The Rise of the $10 Million Disc Golf Celebrity
How much can athletes really make in niche sports? A whole lot more than you might think.
How much can athletes really make in niche sports? A whole lot more than you might think.
David Gardner The Ringer Jun 2021 25min Permalink
The petty, vindictive, backbiting, lawsuit-laden, career-ruining infighting at everyone’s favorite local NY1 news station.
Caitlin Moscatello New York Jun 2021 35min Permalink
“It’s basically bankruptcy for profit.”
Naveena Sadasivam Grist Jun 2021 10min Permalink
We’ve barely explored the darkest realm of the ocean. With rare-metal mining on the rise, we’re already destroying it.
Elizabeth Kolbert New Yorker Jun 2021 15min Permalink
Gulfport police killed a Black veteran. His family waits for answers.
Margaret Baker, Isabelle Taft Sun Herald Jun 2021 20min Permalink
1619, 1776, and the politics of the past
Matthew Karp Harper's Jun 2021 25min Permalink
Residents have lived near more than 100 massive petroleum storage tanks for decades, never really knowing if they’re breathing in dangerous chemicals. Now they’re fighting to find out.
Kathryn Miles Boston Globe Magazine Jun 2021 15min Permalink
My dad was a riddle to me, even more so after he disappeared. For a long time, who he was—and by extension who I was—seemed to be a puzzle I would never solve.
Nicholas Casey New York Times Magazine Jun 2021 35min Permalink
The rush to find a conspiracy around the COVID-19 pandemic’s origins is driven by narrative, not evidence.
Justin Ling Foreign Policy Jun 2021 20min Permalink
In 1970 South Central, pigeon fancying was serious business. But there’s a deeper story behind why these Black Angelenos are entering their fifth and sixth decade raising Birmingham Roller pigeons.
Shanna B. Tiayon Pipe Wrench Jun 2021 30min Permalink
Last year’s first-ever fatal shark attack jolted Mainers into acknowledging that great whites regularly swim off the state’s shores—and that there’s plenty about them we don’t know.
Kathryn Miles Down East Jun 2021 15min Permalink
Dan Rather is a journalist, author, and the former anchor of CBS Evening News.
”I knew that being named to succeed Walter Cronkite would put me in a position of inhaling—every day—a kind of NASA-grade rocket fuel for the ego. And that could be dangerous…. In the end, when the red light goes on, it's just you. You're by yourself.… And the longer you're in that role, the more difficult it is to stay true to yourself and to remember who you are and who you want to be.”
Thanks to Mailchimp for sponsoring this week's episode.
Jun 2021 Permalink
When things go horribly wrong during a stay, the company’s secretive safety team jumps in to soothe guests and hosts, help families—and prevent PR disasters.
Olivia Carville Bloomberg Businessweek Jun 2021 20min Permalink
Searching for home at a cowboy poetry convention in Elko, Nevada.
Carvell Wallace MTV News Mar 2017 25min Permalink
How a 15-month-old was found dead in the sea in Norway.
Anders Fjellberg, Henriette Johannesen Aftenbladet Jun 2021 20min Permalink
Prison Doctor David Ross was powerless in the role of bedside bystander as he tended to ten hunger strikers who died during the 1981 Maze Prison hunger strike. Five years later, he killed himself.
Simon Carswell The Irish Times Jun 2021 Permalink
At 15, he shot and killed his parents, two classmates at his school, and wounded 25 others. He’s been used as the reason to lock kids up for life ever since.
Jessica Schulberg HuffPost Jun 2021 Permalink
The city is beating the pandemic. Can it also recover from decades of division and neglect?
Jonathan Mahler New York Times Magazine Jun 2021 45min Permalink
How China’s biggest audio platform funded one man’s frat boy dreams.
Ashley Carman The Verge Jun 2021 25min Permalink
You walk around carrying this invisible weight — this pressure on your whole spirit—because the worlds you’re trying to fit into are rejecting you in so many ways. And you think it’s your fault.
Taylor Townsend Players' Tribune Jun 2021 25min Permalink
Thirty years ago, the biggest celebrities on earth opened a chain restaurant. For a few years, it was the hottest ticket in town. Then it went bankrupt. Twice.
Kate Storey Esquire Jun 2021 25min Permalink
From medical health privacy laws to a maze of siloed information systems, the true impact of COVID-19 on American Indian and Alaska Natives is impossible to calculate.
Sarah Green escaped her mother’s cult 22 years ago. She still thinks about those she left behind.
Harrison Hill The Cut Jun 2021 30min Permalink
In just a few years, he’s become one of the most fearsome media figures in the country—mobilizing his vast Twitter following to promote his famous friends and punish foes. Can his own past survive similar scrutiny?
Peter Kiefer Los Angeles Magazine Jun 2021 25min Permalink
Katherine Eban is an investigative journalist and contributor to Vanity Fair. Her latest article is ”The Lab-Leak Theory: Inside the Fight to Uncover COVID-19’s Origins.”
”You can't make a correction unless you know why something happened. So imagine—if this is a lab leak—the earth shattering consequences for virology. For the science community, for how research is done, for how research is regulated. Or if it is a zoonotic origin, we have to know how our human incursion into wild spaces could be unleashing these viruses. Because COVID-19 is one thing, but we're going to be looking at COVID-25 and COVID-34. We have to know what caused this.”
Thanks to Mailchimp for sponsoring this week's episode.
Jun 2021 Permalink