How to Murder Your Life
" I was twenty-six years old and an associate beauty editor at Lucky, one of the top fashion magazines in America, and that’s all that most people knew about me. But beneath the surface, I was full of secrets..."
" I was twenty-six years old and an associate beauty editor at Lucky, one of the top fashion magazines in America, and that’s all that most people knew about me. But beneath the surface, I was full of secrets..."
Cat Marnell New York Jan 2017 15min Permalink
It started with a vague tip-off: a tug boat approaching the UK could be transporting cocaine. What followed was a race against the clock to find £500m in narcotics
Greg Williams Wired (UK) Dec 2016 25min Permalink
One refugee’s escape from Syria.
Nicholas Schmidle New Yorker Oct 2015 25min Permalink
Late in a career marked by both triumph and tragedy, the author has written a new book exploring the unsettling case of Emmett Till’s father — and the isolation of black men in America.
Thomas Chatterton Williams New York Times Magazine Jan 2017 20min Permalink
Franklin Leonard’s anonymous survey has launched careers, recognized four of the past eight Best Picture winners, and pushed movie studios to think beyond sequels and action flicks.
Alex Wagner The Atlantic Jan 2017 20min Permalink
The American students hopped across the border for a night of partying in Matamoros. One didn’t return and was found later in a shack with 14 other corpses.
Guy Garcia Rolling Stone Jun 1989 15min Permalink
Twenty-two years in, E-40 has extended his reign over the Bay Area rap landscape by returning to “making music the way he did back in the late ’80s: completely independently, selling his raps more or less directly to his fans.”
Willy Staley The Fader Jan 2017 20min Permalink
How a brewery became more famous for what’s on its bottle than what’s in it.
Amanda Whiting Washingtonian Jan 2017 15min Permalink
Capitalism, self-identity, and fraudulent projections.
Lucie Britsch Vol. 1 Brooklyn Jan 2017 10min Permalink
How populism took a continent.
Sasha Polakow-Suransky The Guardian Nov 2016 30min Permalink
Astronomy, history, and spirituality collide at the summit of Hawaii’s Mauna Kea.
Trevor Quirk Virginia Quarterly Review Jan 2017 30min Permalink
Alexey Kovalev is a Moscow-based journalist and the author of the recent article, “A Message to My Doomed Colleagues in the American Media."
“It’s really disheartening to see how little it takes for people to start believing in something that directly contradicts the empirical facts that they are directly confronting. The Russian TV channel tells you that the pill is red, but the pill in front of you is blue. It completely alters the perception of reality. You don’t know what’s real anymore.”
Thanks to MailChimp and Penn State World Campus.
Jan 2017 Permalink
The rise and fall of the Seven-Seven - stationed in the war zone of 1980’s Crown Heights, Brooklyn - and how an idealistic young recruit became part of cash-snatching, drug-reselling, renegade clique of cops
Michael Daly New York Dec 1986 30min Permalink
"Some in Nice knew the man as one of the many playboy predators the city seems to beget—black hair slicked back off a shining brow, dress shoes tapering to varnished points, a dark shirt unbuttoned low to reveal the pectorals into which he had obsessively, unblushingly, invested himself. He was 31 but preferred older women, both for their erotic openness and, it seems clear, for their money. Those who knew him best knew him to be a cold and brutal man, detached, amused by little save rough sex and gore."
Scott Sayare GQ Jan 2017 20min Permalink
Dirty Projectors’ Dave Longstreth and the genesis of a break-up album.
Mike Powell Pitchfork Jan 2017 15min Permalink
The Vice President’s days in Indiana.
Stephen Rodrick Rolling Stone Jan 2017 25min Permalink
A dispatch from the Philippine capital, where “no one will be safe until many, many more have died.”
James Fenton New York Review of Books Jan 2017 15min Permalink
Abdullahi Yusuf was 18 and ready to dedicate his life to ISIS when federal agents pulled him aside in the Minneapolis airport. He will never see the inside of a jail cell.
Brendan I. Koerner Wired Jan 2017 20min Permalink
“A love letter to my new country.”
Andrew Sullivan New York Jan 2017 30min Permalink
Some of the wealthiest people in America are getting ready for the crackup of civilization.
Evan Osnos New Yorker Jan 2017 30min Permalink
On Alaska’s North Slope, village schools aim to blend book learning with the Arctic reality.
Lauren Markham Orion Jan 2017 25min Permalink
An investigation into 62 incidents caught on video shows how cops are incentivized to lie — and why they get away with it.
Albert Samaha Buzzfeed Jan 2017 40min Permalink
A profile of the Atlanta star and creator, who also released a hit album in 2016 and is set to star in the next Star Wars.
Allison Samuels Wired Jan 2017 10min Permalink
When Randy Lanier sped to Rookie of the Year honors at the 1986 Indianapolis 500, few knew his racing credentials, let alone his status as one of the nation’s most prolific drug runners, smuggling in tons of marijuana when he wasn’t on the track. Now, after 27 years in prison, Lanier is looking to the road ahead.
L. Jon Wertheim Sports Illustrated Jan 2017 20min Permalink
An essay on wielding the scythe.
Paul Kingsnorth Orion Jan 2012 35min Permalink