‘If I’m a storyteller it’s because I listen’
A visit with John Berger, author of Ways of Seeing, which “changed the way at least two generations responded to art,” just before his death.
A visit with John Berger, author of Ways of Seeing, which “changed the way at least two generations responded to art,” just before his death.
Kate Kellaway The Guardian Oct 2016 15min Permalink
A palliative-care doctor and triple amputee has built a new kind of hospice in San Francisco.
Jon Mooallem New York Times Magazine Jan 2017 30min Permalink
Looking for answers in India after a seeker disappears and his guide commits suicide.
Ariel Sophia Bardi Roads and Kingdoms Jan 2017 10min Permalink
He left China at 10 and would never see his mother again. He lived in extreme poverty once he arrived in America. He found his calling in art, became the creative force behind one of Disney’s iconic films, but didn’t get recognition for his brilliance until late in his life, when in addition to painting and illustrating he began to make fantastical kites.
Margalit Fox New York Times Dec 2016 10min Permalink
A dispatch from a tiny-house convention:
Here the stories pivoted around Turning Tiny. Before Tiny, there was an unhappy marriage, unpaid bills, stifling office work, a home of 2,500 square feet or more; after Tiny came freedom, new love, debt relief, self-employment, and, of course, a handmade nest.
Mark Sundeen Outside Dec 2016 20min Permalink
Hannah Arendt attends the trial of Adolf Eichmann.
Hannah Arendt New Yorker Feb 1963 1h15min Permalink
After thousands of birds vanished overnight from a Florida refuge, conspiracy theories bloomed.
Brian Kevin Audobon Dec 2016 15min Permalink
“We have a lot in common. We go to the same shrink.”
Carrie Fisher, Madonna Rolling Stone Jun 1991 40min Permalink
She went to jail 35 years ago after driving the getaway car in an infamous robbery and defiantly refusing to admit the act was wrong. Her sentence was 75 years. But something changed in prison — Judy Clark went from radical to model inmate. This week her sentence was commuted.
Tom Robbins New York Times Magazine Jan 2012 25min Permalink
On the story we tell ourselves about artificial intelligence.
Maciej Ceglowski Idle Words Oct 2016 30min Permalink
“You know, you’re a nasty guy,” he said. “You’re really a nasty guy.”
David A. Fahrenthold Washington Post Dec 2016 20min Permalink
A 48-hour reconstruction of the Breitscheidplatz Attack and the political response.
Der Spiegel Dec 2016 25min Permalink
A search for meaning through academics, cultural studies, and terrorism.
Camille Bordas The New Yorker Dec 2016 30min Permalink
When Elizabeth Abel returned to the Bay Area home she had rented to a fellow professor on SabbaticalHomes.com, he refused to leave or pay the back rent he owed. She moved in across the street and enlisted her famous academic colleagues to help her get back the house she had raised her children in.
Ian Gordon Mother Jones Dec 2016 10min Permalink
In 1991, Edwin Debrow shot and killed a cab driver on the east side of San Antonio. He was twelve years old. Twenty-five years later, he is still in prison. Is that justice? And is there room for mercy?
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Dec 2016 30min Permalink
Why we must bring trains back.
“The world before the railways appeared so very different from what came afterward and from what we know today because the railways did more than just facilitate travel and thereby change the way the world was seen and depicted. They transformed the very landscape itself.”
“It is simply not possible to envision any conceivable modern, urban-based economy shorn of its subways, its tramways, its light rail and suburban networks, its rail connections, and its intercity links.”
Tony Judt New York Review of Books Dec 2010 – Jan 2011 25min Permalink
Stephen Reed was “mayor for life” in Harrisburg, PA. Now he’s going to trial on 114 counts of bribery, theft, and fraud.
David Gambacorta The Baffler Dec 2016 20min Permalink
“Oh, I think I do overshare, and I sometime marvel that I do it. But it's sort of - in a way, it's my way of trying to understand myself. I don't know. I get it out of my head. It creates community when you talk about private things and you can find other people that have the same things. Otherwise, I don't know - I felt very lonely with some of the issues that I had or history that I had. And when I shared about it, I found that others had it, too.”
Terry Gross NPR Dec 2016 25min Permalink
Revisiting the 2006 masterpiece.
Abraham Riesman New York Dec 2016 20min Permalink
Nina Simone, Guantánamo’s youngest prisoner, and a murderous college student — a collection of articles based on private journals.
The secret diary of Nina Simone.
Joe Hagan The Believer Aug 2010 25min
The diary of a Scranton, PA National Guardsmen tasked with guarding the highest profile prisoner in U.S. history: a surprisingly amiable Saddam Hussein.
Lisa DePaulo GQ Jun 2005 25min
Is an ancient diary the key to discovering the origins of baseball?
Bryan Curtis Grantland Sep 2013
The youngest prisoner held at Guantánamo on his seven years in detention.
Mohammed el Gorani, Jérôme Tubiana London Review of Books Dec 2011 20min
Diary of a veteran gadfly.
George Gurley New York Observer Mar 2013 35min
On the last day of their junior year at Harvard, one roommate kills the other, then hangs herself.
Melanie Thernstrom New Yorker Jun 1996
Jun 1996 – Sep 2013 Permalink
The Mosul Dam is failing. A breach would cause a masssive wave that could kill as many as a million and a half people.
Dexter Filkins New Yorker Dec 2016 25min Permalink
Gwen Wright was raised in dozens of foster homes. A new housing experiment could spare her son the same fate.
Jessica Contrera Washington Post Dec 2016 10min Permalink
The Harvard Law School legend has defended everyone from O.J. Simpson to Claus von Bülow. Now he’s facing his toughest case yet: his own.
“A body is a body, but personal effects are a life.”
Lauren Larson GQ Dec 2016 Permalink
A ragtag band of pirate-Jihadists grab Americans from a diving resort in the Phillipines and lead them on an odyssey through the jungles of an archipelago with the competing interests of the Phillipines’ Navy and Army, the U.S. Military, and the C.I.A. thwarting their rescue.
Mark Bowden The Atlantic Mar 2007 45min Permalink