The Chef of the Future Makes Only One Dish
Can a $100,000 robot that makes a delicious crab bisque replace a real chef?
Can a $100,000 robot that makes a delicious crab bisque replace a real chef?
David Marchese New York Jan 2017 15min Permalink
Michael Chabon GQ Sep 2016 20min
Becca Rothfeld The Hedgehog Review Sep 2016 20min
Andrew Sullivan New York May 2016 30min
Sam Anderson New York Times Magazine Aug 2016 30min
Zandria F. Robinson Oxford American Nov 2016 30min
May–Nov 2016 Permalink
Rebecca Traister New York May 2016 35min
Mac McClelland Audobon Society May 2016 30min
Jennifer Percy New York Times Magazine Aug 2016 25min
Wil S. Hylton New York Times Magazine Jul 2016 30min
George Saunders New Yorker Jun 2016 40min
Bronwen Dickey Popular Mechanics Aug 2016 20min
Pamela Colloff Texas Monthly Mar 2016 50min
Mar–Aug 2016 Permalink
Jeffrey Goldberg The Atlantic Apr 2016 1h20min
Shannon Pettypiece, David Voreacos Businessweek Aug 2016 15min
Heidi Blake, John Templon Buzzfeed, BBC Jan 2016 40min
Harald Doornbos, Jenan Moussa Foreign Policy Aug 2016 15min
Shane Bauer Mother Jones Jul 2016 2h20min
Gabriel Sherman New York Jul 2016
Ben Taub New Yorker Apr 2016 35min
Jan–Aug 2016 Permalink
As the snow tires rumbled on the highway beneath us, a neo-Nazi "troll army" was several days into attacking the Jewish people of Whitefish on Spencer's behalf, based on a belief that some Whitefish Jews had recently tried to run Spencer and his mother out of town. Details about what actually happened between the town and the Spencers were in short supply, and, among the neo-Nazi troll brigades, anti-Semitism was in abundance.
Eli Sanders The Stranger Jan 2017 25min Permalink
In the midst of devastation, a couple seeks answers from a mysterious figure.
Emily Coon Necessary Fiction Jan 2017 10min Permalink
A Washington tribe expelled 306 of its members. They’re not going quietly.
The screaming ambassador to the sidewalks of New York City.
E. Alex Jung New York Jan 2017 Permalink
Jeff Sharlet writes about politics and religion for Esquire, GQ, New York Times Magazine, and more.
“I like the stories with difficult people. I like the stories about people who are dismissed as monsters. I hate the term ‘monster.’ ‘Monster’ is a safe term for us, right? Trump’s a monster. Great, we don’t need to wrestle with, ‘Uh oh, he’s not a monster. He’s in this human family with us.’ I’m not normalizing him. I’m acknowledging the fact. Now, what’s wrong with us? If Trump is human, what’s wrong with you?”
Thanks to MailChimp, Squarespace, and Blue Apron for sponsoring this week's episode.
Jan 2017 Permalink
He was a Georgetown-educated Native-American lawyer who’d left behind a career in D.C. to advocate on behalf of poor and minority populations in rural North Carolina. At the time of his 1988 murder, he was investigating ties between police and the local cocaine trade.
The author spent nearly 30 years looking into what really happened.
Nicole Lucas Haimes MEL Magazine Jan 2017 25min Permalink
The definitive biographical portrait of a whistleblower.
Denver Nicks This Land Sep 2010 20min Permalink
We devote vast resources to intensive, one-off procedures, while starving the kind of steady, intimate care that often helps people more.
Atul Gawande New Yorker Jan 2017 30min Permalink
When Raymond Stansel was busted in 1974, he was one of Florida’s biggest pot smugglers. Facing trial and years in prison, he jumped bail, changed his name, holed up in a remote Australian outpost and began his second life as an environmental hero.
Rich Schapiro Outside Jan 2017 20min Permalink
Wrestler Jimmy ‘Superfly’ Snuka was one of the WWF’s first high-flyers in the 1980s. In 1983, his girlfriend, Nancy Argentino, died in a hotel room with a head injury. The case remains unsolved 30 years later—and after this article was published it was reopened.
The case against Snuka was dismissed earlier this month after a judge ruled him incompetent to stand trial. Snuka died on January 16th.
Adam Clark, Kevin Amerman The Morning Call Jun 2013 20min Permalink
Music writer Mark Fisher (who died this week) on the decline of Michael Jackson.
Mark Fisher k-punk Jun 2009 10min Permalink
Pirates could be found in nearly every Atlantic port city. But only particular locations became known as “pirate nests,” a pejorative term used by royalists and customs officials. Many of the most notorious pirates began their careers in these ports. Others established even deeper ties by settling in these cities and becoming respected members of the local elite. Instead of the snarling drunken fiends that parade through children’s books, these pirates spent their booty on pigs and chickens, hoping to live a more placid and financially secure life on land.
Mark G. Hanna Humanities Jan 2017 10min Permalink
It was a genius piece of technology. But that didn’t mean it was a business.
Jessi Hempel Backchannel Jan 2017 15min Permalink
Programming luck involves a lot of rule-bending and mind-manipulation.
Simon Parkin Nautilus Jan 2017 10min Permalink
Did our ancient cousins get a bad rap?
Jon Mooallem New York Times Magazine Jan 2017 35min Permalink
The story of Martin McNally, who hijacked a plane in 1972. Among other crimes.
Danny Wicentowski Riverfront Times Jan 2017 Permalink
In April 2016, eight family members were slain in their homes in Ohio. Nine months later, the killer or killers are still on the loose, and the town has all but forgotten the crimes.
Kathleen Hale Hazlitt Jan 2017 25min Permalink
"There is a real danger here that this maneuver can harshly backfire, to the great benefit of Trump and to the great detriment of those who want to oppose him."
Glenn Greenwald The Intercept Jan 2017 10min Permalink
No one understands our new era of reality-TV populism better than the man who turned “The Real Housewives” into an empire.
Taffy Brodeser-Akner New York Times Magazine Jan 2017 20min Permalink
A cabbie and a passenger discuss Chinese economics and generational gaps.
Raheel Siddiqui was a young Muslim who dreamed of becoming a Marine. At twenty, he started basic training at Parris Island, where barking drill sergeants transform callow recruits into elite killing machines. Less than two weeks after he arrived, Siddiqui suffered a mysterious and fatal fall. The Marine Corps says he committed suicide, but some think more sinister forces led to his death.
Alex French Esquire Jan 2017 20min Permalink