Seven Days of Heroin
Sixty journalists cover an ordinary week in an epidemic.
Sixty journalists cover an ordinary week in an epidemic.
Cincinnati Enquirer Sep 2017 30min Permalink
They were the first black boys to integrate the South’s elite prep schools. They drove themselves to excel in an unfamiliar environment. But at what cost?
Mosi Secret New York Times Magazine Sep 2017 30min Permalink
A case in Baltimore — in which two men were convicted of the same murder and cleared by DNA 20 years later — shows how far prosecutors will go to preserve a conviction.
Megan Rose ProPublica Sep 2017 30min Permalink
Christian Longo brutally murdered his familyand then posed in Mexico as a New York Times reporter named Michael Finkel. From death row, Longo asked the real Finkel to attend his execution.
Michael Finkel Esquire Dec 2009 1h Permalink
Could Kim Jong Un and Donald Trump goad each other into a devastating confrontation?
Evan Osnos New Yorker Sep 2017 55min Permalink
She turned to Google for help getting sober. Then she had to escape a nightmare.
Cat Ferguson The Verge Sep 2017 35min Permalink
The quest to control hurricanes.
Rivka Galchen Harper's Oct 2009 30min Permalink
Southern crimes and nightmares; an excerpt from Ward's latest novel.
Jesmyn Ward Buzzfeed Aug 2017 Permalink
“The foundation of Donald Trump’s presidency is the negation of Barack Obama’s legacy.”
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic Sep 2017 30min Permalink
Bill Brookman has traveled to some of the world’s most dangerous places to disarm militias and negotiate with gangs. Bill Brookman is a clown.
Jessica Hatcher-Moore The Atavist Magazine Sep 2017 50min Permalink
What one Alabama town’s attempt to secede from its school district tells us about the fragile progress of racial integration in America.
Nikole Hannah-Jones New York Times Magazine Sep 2017 40min Permalink
Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah is an essayist. Her latest piece is “A Most American Terrorist: The Making of Dylann Roof.”
“I remember feeling like ‘you’re playing chess with evil, and you gotta win.’ Because this is the most terrible thing I’d ever seen. And I was so mad. I still get so mad. Words aren’t enough. I’m angry about it. I can’t do anything to Dylann Roof, physically, so this is what I could do.”
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Sep 2017 Permalink
A profile of the baker behind Milk Bar, the place that gave us crack pie, cereal milk, and bagel bombs.
Mary HK Choi Eater Sep 2017 20min Permalink
A tragic suicide from 1989 may have been something even more sinister.
The mysterious case of the boy in the barn.
Fellow deputies and the questions not asked.
How suspicions passed from woman to woman.
A quest to ask K.W. the hard questions, at last.
Who abused Josh Klaver – and who know about it?
A closed case, a search for peace.
Julia Prodis Sulek The Mercury News Sep 2017 Permalink
A new-society vision in Jackson, Mississippi.
Katie Gilbert Oxford American Sep 2017 50min Permalink
The slacker auteur reinvents himself.
Abraham Riesman Vulture Sep 2017 15min Permalink
A teenager in a dreary suburb of Paris live-streams her own suicide—and acquires a morbid kind of digital celebrity.
Rana Dasgupta The Guardian Aug 2017 20min Permalink
The consumer giant looks to social responsibility in the age of big business.
Thomas Buckley Bloomberg Business Aug 2017 15min Permalink
Bobby Hadid joined the NYPD after 9/11, to protect his new country. But when he questioned the force’s tactics, his life began to erode.
Rachel Aviv New Yorker Sep 2017 35min Permalink
The story of the “Barefoot Bandit,” a teenage fugitive on the run.
“I was the wealthiest, most powerful person Brown knew, and I had sixty-seven dollars in my banking account.”
Kiese Laymon Buzzfeed Aug 2017 Permalink
A collection of picks on arsonists, fire fighters and more.
For 18 months, Coatesville, Penn., was besieged with an improbable number of arsons. But who started the fires—and why?
Matthew Teague Philadelphia Magazine Jan 2010 20min
The arson case that led Texas to execute an almost certainly innocent man.
David Grann New Yorker Sep 2009 1h5min
Living through a Colorado fire that burned down 169 homes.
Robert Sanchez 5280 Sep 2011 30min
Ten churches are torched in East Texas. The culprits? Two Baptist teens having a crisis of faith.
Pamela Colloff Texas Monthly May 2011
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
It started with a candle in an abandoned warehouse. It ended with temperatures above 3,000 degrees and the men of the Worcester Fire Department in a fight for their lives.
Sean Flynn Esquire Jul 2001 1h
The Granite Mountain Hotshots, an outfit of professional wildland firefighters, had 20 members. On June 30, 19 of them lost their lives.
Kyle Dickman Outside Sep 2013 35min
A rookie firefighter confronts his first test.
N.R. Kleinfeld New York Times Jun 2014 25min
Jul 2001 – Jun 2014 Permalink
By choice, for less than $2 an hour, the female inmate firefighters of California work their bodies to the breaking point. Sometimes they even risk their lives.
Jaime Lowe New York Times Magazine Aug 2017 20min Permalink
A 2016 investigation into why Houston wasn’t ready for the next big hurricane.
Neena Satija, Kiah Collier, Al Shaw, Jeff Larson ProPublica, Texas Tribune Mar 2016 40min Permalink
A profile of the documentary filmmaker.
Ian Parker New Yorker Sep 2017 30min Permalink