In Conversation: David Letterman
“Do you think you’re talking to a normal person here?”
“Do you think you’re talking to a normal person here?”
David Marchese Vulture Mar 2017 35min Permalink
On the eve of the Civil War, a nightmare at sea turned into one of the greatest rescues in maritime history. More than a century later, a rookie treasure hunter went looking for the lost ship—and found a different kind of ruin.
David Wolman The Atavist Magazine Mar 2017 35min Permalink
Best Article Arts History Food
Mince pie was once more American than the apple variety. It was also blamed for “bad health, murderous dreams, the downfall of Prohibition, and the decline of the white race,” among other things. Then it disappeared.
Cliff Doerksen Chicago Reader Dec 2009 15min Permalink
Investigating a brutal double murder in a Kentucky military town.
Nick Tabor Oxford American Mar 2017 50min Permalink
The strange saga of Gordon Todd Skinner, a psychedelic aficionado and government informant who is now serving time in prison for kidnapping and torturing his wife’s teenage lover.
Michael Mason, Chris Sandel, Lee Roy Chapman This Land Jul 2013 35min Permalink
Wags Lending and the brave new world of of financing in “niches where we’re dealing with emotional borrowers.”
Patrick Clark Bloomberg Business Mar 2017 15min Permalink
Stephen Bannon and Jeff Sessions, the new attorney general, have long shared a vision for remaking America. Now the nation’s top law-enforcement agency can serve as a tool for enacting it.
Emily Bazelon New York Times Magazine Feb 2017 25min Permalink
Why didn’t gay rights cure gay loneliness?
Michael Hobbes Huffington Post Mar 2017 25min Permalink
An oral history of SHU.
Nathaniel Penn GQ Feb 2017 20min Permalink
A near future with racial voting restrictions and questionnaires.
Kashana Cauley Slate Feb 2017 15min Permalink
After oil was discovered on their Oklahoma reservation, the Osage Nation became the richest people per capita in the world. Then they began to be murdered off mysteriously. In 1924 the nascent FBI sent a team of undercover agents, including a Native American, to the Osage reservation.
David Grann New Yorker Mar 2017 15min Permalink
Computer scientist tycoon Robert Mercer is at the heart of a shockingly well-funded propaganda network.
Carole Cadwalladr The Guardian Feb 2017 20min Permalink
Matthew Cole is an investigative reporter at The Intercept, where he recently published “The Crimes of Seal Team 6.”
“I’ve gotten very polite and very impolite versions of ‘go fuck yourself.’ I used to have a little sheet of paper where I wrote down those responses just as the vernacular that was given to me: ‘You’re a shitty reporter, and I don’t talk to shitty reporters.’ You know, I’ve had some very polite ones, [but] I’ve had people threaten me with their dogs. Some of it is absolutely cold.”
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Mar 2017 Permalink
The reclusive Swedish songwriting guru gives his first interview in 20 years.
Max Martin Dagens Industri Feb 2016 25min Permalink
“These, I now know, are the details of how my mother died..:”
Leah Carroll New York Feb 2017 10min Permalink
Bill Ackman’s hedge fund planned to make a fortune while doing good by exposing Herbalife as a scheme that preyed upon and lied to the poor. How one of the highest profile stock shorts in market history went awry.
Sheelah Kolhatkar New Yorker Feb 2017 35min Permalink
The rise and fall and rise again of a crooked televangelist.
Mark Oppenheimer GQ Feb 2017 20min Permalink
On the decades-long quest for a zero-calorie sweetener.
Beth Kowitt Fortune Feb 2017 15min Permalink
The American medical experiment in Guatemala that left hundreds with STDs.
Sushma Subramanian Slate Feb 2017 25min Permalink
A profile of Beatty on the heels of Bonnie and Clyde.
A discovery in a Lithuanian forest brings a tale of survival back to life.
Matthew Shaer Smithsonian Magazine Mar 2017 20min Permalink
An interview with the duo behind Moonlight.
Terry Gross Fresh Air Oct 2016 30min Permalink
How Carl Foreman, while tangling with the House Un-American Activities Committee, turned a throwaway Western into an allegory for the Hollywood blacklist.
Glenn Frankel Vanity Fair Feb 2017 25min Permalink
Ahmed Naji’s novel was not overtly political, but the “protagonist performs cunnilingus, rolls hash joints and gulps from bottles of vodka” which led a lawyer to press charges against him for causing a fluctuation in his blood pressure when the novel was excerpted in a Cairo newspaper, even though it had been approved by censors.
Jonathan Guyer Rolling Stone Feb 2017 20min Permalink
An immigrant on what happens when neighbors turn on each other:
"Every Bosnian I know had a friend, or even a family member, who flipped and betrayed the life they had shared until, in the early 1990s, the war started. My best high-school friend turned into a rabid Serbian nationalist and left his longtime girlfriend in Sarajevo so he could take part in its siege. My favorite literature professor became one of the main ideologues of Serbian fascism. Just last week, I talked to a Muslim man from Foča whose mother was repeatedly raped by his Serb friend, and whose brother was killed by their neighbor. Yugoslavia and Bosnia had provided a sense of societal stability for a couple of generations, which is why the betrayal was so shocking to so many of us."
Aleksandar Hemon Literary Hub Feb 2017 15min Permalink