The Fallout From Sportswriting's Filthiest Fuck-Up
Twenty years later, looking back at an infamous paragraph.
Twenty years later, looking back at an infamous paragraph.
Jeff Pearlman Deadspin Aug 2017 20min Permalink
Last November, A.J. Delgado played a vital role in the presidential campaign. Then everything fell apart.
McKay Coppins The Atlantic Aug 2017 10min Permalink
“If a life can have a crystallizing moment, for Jim Graham that 1993 meeting was it, discovering that his father might have been a Catholic priest, rather than John Graham, the distant man who raised him with scarcely a kind or comforting word.”
Michael Rezendes Boston Globe Aug 2017 20min Permalink
Jay Caspian Kang is a writer at large at The New York Times Magazine and a correspondent for Vice News Tonight.
“I make a pretty provocative argument about how Asian American identity doesn’t really exist—how it’s basically just an academic idea, and it’s not lived within the lives of anybody who’s Asian. Like you grow up, you’re Korean, you’re a minority. You don’t have any sort of kinship with, like, Indian kids. You know? And there’s no cultural sharedness where you’re just like, ‘oh yeah…Asia!’”
Thanks to MailChimp, "Mussolini’s Arctic Airship," and Blinkist and for sponsoring this week's episode.
Aug 2017 Permalink
It’s one of our most in-demand natural resources, and it’s running out.
David Owen New Yorker May 2017 20min Permalink
How dangerous is the media company that Steve Bannon called “the platform for the alt-right”?
Wil S. Hylton New York Times Magazine Aug 2017 35min Permalink
The underbelly of Vox Media’s success.
Laura Wagner Deadspin Aug 2017 30min Permalink
The next big thing in the death business.
Hayley Campbell Wired (UK) Aug 2017 20min Permalink
Life on an isolated island utopia.
Emily Eakin VQR Jul 2017 20min Permalink
In 1970, he was plucked from Saigon to attend West Point. He got his degree and went home to fight, but instead spent six years in a reeducation camp. Then, somehow, he ended up teaching high school in D.C.
Chip Scanlan Washington Post Magazine Jul 1992 30min Permalink
What the 2016 Summer Games left behind in Rio.
Wayne Drehs, Mariana Lajolo ESPN Aug 2017 15min Permalink
A series of conversations with the WikiLeaks founder about his role in the 2016 presidential election.
Raffi Khatchadourian New Yorker Aug 2017 1h30min Permalink
Classics from Martin Luther King, Jr., Lindy West, James Baldwin and more.
On the moral responsibility to break unjust laws.
Martin Luther King Jr. Liberation May 1963 55min
An author pleas to amend his entry.
Philip Roth New Yorker Sep 2012 10min
On the wonders of being an only child.
John Hodgman Psychology Today Jan 2007 10min
On rape jokes.
Lindy West Jezebel May 2013 10min
Davis was imprisoned on charges of first degree murder.
Max Soffar, who has liver cancer, has been on death row since 1981. He’s almost certainly innocent.
Michael Hall Texas Monthly Oct 2014 20min
On the imprisonment of Alfred Dreyfus.
Émile Zola L'Aurore Jan 1898 20min
Jan 1898 – Oct 2014 Permalink
“The true impact of activism may not be felt for a generation. That alone is reason to fight.”
Rebecca Solnit The Guardian Mar 2017 15min Permalink
A critique of Facebook.
John Lanchester London Review of Books Aug 2017 35min Permalink
A profile of the writer.
Ruth Franklin New York Times Magazine Aug 2017 20min Permalink
On June 4, 1989, the bodies of Jo, Michelle, and Christe were found floating in Tampa Bay. This is the story of the murders, their aftermath, and the handful of people who kept faith amid the unthinkable.
Thomas French The St. Petersburg Times Oct 1997 3h30min Permalink
On coming to see your home country the way the rest of the world does.
Suzy Hansen The Guardian Aug 2017 20min Permalink
The women of the alt-right.
Seyward Darby Harper's Aug 2017 25min Permalink
Two decades later, a traffic stop on a country road is still teaching police officers about deadly force – and the cost of hesitation. Part 1 of “The Trigger and the Choice,” a 3-part series.
Thomas Lake CNN Aug 2017 20min Permalink
A professor conducts a lifelong racial experiment.
Jocelyn Nicole Johnson Guernica Aug 2017 20min Permalink
A woo-hoo heard around the world.
Darryn King Vanity Fair Aug 2017 10min Permalink
“These documents show how Palantir applies Silicon Valley’s playbook to domestic law enforcement. New users are welcomed with discounted hardware and federal grants, sharing their own data in return for access to others’. When enough jurisdictions join Palantir’s interconnected web of police departments, government agencies, and databases, the resulting data trove resembles a pay-to-access social network—a Facebook of crime that’s both invisible and largely unaccountable to the citizens whose behavior it tracks.”
Mark Harris Wired Aug 2017 20min Permalink
David Gessner is the author of ten books. His latest is Ultimate Glory: Frisbee, Obsession, and My Wild Youth.
“The ambition got in my way at first. Because I wanted my stuff to be great, and it froze me up. But later on it was really helpful. I’m startled by the way people don’t, you know, admit [they care] … it seems unlikely people wouldn’t want to be immortal.”
Thanks to Casper, Squarespace, and MailChimp for sponsoring this week's episode.
Aug 2017 Permalink
The lives of six people who survived the atomic bomb.
John Hersey New Yorker Aug 1946 2h Permalink