‘How’s Amanda?’
A story of truth, lies, and an American addiction.
A story of truth, lies, and an American addiction.
Eli Saslow Washington Post Jul 2016 Permalink
The private grief of Samaria Rice, twenty months after her son Tamir was killed.
“Don’t forget. You see all these protests. That’s good. You see this whole movement. That’s good. You see all these different people with all these different agendas. You see celebrities making speeches. But underneath it all there’s somebody like me with a dead son.”
Jordan Ritter Conn The Ringer Jul 2016 15min Permalink
“If I had to pick one sentence I’ve heard more than any other in the last six years of conversation about economics, it would be ‘Why aren’t people more angry?’ The Brexit vote showed that plenty of them are. But perhaps it expressed that other feeling, the one of bewilderment, just as much. ‘Take back control’ is a cynical but extremely astute pitch to an electorate in that state of mind.”
John Lanchester London Review of Books Jul 2016 20min Permalink
A conversation about race, Hollywood, and what it’s like to be able to conjure weed out of thin air.
E. Alex Jung New York Jul 2016 20min Permalink
A profile of comedian Leslie Jones, who made Saturday Night Live after 25 years as a road comic.
Andrew Marantz New Yorker Jan 2016 30min Permalink
On Timothy Treadwell, who lived and died with the bears of Alaska.
Ned Zeman Vanity Fair May 2004 40min Permalink
The lip-syncing app Musical.ly claims that it has signed up 50% of American teens.
Elspeth Reeve Elle Jul 2016 Permalink
How the French philosopher earned the means to publish freely by winning the lottery—repeatedly.
Roger Pearson Lapham's Quarterly Jul 2016 15min Permalink
Sharon Lopatka had found many identities on Usenet: VHS interior decoration pitch-woman, author of love spells, and pornographic film scammer. Her final posts concerned wanting to find someone to torture her to death.
Jeremy Lybarger The Kernel Jul 2016 15min Permalink
A look inside Donald Trump’s portfolio of exclusive real estate properties.
Caity Weaver GQ Jul 2016 25min Permalink
A terminally ill journalist deals with a variety of setbacks.
Joy Williams New Yorker Jul 2016 15min Permalink
Supreme, founded by a secretive self-made millionaire in 1994, is the most influential streetwear brand in the world.
Kyle Chayka Racked Jul 2016 Permalink
David Remnick is the editor of The New Yorker.
“I think it’s important — not just for me, but for the readers — that this thing exists at the highest possible level in 2016, in 2017, and on. That there’s a continuity to it. I know, because I’m not entirely stupid, that these institutions, no matter how good they are, all institutions are innately fragile. Innately fragile.”
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Jul 2016 Permalink
Life as an Olympic-level archer.
Reeves Wiedeman Harper's Jul 2016 25min Permalink
The Darién Gap is a lawless wilderness on the border of Colombia and Panama teeming with everything from deadly snakes to antigovernment guerrillas. For many migrants, crossing it is their only way to get to America.
Jason Motlagh Outside Jul 2016 40min Permalink
It’s legal to buy poppy seeds in America and it’s legal to plant them—unless you’re familiar with the simple process of turning them into opium, that is. Then having poppies in your garden is a felony.
Michael Pollan Harper's Apr 1997 1h10min Permalink
Jonathan Kos-Read’s long, strange trip to movie stardom.
Mitch Moxley New York Times Magazine Jul 2016 10min Permalink
There’s a growing gap between the gun lobby’s leadership and its rank-and-file.
Sarah Ellison Vanity Fair Jul 2016 30min Permalink
The results can be deadly.
Jenna Russell Boston Globe Jul 2016 35min Permalink
Writing The Art of the Deal made Tony Schwartz rich. He still regrets it.
“I genuinely believe that if Trump wins and gets the nuclear codes there is an excellent possibility it will lead to the end of civilization.”
Jane Mayer New Yorker Jul 2016 25min Permalink
Donald Trump has spent decades seeking revenge on the many people who have taunted him. One of them was this reporter, who two years ago wrote that Trump would never run.
McKay Coppins Buzzfeed Jul 2016 30min Permalink
“Life has a soundtrack. And certain music is a soundtrack to a certain type of identity or feeling. 50 Cent, the Game, and those kinds of guys—they made us feel like our lives were worth nothing, basically.”
Simone White BOMB Jul 2016 20min Permalink
In the late 1990s, a serial killer found his victims in Yosemite National Park.
Joshua Hammer Outside Nov 1999 20min Permalink
A murder case in Los Angeles, cold since the late ’80s, heats up thanks to breakthroughs in forensic science and leads detectives to “one of the unlikeliest murder suspects in the city’s history.”
Matthew McGough The Atlantic Jun 2011 35min Permalink
For those who suffer from environmental illnesses, the town of Snowflake is an escape from a modern world full of allergens: fragrances, gluten, wifi.
Kathleen Hale, Mae Ryan The Guardian Jul 2016 15min Permalink