Fiction Pick of the Week: "Do Not Save the Ferocious, Save the Tender"
A shipwreck, a mythical creature.
A shipwreck, a mythical creature.
Ramona Ausubel Oxford American Jan 2016 20min Permalink
After Daniel Rigmaiden was arrested for a multi-million dollar fraud, he didn’t argue that he was innocent. He wasn’t. But he couldn’t understand how he had been caught. Rigmaiden had covered his tracks meticulously — the only way the cops could’ve found him, he realized, was through some secret tracking device that they had never disclosed to the public.
Russell Brandom The Verge Jan 2016 20min Permalink
A sociologist’s controversial first book and the debate over who gets to speak for whom.
Gideon Lewis-Kraus New York Times Magazine Jan 2016 25min Permalink
Brooke Gladstone is the host of On the Media and the author of The Influencing Machine.
“I'm not going to get any richer or more famous than I am right now. This is it, this is fine — it's better than I ever expected. I don't have anything to risk anymore. As far as I’m concerned, I want to just spend this last decade, decade and a half, twenty years, doing what I think is valuable. I don’t have any career path anymore. I’m totally off the career path. The beautiful thing is that I just don’t have any more fucks to give.”
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Jan 2016 Permalink
Looking for the ghosts of the Allman Brothers Band in Macon.
Amanda Petrusich Oxford American Jan 2016 20min Permalink
What seems like a slam-dunk case against a mass murderer exposes widespread prosecutorial misconduct in Orange County.
Edward Humes Orange County Register Jan 2016 1h20min Permalink
A report from the border of ISIS territory in Iraq, where civilians are battling to survive.
Luke Mogelson New Yorker Jan 2016 35min Permalink
Nobody noticed Connie Converse when she was trying to get a record deal in New York in the 1950s. Nobody stopped her when she left her life in Michigan in 1974, never to be seen again. Today, her music is heard by tens of thousands.
Rosie Cima Priceonomics Jan 2015 15min Permalink
On George Plimpton and the founders of The Paris Review.
Early in the fifties another young generation of American expatriates in Paris became twenty-six years old, but they were not Sad Young Men, nor were they Lost; they were the witty, irreverent sons of a conquering nation.
Gay Talese Esquire Jul 1963 20min Permalink
A personal and legal history of assisted suicide.
Kevin Drum Mother Jones Jan 2016 15min Permalink
Emily and Kate wanted to have a baby together. They were more successful than they ever imagined.
Alexa Tsoulis-Reay New York Jan 2016 20min Permalink
David Bowie interviewed by William S. Burroughs.
Cragig Copetas Rolling Stone Feb 1974 25min Permalink
Rob Billot spent eight years defending corporate clients in environmental cases. Then Wilbur Tennant called.
Nathaniel Rich New York Times Magazine Jan 2016 20min Permalink
“It’s just beyond our experience—we have nothing in our evolutionary history that prepares us or primes us, no intellectual architecture, to try and grasp the remoteness of those odds.”
Adam Piore Nautilus Aug 2013 15min Permalink
A secret meeting, and short Q&A, with the drug lord while he was still on the lam.
Sean Penn Rolling Stone Jan 2016 45min Permalink
The 15-year-old who flummoxed the SEC, the precarious existence of NFL placekickers, a world tour of economic collapse and much more—our complete archive of articles by Michael Lewis.
Sitting alone in his San Jose office, Michael Burry saw the bubble in the subprime-mortgage market before anyone else. So he convinced Wall Street to let him bet on it, even though few were betting on him. The article that became The Big Short.
Michael Lewis Vanity Fair Apr 2010 45min Permalink
“Offhand, there are maybe three times in my life I can clearly recall laughing at something really terrible. One: when my mother told me my grandfather had a heart attack. Two: when a friend and I were driving to Cape Cod and a huge bird careened into the windshield, instantly bonking itself dead. Three: when my friends tried to keep me from going home from a party because they thought my boyfriend might kill me.”
Julieanne Smolinski New York Jan 2016 10min Permalink
A collection of articles about drug lord Joaquín Guzmán, who was recaptured Friday, and his Sinaloa cartel.
How Guzmán was captured the last time.
Patrick Radden Keefe New Yorker May 2014 40min
The Sinaloa cartel was flooding cocaine across the border. The DEA was listening. A 4-part series based on hundreds of pages of transcripts from intercepted calls, court testimony, and investigative reports.
Richard Marosi The Los Angeles Times Jul 2011 10min
El Chapo and the ruins of the Mexican-American border.
Alma Guillermoprieto New York Review of Books Oct 2010 20min
On a Mexican newsweekly brave enough to cover El Chapo.
Drake Bennett, Michael Riley Businessweek Apr 2012 15min
A report from El Chapo’s battle for Guadalajara.
William Finnegan New Yorker Jun 2012 40min
On Sinaloa’s multi-billion dollar business model.
Patrick Radden Keefe New York Times Magazine Jun 2012 20min
Oct 2010 – May 2014 Permalink
Politics World Media Movies & TV
“In this scene, set at a government dacha, they are joined by their American counterparts at the State Department for a daylong picnic that grows increasingly informal, involving drinks, flirtation, a guitar jam and (spoiler) contact between two spies. At times in my new job, I feel like a spy myself, and one with a shaky cover. I don’t have a good answer for how I got here.”
Michael Idov New York Times Magazine Jan 2016 20min Permalink
Why last night’s chicken made you sick.
Wil S. Hylton New Yorker Feb 2015 20min Permalink
Last February, John Jonchuck Jr. dropped his 5-year-old daughter off a bridge to her death. This is the story of what happened, and what didn’t, in the years before the murder made headlines.
Lane DeGregory Tampa Bay Times Jan 2016 25min Permalink
The Castro, 1990, and a first night in drag.
Alexander Chee Guernica Mar 2015 20min Permalink
After Brooke Melton died in a car crash, her parents approached attorney Lance Cooper to investigate. What he found in her 2005 Chevy Cobalt would lead to GM’s 30 million-vehicle recall.
Max Blau Atlanta Magazine Jan 2016 25min Permalink
College friends come together during a power failure and the onset of an ill-fated relationship.
Kate Garklavs Juked Dec 2015 20min Permalink