It's Not Spying If They're Always Watching
Uncovering Baltimore’s secret aerial surveillance program.
Uncovering Baltimore’s secret aerial surveillance program.
Monte Reel Businessweek Aug 2016 20min Permalink
The implosion of the daily fantasy industry is a bro-classic tale of hubris, recklessness, political naïveté and a kill-or-be-killed culture.
Don Van Natta Jr. ESPN the Magazine Aug 2016 25min Permalink
"Los Angeles is a weird, complicated town for him. It's where all the record labels are, for one thing. And Chancelor Bennett, as he was born, is unsigned. Won't sign. It's maybe the most interesting, improbable music-industry story going right now—a young, obviously gifted rapper, universally hailed as the heir to Kanye and leader of a new generation of Internet-savvy kids who think of Jay Z as a failed tech entrepreneur, now on his fourth year of refusing to sign with a label."
Zach Baron GQ Aug 2016 15min Permalink
Rachel Monroe is a freelance writer based in Texas.
“I will totally go emotionally deep with people. If I can find a subject who is into that then it will probably be a good story. Whether that person is a victim of a crime, or a committer of a crime, or a woman who spends a lot of time on the internet looking for hoaxes, or whatever it may be—I guess I just think people are interesting. Particularly when those people have gone through some sort of extreme situation.”
Thanks to MailChimp, Club W, and Igloo for sponsoring this week's episode.
Aug 2016 Permalink
Brazilian businessman Zero Freitas has amassed the world’s largest collection of records, the majority of which have never been digitized.
Dominik Bartmanski The Vinyl Factory Aug 2016 15min Permalink
Only 16 counties regularly impose death sentences, and they have three things in common: overaggressive prosecutors, defense lawyers who aren’t up to the task and cultural legacies of racial bias. Florida’s Fourth Judicial Circuit is among them.
Inside the secretive $3.4 billion Urban Outfitters empire as it reaches a crucial crossroads.
Jason Fagone Philadelphia Magazine Aug 2016 20min Permalink
He was just another coked-up agent (repping the likes of Steven Soderbergh) when he disappeared into Iraq, shooting heaps of footage he would attempt to package into a pro-war documentary. And that was just the beginning.
Evan Wright Vanity Fair Mar 2007 1h35min Permalink
Anti-aging medicine has been an epicenter of quackery for more than a century, but an MIT scientist is waging his reputation on a new pill.
Benjamin Wallace New York Aug 2016 20min Permalink
In the throes of an epidemic, researchers investigate how to inoculate against the disease.
Siddhartha Mukherjee New Yorker Aug 2016 20min Permalink
The author on Lolita, his work habits, and what he expected from his literary afterlife.
Alvin Toffler Playboy Jan 1964 30min Permalink
On a Saturday evening in February, a 45-year-old Uber driver and father of two named Jason Dalton got into his car, left his home near Kalamazoo, Michigan, and began shooting people. But the strangest, most unfathomable thing about the night that Dalton killed and killed again is what he did in between.
Chris Heath GQ Aug 2016 40min Permalink
How two high school wrestling teammates ended up on opposites side of the law during Miami’s cocaine wars.
Brett Forrest ESPN the Magazine Aug 2016 25min Permalink
The investigators tasked with finding jihadists embedded within Europe.
Mitch Prothero Buzzfeed Aug 2016 25min Permalink
The rise and fall of Lou Pearlman; blimp impresario, packager of boy bands like Backstreet Boys and *NSYNC, molester, fraudster, and ultimately fugitive from justice.
Bryan Burrough Vanity Fair Nov 2007 45min Permalink
The unintended consequences of cost cutting corporate decisions on display at a Tulsa Wal-Mart Supercenter.
Shannon Pettypiece, David Voreacos Bloomberg Businessweek Aug 2016 15min Permalink
A week with the Libertarian presidential candidate, who hasn’t ruled out a win in November.
Ben Birnbaum Politico Aug 2016 35min Permalink
The greatest stand-up of his generation is also his own worst enemy.
Geoff Edgers Washington Post Aug 2016 15min Permalink
On London’s new squad of “super-recognizers.”
Patrick Radden Keefe New Yorker Aug 2016 30min Permalink
McKay Coppins is a senior political writer for Buzzfeed News and the author of The Wilderness: Deep Inside the Republican Party's Combative, Contentious, Chaotic Quest to Take Back the White House.
“I am part of the problem. Not in the sense that it’s my fault Trump ran, but in the sense that I’m one of many who for his entire life have mocked him and ridiculed him. He’s a billionaire—I don’t feel any moral guilt about it. But if being I’m honest with myself that same part of me can also, when not checked, be projected onto vast swathes of people. It’s easy to have a lazy classism about the type of people who would vote for Donald Trump.”
Thanks to MailChimp and Blue Apron for sponsoring this episode.
Aug 2016 Permalink
The story of the meeting that led to the creation of ISIS, as explained by someone still on the inside.
Harald Doornbos, Jenan Moussa Foreign Policy Aug 2016 15min Permalink
The most prolific duo in history, the Texas woman who robbed banks dressed a pudgy cowboy, and the story that inspired Dog Day Afternon — a collection of our favorite stories about bank robberies.
Ray Bowman and Billy Kirkpatrick, who began boosting together as teenagers, were arrested only twice during their prolific partnership. The first time was for stealing 38 records from a K-Mart in 1974. The second arrest came in 1997. In between, Bowman and Kirkpatrick robbed 27 banks, including the single biggest haul in United States history: $4,461,681 from the Seafirst Bank in suburban Tacoma.
Alex Kotlowitz New Yorker Jul 2002 20min
Peggy Jo Tallas, a soft-spoken bachelorette, spent much of her adult life doing two things: taking care of her ailing mother and robbing bank after bank dressed as a pudgy, bearded cowboy.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Nov 2005 35min
Anthony Curcio was the pride of his small town in Washington state. A former football star, he had married his high-school sweetheart and was making good money flipping houses. Then the real estate market crashed, and Curcio turned his obsessive attention to planning an ingenious heist involving Craigslist, an inner tube, and $400,000.
David Kushner GQ Oct 2010
The robbers had a helicopter, explosives, and inside information on a $150 million cash repository. But the police were on to them—sort of.
Evan Ratliff Atavist Magazine Jan 2011 45min
A young man named John Wojtowicz, desperate to provide for his children and finance his lover’s sex-change surgery, attempts to rob a Chase branch in Brooklyn. The bank is surrounded almost immediately and a 14-hour standoff ensues. The story inspired Sidney Lumet’s Dog Day Afternoon.
P. F. Kluge, Thomas Moore LIFE Sep 1972
In 2003, a man named Brian Wells robbed a bank in Erie, Pa., with a bomb around his neck. Shortly thereafter, with Wells surrounded by cops and claiming he’d been forced to commit the crime, the bomb detonated, leaving authorities to piece together who had put it there. Eight years later, they’re still not entirely sure who was behind this bizarre crime, or even the true motive.
Rich Schapiro Wired Dec 2010 20min
How a 24-year-old nurse discovered Vegas, high-stakes gambling, and serial bank robbery.
Jeff Maysh BBC Apr 2015 25min
Sep 1972 – Apr 2015 Permalink
How the “biggest grow op willing to publish its address” could make Canada an international pioneer in the legalization and commercialization of weed.
Brett Popplewell The Walrus Aug 2016 30min Permalink
On a 650-mile trek, two adventurers faced danger and hardship—and saw how development could spoil an American icon.
Kevin Fedarko National Geographic Aug 2016 20min Permalink
Our archive of articles from Gawker, which will cease operations next week.