The Perks Are Great. Just Don’t Ask Us What We Do.
50onRed is a fixture in Philly’s startup world. But there’s something the leadership didn’t talk about, even with some of its own staff. They make malware.
50onRed is a fixture in Philly’s startup world. But there’s something the leadership didn’t talk about, even with some of its own staff. They make malware.
Juliana Reyes Backchannel May 2016 10min Permalink
The diner manager told the cook not to prepare the poached eggs a woman had ordered. The next day, the cook killed the manager. They had worked together amicably for 20 years.
Lisa Davis SF Weekly Oct 1997 20min Permalink
An examination of teenage lust and hierarchies on a trip to Disneyland.
Lori Sambol Brody Little Fiction Jun 2016 15min Permalink
Mini-Currys and the future of basketball.
Danny Chau The Ringer Jun 2016 15min Permalink
The fight to extradite El Chapo.
Dwyer Murphy Guernica Jun 2016 20min Permalink
Leah Finnegan, a former New York Times and Gawker editor, is the managing news editor at Genius.
“After the Condé Nast article, Nick Denton decided Gawker needed to be 20% nicer, and I took a buyout because I was not 20% nicer.”
Thanks to MailChimp, Audible, Squarespace, and Trunk Club for sponsoring this week's episode.
Photo: Andrew Oppeneer
Jun 2016 Permalink
“It’s more than soup.”
Andrea Nguyen Lucky Peach May 2016 10min Permalink
The aftermath of a childhood filled with subway flashers, teachers who asked for hugs, and boys who joked about your breasts.
Jessica Valenti The Guardian May 2016 15min Permalink
In eight minutes, Miashah Moses took out the trash and a blaze consumed the apartment where her nieces were watching television. What happened, and who’s to blame?
Carol Mersch The Big Roundtable May 2016 50min Permalink
There’s nothing simple about this candidacy—or candidate.
Rebecca Traister New York May 2016 35min Permalink
What it’s like to have thousands of fans who don’t recognize you.
Brandon R. Reynolds Los Angeles May 2016 20min Permalink
Behind a Muslim community in northern Wyoming — and 20 percent of all Muslims in the state — lies one very enterprising man.
Kathryn Schulz New Yorker May 2016 30min Permalink
More and more Americans are trying to survive on less than $2 a day.
Christopher Jencks New York Review of Books May 2016 15min Permalink
Collections Sponsored
It takes a special kind of person to become a nurse. You have to be willing to work long shifts. To care for people when nobody else will. To be there for families at their darkest hour. And to do it all while being taken for granted.
Nursing is hard, thankless work. And yet nearly four million people in America do it every day. Here are a few of their stories, a collection presented in partnership with Johnson & Johnson.
Sitcoms satirize them, the media ignore them, doctors won’t listen to them, and now hospitals are laying them off, sacrificing them to corporate medicine — yet nurses’ contributions to patients and families is beyond price.
Suzanne Gordon The Atlantic Feb 1997 15min
In the bayou south of New Orleans, a program called the Nurse-Family Partnership tries to reverse the life chances for babies born into extreme poverty. Sometimes it actually succeeds.
Katherine Boo New Yorker Feb 2006 20min
Tereza Sedgwick trains to become a nurse aid, one of the fastest-growing — and most challenging — jobs in America.
Eli Saslow Washington Post May 2014
An interview with Theresa Brown, author of The Shift: One Nurse, Twelve hours, Four Patients’ Lives.
Terry Gross Fresh Air Sep 2015 20min
A former nurse who left to become an English professor remembers the stress of her first career.
Janet Lyon Los Angeles Review of Books Mar 2015 10min
A palliative care nurse on the inspiring lessons she learned from her dying patients.
Bronnie Ware Inspiration and Chai Nov 2009
Thanks to Johnson & Johnson for supporting Longform. To learn more about their commitment to nurses around the world, visit discovernursing.com.
Feb 1997 – Sep 2015 Permalink
A short history of leisure.
Witold Rybczynski The Atlantic Aug 1991 20min Permalink
Thirteen years ago, Chris Velten disappeared while retracing the travels of explorer Mungo Park in Africa. He hadn’t been heard from at all — until he sent a friend request.
Jamie Maddison Love Nature May 2016 20min Permalink
Reince Priebus was about to go down as the most successful GOP chairman in party history. Then Trump happened.
Joshua Green Businessweek May 2016 20min Permalink
In Brooklyn’s Brownsville, being in a gang can mean as little as being born on a specific block. Ackquille Pollard spent his final free days as a viral rap sensation, before being jailed as the leader of a sect of Crips.
Scott Eden GQ May 2016 25min Permalink
“She scrolls, she waits. For that little notification box to appear.”
Jessica Contrera Washington Post May 2016 Permalink
Life problems imagined as fantasies.
Charles Yu New Yorker May 2016 25min Permalink
What went wrong when a group of canyoneers was caught by a flash flood in Zion National Park.
Grayson Schaffer Outside May 2016 20min Permalink
Libertarian, futurist, billionaire: a profile of Peter Thiel.
George Packer New Yorker Nov 2011 35min Permalink
Pablo Torre is a senior writer at ESPN the Magazine and frequently appears on Around the Horn, PTI, and other ESPN shows.
“Most of my friends are not sports fans. My parents aren't. Brother and sister — no. So I just want to make things that they want to read. That's the big litmus test for me in deciding if a story is worth investing my time into: Is somebody who doesn’t give a shit about sports gonna be interested in this?”
Thanks to MailChimp, Johnson & Johnson, FreshBooks, and Squarespace for sponsoring this week's episode.
May 2016 Permalink
On trigger warnings, allyship, intersectionality, and what’s really eating Oberlin.
Nathan Heller New Yorker May 2016 35min Permalink
Keiko, Nessie, and giant squids: a collection of picks on animals from the deep.
An obsessive marine biologist gambles his savings, family, and sanity on a quest to be the first to capture a live giant squid.
David Grann New Yorker May 2004 45min
A trip to a lobster festival leads to an examination of the culinary and ethical dimensions of cooking a live, possibly sentient, creature.
David Foster Wallace Gourmet Aug 2004 30min
Stalking the disappearing bluefin tuna, the world’s most valuable wild animal.
John Seabrook Harper's Jun 1994 30min
A trip to Scotland and an investigation of enduring belief.
Tom Bissell VQR Dec 1998 35min
On the mysterious and moderately intelligent giant Pacific octopus.
Sy Montgomery Orion Oct 2011 20min
A profile of a celebrity whale.
Susan Orlean New Yorker Sep 2002 25min
In 1992, a Chinese freighter tipped violently in a storm dumping a load of plastic floating infant 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 1h35min
In February 2010, a killer whale named Tilikum dragged his SeaWorld trainer into the pool and drowned her. It was the third time the orca had been involved in a death during his 27 years in captivity. This is his story.
Tim Zimmermann Outside Jul 2010 35min
The story of the loneliest whale in the world.
Leslie Jamison The Atavist Magazine Aug 2014 50min
Jun 1994 – Aug 2014 Permalink