Mr. Ten Percent
A profile of Chuck Blazer, “the man who built — and bilked — American soccer.”
A profile of Chuck Blazer, “the man who built — and bilked — American soccer.”
Ken Bensinger Buzzfeed Jun 2014 30min Permalink
An ode to mayonnaise.
Rick Bragg Gourmet Nov 2010 10min Permalink
On the business of an idea.
Eliza Brooke Racked Jul 2017 20min Permalink
Mark Bowden is a journalist and the author of 13 books, including Black Hawk Down and his latest, Hue 1968: A Turning Point of the American War in Vietnam.
“My goal is never to condemn someone that I’m writing about. It’s always to understand them. And that, to me, is far more interesting than passing judgment on them. I want you to read about Che Thi Mung, an 18-year-old village girl, who was selling hats on corners in Hue in the daytime and going home and sharpening spikes to go into booby traps to try and kill American soldiers and ARVN soldiers in the evening. I want to understand why she would do that, why she would be so motivated to do that. And I think I did.”
Thanks to MailChimp, LeVar Burton Reads, Babbel, and HelloFresh for sponsoring this week's episode.
Jul 2017 Permalink
The members of Girls Travel Baseball come from all over the country, compete against boys, and aim to prove they can play in the major leagues.
Jessica Luther Bleacher Report Jul 2017 15min Permalink
An essay on power.
Rebecca Solnit Harper's Jul 2017 10min Permalink
Ten years in the life of a young woman from the Bronx.
Adrian Nicole LeBlanc New Yorker Apr 2000 40min Permalink
“‘Make America Great Again’ means ‘Make America White Again.’ So now you have this other explosion of people who want to feel above something, better than something. And who is that? That’s me.”
Mario Kaiser, Sarah Ladipo Manyika Granta Jun 2017 20min Permalink
An investigation leads to the deepest reaches of the internet.
Nigel Jaquiss Willamette Week Jul 2017 15min Permalink
Gang-bang buffet tables, deeply earnest 'Letters to the Editor,' ghost-writing Kierkegaard references into model bios in Barely Legal, and how a half-decade of reviewing porn eroded the thin line between the author's alter egos and self.
Evan Wright LA Weekly Apr 2000 40min Permalink
One possible (if depressing) conclusion to take from this is that strategy is just an illusory abstraction that we have invented to give meaning to that which has none. We use it as a retrospective framing device to explain a complex series of events (of our own making but mostly of external provenance) that we do not understand. So maybe strategic theory is really just an gussied up form of conspiracy theory. We need to impose order on the world and believe that someone, somewhere, knows that the hell is going on.
Adam Elkus Ribbonfarm Feb 2017 25min Permalink
Satoshi Nakamoto was the mysterious creator of Bitcoin. Facing bankruptcy and jail, Craig Wright fled Australia knowing that he would soon be outed as Satoshi by multiple publications. Backed by a business group that hoped to sell his patents, Wright was due to show the proof that he possessed the original keys for Bitcoin, but did he?
Andrew O'Hagan London Review of Books Jun 2016 2h20min Permalink
A profile of Moonlight’s Mahershala Ali.
Carvell Wallace GQ Jun 2017 Permalink
“The most decorated athlete in all of Kazakhstan is a five-year-old Mongolian horse named Lazer.”
Will Boast VQR Jul 2017 20min Permalink
The author on her reverence for water.
Joan Didion PBS Jan 1977 10min Permalink
Science predicts only the predictable, ignoring most of our chaotic universe.
Noson S. Yanofsky Nautilus Jun 2017 20min Permalink
“The murder of Anna Politkovskaya was at once unbelievable and utterly expected.”
Michael Specter New Yorker Jan 2007 40min Permalink
Four American rock climbers are kidnapped by guerillas in Kyrgyzstan.
Greg Child Outside Nov 2000 30min Permalink
With The Apprentice, Trump rose to a level of popularity with minorities that the GOP could only dream of. Then he torched it all to prepare for a hard-right run at the presidency.
Joshua Green Businessweek Jun 2017 20min Permalink
In 1993, his rookie season, more than 1,700 boys were named after Shaquille O’Neal. Now they’ve grown up.
Alex Prewitt Sports Illustrated Jul 2017 20min Permalink
What’s a writer to do when the audacity dwindles?
Taffy Brodesser-Akner New York Jul 2017 15min Permalink
A soldier attempts to deliver a death notice.
Jono Naito Pithead Chapel Jul 2017 10min Permalink
How the death of a Muslim recruit revealed a culture of brutality.
Janet Reitman New York Times Magazine Jul 2017 40min Permalink
A profile of Lil Yachty.
Rembert Browne The Fader Jul 2017 20min Permalink
Following a Cadbury factory to Poland.
James Meek London Review of Books Apr 2017 55min Permalink