Fiction Pick of the Week: "Twentieth"
Memories and violence resurface at a high school reunion.
Memories and violence resurface at a high school reunion.
Lindsay Hunter Buzzfeed Nov 2016 Permalink
“We’re the fucking establishment now. You and I. We’re not…” the young red hat, encircled by his squad, pantomimed the old establishment with a swaying, limp-wristed dance. “We won. Fuck them.”
Mattathias Schwartz The Intercept Nov 2016 Permalink
On the road with Billy Bob Thornton and his band The Boxmasters. Twenty years after Sling Blade all he wants to do is direct but “but none of those Hollywood assclowns will give him the keys anymore.”
Taffy Brodesser-Akner GQ Nov 2016 25min Permalink
Predicting the first 100 days.
Evan Osnos New Yorker Sep 2016 20min Permalink
“We take it that all young writers overestimate their work. It’s impossible not to—I mean if you recognized what shit you were writing, you wouldn’t write it. You have to believe in your stuff—every day has to be the new day on which the new poem may be it.”
John Berryman, Peter A. Stitt The Paris Review Dec 1972 40min Permalink
A journey through Venezuela, once the richest country in South America, but now collapsing under the weight of the world’s highest rates of inflation and violent crime.
William Finnegan New Yorker Nov 2016 40min Permalink
For three days, thousands of uninsured Americans converge on the Wise County Fairgrounds for the largest pop-up clinic in the country.
Amy Woolard VQR Nov 2016 30min Permalink
The complicated relationship between Gawker founder Nick Denton and his arch-nemesis investorr Peter Thiel.
David Margolick Vanity Fair Nov 2016 20min Permalink
Undercover as a student at Phoenix University, the largest for-profit higher education company in the country and the second-largest enroller of students (behind the SUNY system), where only 12 percent of first-time students graduate and the ad budget accounts for 30 percent of overall spending.
Christopher R. Beha Harper's Oct 2011 Permalink
How do we restore consensus in an age so divorced from fact?
Maria Bustillos The Awl Nov 2016 10min Permalink
In 1992, a Chinese freighter tipped violently in a storm dumping a load of plastic floatee toys—7,200 red beavers, 7,200 green frogs, 7,200 blue turtles, and 7,200 yellow ducks—to the open sea. This is their story.
Donovan Hohn Harper's Jan 2007 1h15min Permalink
Excerpted from Last Girl Before Freeway.
Leslie Bennetts Vanity Fair Nov 2016 15min Permalink
A former reality star's strength in the face of a Presidential candidate's comments.
Marcy Dermansky Vol. 1 Brooklyn Oct 2016 Permalink
An Ironman consists of a 2.4-mile swim, then a 112-mile bike ride and then a marathon. The Quintuple Anvil Triathlon is five Ironmans in a row.
Randal C. Archibold New York Times Nov 2016 Permalink
He stole over $1 million in chips – then checked himself into casino’s hotel to live like a king.
Keith Romer Rolling Stone Nov 2016 20min Permalink
A long stroll through a Staten Island cemetery leads to the story of the 19th-century free-black oystermen who settled Sandy Ground.
Joseph Mitchell New Yorker Sep 1956 45min Permalink
How an obsessive New Age hustler brought the sound of the ocean to millions of home stereos.
Mike Powell Pitchfork Nov 2016 20min Permalink
Wesley Morris is a critic at large for The New York Times, a staff writer for The New York Times Magazine, and the co-host of Still Processing. His latest article is "Last Taboo: Why Pop Culture Just Can’t Deal With Black Male Sexuality."
“You learn a lot of things about your sexuality at an early age. You know, I learned that your penis is a problem for white people, that you can’t be too openly sexual in general because that could get you in trouble because someone could misconstrue what you’re doing, and, in my case, I also knew I was gay. So I had to deal with, ‘Ok so my dick is a problem in general, and I’m not even interested in putting my penis where it’s supposed to go. This is going to be bad.’”
Thanks to Audible, Casper, Squarespace, and MailChimp for sponsoring this week's episode.
Nov 2016 Permalink
"His friends remembered when Richard became famous. It was the year the hippies came to San Francisco. Richard had published one novel, A Confederate General from Big Sur, but it had sold miserably 743 copies and his publisher, Grove Press, had dropped its option on Trout Fishing in America."
Lawrence Wright Rolling Stone Apr 1985 30min Permalink
The director of The Exorcist visits the Vatican’s 91-year-old in-house exorcist in Rome.
William Friedkin Vanity Fair Oct 2016 20min Permalink
How Atlanta-born Davido, the son of a wealthy Nigerian businessman, hopes to break the international market with his brand of Nigerian pop.
Rawiya Kameir The Fader Feb 2016 Permalink
“They have effectively claimed the progressive causes of the left – from gay rights to women’s equality and protecting Jews from antisemitism – as their own, by depicting Muslim immigrants as the primary threat to all three groups. As fear of Islam has spread, with their encouragement, they have presented themselves as the only true defenders of western identity and western liberties – the last bulwark protecting a besieged Judeo-Christian civilisation from the barbarians at the gates.”
Sasha Polakow-Suransky The Guardian Nov 2016 30min Permalink
The Southern Baptist church, which has its origins in a split over slavery, at an election-year crossroads.
Kelefa Sanneh New Yorker Oct 2016 30min Permalink
A brief history of churchyards, cemeteries, and the ghosts that haunt them.
Colin Dickey Literary Hub Oct 2016 20min Permalink
In rural North Dakota, a small county and an insular religious sect are caught in a stand-off over a decaying piece of America’s atomic history.