Will You Ever Change?
Can face-to-face meetings between a victim and an abuser—a form of restorative justice—help a society overwhelmed with bad behavior?
Can face-to-face meetings between a victim and an abuser—a form of restorative justice—help a society overwhelmed with bad behavior?
Amelia Schonbek The Cut Jul 2021 30min Permalink
On the early NBA days of the league’s newest champion.
Mirin Fader The Ringer Jul 2021 30min Permalink
Robert McKee is an author and screenwriting lecturer. His new book is Character: The Art of Role and Cast Design for Page, Stage, and Screen.
”When I'm in conversation with others, I'm always aware—or sensitive, at least—to what they're really thinking and feeling. And writers must have that. They can't possibly create excellent nonfiction or fiction if they're not aware of what is going on inside of other people, really, even subconsciously, while they go about saying whatever they do consciously in the world. Because if you just recorded the surface, if you were just paying attention to the surface, you'd be missing the whole show.”
Thanks to Mailchimp for sponsoring this week's episode.
Jul 2021 Permalink
How a baby-faced CEO turned a Farmville clone into a massive Ponzi scheme.
Paul Benjamin Osterlund Rest of World Jul 2021 15min Permalink
Daniel Hale exposed the machinery of America’s clandestine warfare. Why did no one seem to care?
Kerry Howley New York Jul 2021 30min Permalink
One man’s obsession with his miniature Christmas village.
Richard Kelly Kemick The Walrus Nov 2015 25min Permalink
A Canadian man won’t touch money, except to destroy it.
Tori Marian Capital Daily Jul 2021 40min Permalink
After a reckoning over policing in America, 30 recruits enroll at the academy.
“I want to be the change.”
“This could happen to you.”
“What did you think this job was?”
“Just like that: Bang! You’re dead.”
“Love the aggression.”
“Get him to the grass!”
“You change when you become a cop.”
“One family! One fight!”
After the academy, new officers meet real-world challenges.
Lane DeGregory Tampa Bay Times Jul 2021 1h20min Permalink
Wih Alexey Navalny in prison, one of his closest aides is carrying on the lonely work of the opposition.
Masha Gessen New Yorker Jul 2021 25min Permalink
The writer investigates her brother’s death, their complicated relationship, and the disturbing mysteries he left behind.
Prachi Gupta Jezebel Sep 2019 30min Permalink
Why did so many Americans receive strange packages they didn’t think they’d ordered?
Chris Heath The Atlantic Jul 2021 30min Permalink
Novelist Brad Thor thought he had found his doomsday-prepping soulmate, but then the End Times went bad.
Sam Biddle The Intercept Jul 2021 50min Permalink
A nation’s uncertain future.
John Jeremiah Sullivan New York Times Magazine Sep 2012 40min Permalink
Those who are incarcerated are suing for their right to gender confirmation surgery—if deemed necessary. Meet the psychiatrist who almost always says it’s not.
Aviva Stahl Wired Jul 2021 25min Permalink
A celebrated Uyghur writer gives a first-person account of the genocide in Xinjiang.
Tahir Hamut Izgil The Atlantic Jul 2021 50min Permalink
In 2003, the destruction of one particular statue in Baghdad made worldwide headlines and came to be a symbol of western victory in Iraq. But there was so much more to it—or rather, so much less.
Alex von Tunzelmann Guardian Jul 2021 20min Permalink
How Amazon turned a generation against labor.
Daniel Brook Harper's Jul 2021 25min Permalink
...Prince hoped to hire Ukraine’s combat veterans into a private military company. Prince also wanted a big piece of Ukraine’s military-industrial complex, including factories that make engines for fighter jets and helicopters."
Simon Shuster Time Jul 2021 Permalink
When I was 27, I quit my job to travel and ski-bum, and by that point I had managed to save a small sum that could float me for a year. I called it my fuck-you money, because if I was ever in a situation I didn’t like—stuck in a job or with a boyfriend I wanted to leave—I could say fuck you and go. Living in ski towns is how I learned the dirtbag lifestyle, and to my surprise I took to it naturally and with enthusiasm.
Gloria Liu Outside Jul 2021 Permalink
On the chef Sean Sherman.
Steve Marsh Meal Magazine Jun 2021 Permalink
On losing your Beloved in 2020.
Jesmyn Ward Vanity Fair Sep 2020 10min Permalink
“The dirty secret of American higher education is that student-loan interest rates are almost irrelevant. It’s not the cost of the loan that’s the problem, it’s the principal—the appallingly high tuition costs that have been soaring at two to three times the rate of inflation, an irrational upward trajectory eerily reminiscent of skyrocketing housing prices in the years before 2008.”
Matt Taibbi Rolling Stone Aug 2013 20min Permalink
Why now is the time to rethink COVID safety protocols for children—and everyone else.
David Wallace-Wells New York Jul 2021 40min Permalink
How the Baltimore Orioles first baseman overcame stage 3 colon cancer.
Kevin Van Valkenburg ESPN Jul 2021 30min Permalink
The Texas Department of Transportation intends to spend $25 billion widening highways to fix traffic in Texas cities. What if we tore them down instead?
Megan Kimble The Texas Observer Jul 2021 20min Permalink