for sponsoring this week's episode.
Jan 2018 Permalink
The same “Stephen Hawking voice” is used by little girls, old men, and people of every racial and ethnic background. Inside the quest to give people a voice of their own.
Jordan Kisner The Guardian Jan 2018 Permalink
“There’s always room for another story. There’s always room for another tune.”
Choire Sicha Interview Sep 2015 15min Permalink