MFA vs. CIA
On applying to work as an undercover agent.
On applying to work as an undercover agent.
Jennifer duBois Lapham's Quarterly Feb 2015 15min Permalink
The llamas, the dress, and the day the internet broke.
Charlie Warzel Buzzfeed Feb 2016 25min Permalink
The story of freelance journalist Anna Therese Day.
Gail Sheehy Jezebel Feb 2016 20min Permalink
Be nice and listen.
Charles Duhigg New York Times Magazine Feb 2016 20min Permalink
An attempt to make sense of the dog meat industry in Vietnam, an unregulated maze of black market slaughterhouses, home restaurants, and thieves who are often murdered in the open when caught stealing the family pet.
Calvin Godfrey Roads & Kingdoms Feb 2016 15min Permalink
“In less than a year Trump has succeeded in turning the USA into a massive high school.”
Notes from the GOP campaign trail.
Matt Taibbi Rolling Stone Feb 2016 30min Permalink
Lily gets ready for her first date.
Nancy Jo Sales Vanity Fair Feb 2016 20min Permalink
A woman recalls an endless lifetime of near-death experiences.
Virginia Castiglione Necessary Fiction Feb 2016 10min Permalink
A suburban teen attempts to build a reactor, radioactivity ensues.
Ken Silverstein Harper's Nov 1998 30min Permalink
The real story of a fabricator.
Doyle Murphy Riverfront Times Feb 2016 20min Permalink
Wesley Yang writes for New York and other publications.
“If a person remains true to some part of their experience, no matter what it is, and they present it in full candor, there’s value to that. People will recognize it. Once I knew that was true, I knew I could do this.”
Thanks to MailChimp, Home Chef, and Trunk Club for sponsoring this week's episode.
Feb 2016 Permalink
On heroin and harm reduction.
Sarah Resnick n+1 Feb 2016 45min Permalink
The ripple effect of a single MTA mechanical failure.
Robert Kolker New York Feb 2016 25min Permalink
How one man wants to transport the world’s heaviest cargo in airships that are lighter than air.
Jeanne Marie Laskas New Yorker Feb 2016 25min Permalink
One woman’s attempt to break the speed record on the Pacific Crest Trail.
Megan Michelson Backpacker Sep 2014 15min Permalink
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Inside one woman’s often conflicted world.
Rachel Monroe The Guardian Feb 2016 20min Permalink
An attempt to figure out why, and how, a young pilot named Andreas Günter Lubitz deliberately plunged an airliner into the remote French Alps, killing himself and the other 149 people on board.
Joshua Hammer GQ Feb 2016 25min Permalink
“Women are not abstaining from or delaying marriage to prove a point about equality. They are doing it because they have internalized assumptions that just a half-century ago would have seemed radical.”
Excerpted from </em>All the Single Ladies</a>.
Rebecca Traister New York Feb 2016 25min Permalink
A trip to the zoo, Charlie Kaufman’s new film, and human despair.
Zadie Smith New York Review of Books Feb 2016 20min Permalink
How David Milch, the creator of NYPD Blue and Deadwood, blew his $100 million fortune at the track.
Stephen Galloway, Scott Johnson The Hollywood Reporter Feb 2016 20min Permalink
In an era when America’s great sportswriters were as big as the athletes they covered, W.C. Heinz may have been the best of the bunch.
Jeff MacGregor Sports Illustrated Sep 2000 25min Permalink
“Word choice is hard here. Should we say “raped” automatically if a grown man has sex with a teenager? Does it matter at all if the 15-year-old, now much older, describes their encounter as one of the best nights of her life? What is our word for a ‘yes’ given on a plane that’s almost vertically unequal? Does contemporary morality dictate that we trust a young woman when she says she consented freely, or believe that she couldn’t have, no matter what she says?”
Jia Tolentino Jezebel Feb 2016 10min Permalink
Why China’s super-rich send their children west.
Jiayang Fan New Yorker Feb 2016 20min Permalink
Collections Business Sex Travel
Paris Hilton, Princeton phonies, and the prince who blew through billions—a collection of articles on young money.
“They cruise the city in chauffeured cars, blasting rap, selling pot to classmates. How some of New York’s richest kids joined forces with some of its poorest.”
Nancy Jo Sales New York Dec 1996 20min
Georgia and Patterson Inman, 15-year-old twins, are the only living heirs to the $1 billion Duke tobacco fortune. They are also emotional wrecks who have barely survived a hellacious childhood.
Sabrina Rubin Erdely Rolling Stone Aug 2013 40min
On the brother of the Sultan of Brunei, Prince Jefri Bolkiah, who has “probably gone through more cash than any other human being on earth.”
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Jul 2011 45min
An overachiever on what he did and didn’t learn at Princeton.
Walter Kim The Atlantic Jan 2005 35min
A profile of Paris Hilton at the height of her fame.
Vanessa Grigoriadis Rolling Stone Nov 2003 10min
An invite-only social network for Georgetown assholes.
Angela Valdez Washington City Paper Jul 2007 30min
How two sisters, heirs to the Bronfman fortune, may have blown $100 million supporting the cult-like group NXIVM.
Maureen Tkacik The New York Observer Aug 2010
A profile of Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, the Malibu-dwelling, “fantastically corrupt” dictator-in-waiting of Equatorial Guinea. Teodorin, as his friends call him, is considered by U.S. intelligence to be “an unstable, reckless idiot.”
Ken Silverstein Foreign Policy Mar 2011 20min
Dec 1996 – Aug 2013 Permalink