What Happens When the Surveillance State Becomes an Affordable Gadget?
Your local police department probably has a $400,00 device that listens in on cellphones. Soon your neighbor will be able to buy the same thing for $1,500.
Your local police department probably has a $400,00 device that listens in on cellphones. Soon your neighbor will be able to buy the same thing for $1,500.
Robert Kolker Businessweek Mar 2016 15min Permalink
Two years ago, the fitness guru abruptly disappeared from public life. His friends worry that he’s being held against his will inside his Hollywood Hills mansion, or something even worse.
Andy Martino New York Daily News Mar 2016 20min Permalink
If you don’t get sick, was it really a vacation?
Ian Frazier Outside Aug 2006 20min Permalink
The view from a low point.
Kenneth R. Rosen The Big Roundtable Mar 2016 25min Permalink
Paul Bremer was briefly the Bush administration’s point person in Iraq. His decisions would have lasting consequences.
Neil Swidey The Boston Globe Mar 2016 25min Permalink
At Nancy Reagan’s memorial, Hillary Clinton praised her fellow former first lady for “starting a national conversation” about AIDS. That is not how everyone remembers it.
Chris Geidner Buzzfeed Feb 2015 20min Permalink
After a flawed sexual assault investigation, a Naval Academy instructor made it his mission to prove he did nothing wrong. The discovery of a lost cell phone told a more complicated story.
John Woodrow Cox Washington Post Mar 2016 30min Permalink
Kate del Castillo, the actress who brought Sean Penn to Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, tells her side of the story.
Robert Draper New Yorker Mar 2016 25min Permalink
Part 1 of “The Mastermind,” a serialized investigation of Paul Le Roux, who went from brilliant programmer to vicious cartel boss to highly protected U.S. government asset.
Evan Ratliff The Atavist Magazine Mar 2016 Permalink
How the president thinks about America’s role in the world.
Jeffrey Goldberg The Atlantic Mar 2016 1h20min Permalink
The unexpected history of a name.
Jody Rosen Slate Mar 2016 15min Permalink
A story of blame.
Witold Gombrowicz The Paris Review Mar 2016 Permalink
He made billions. He lost billions. He was fired as CEO of the company he created. And on March 2, just hours after he was accused of rigging oil deals, he died in a one-car crash.
Bryan Gruley, Joe Carroll, Asjylyn Loder Businessweek Mar 2016 15min Permalink
How “Count” Victor Lustig, one of America’s great con men, worked his scams.
Jeff Maysh Smithsonian Mar 2016 10min Permalink
On claiming the conquistador Juan Ponce de León as an ancestor and the fictions we tell ourselves.
Alex Mar Oxford American Mar 2016 30min Permalink
Jia Tolentino is the deputy editor of Jezebel.
“Insult itself is an opportunity. I’m glad to be a woman, and I’m glad not to be white. I think it’s made me tougher. I’ve never been able to assume comfort or power. I’m just glad. I’m glad, especially as you watch the great white male woke freak-out meltdown that’s happening right now, I’m glad that it’s good to come from below.”
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Mar 2016 Permalink
She was mocked for her clothes and for her hair. Tabloids published nude photos of her and covered her custody fight. The defense called her hysterical. The judge condescended to her. She lost. And then she became a punchline. Twenty years later, thanks in part to The People v. O.J. Simpson, Marcia Clark is finally being seen in full.
Rebecca Traister New York Feb 2016 15min Permalink
“Thug is alone even in a room full of people. He is unapproachable. He radiates volatility. I can't even imagine him making actual, on-purpose eye contact with another human. Looking into a person's eyes—seeking some kind of a connection—is an admission of neediness, and Young Thug would rather be shot dead in the street than need a thing from another human being.”
Devin Friedman GQ Feb 2016 20min Permalink
Excerpted from Everyone Leaves Behind a Name, a collection of work by journalist Michael Brick, who died in February at the age of 41. Proceeds from the book go to Brick's wife and children.
Michael Brick Harper's May 2013 20min Permalink
“It is a story that seems almost impossible to believe: a group of female convicts, few of whom had ever played a musical instrument or taken voice lessons, forming a country and western band and becoming, at least in Texas, the Dixie Chicks of their day.”
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly May 2003 35min Permalink
Philanthropist and private equity mogul David Rubenstein is lauded for his patriotic donations, including half the cost of repairing the Washington Monument. He also helped save a controversial tax break billionaires love.
Alec MacGillis ProPublica Mar 2015 30min Permalink
Bobby Gunn has fought 71 illicit bare-knuckle boxing matches. He’s never lost.
Stayton Bonner Men's Journal Mar 2016 20min Permalink
An army vet vanishes in upstate New York.
Kathryn Joyce Pacific Standard Mar 2016 30min Permalink
When juveniles are found guilty of sexual misconduct, the sex-offender registry can be a life sentence.
Sarah Stillman New Yorker Mar 2016 45min Permalink
An attorney pieces together a life cut short.
Burke M. Butler The Marshall Project Mar 2016 20min Permalink