Landays: Cries of the Pashtun Women
On the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, women express themselves through fierce short poems.
On the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, women express themselves through fierce short poems.
Eliza Griswold Outside Apr 2014 15min Permalink
Sandy Jenkins was a shy, daydreaming accountant at the Texas headquarters of Collin Street Bakery, the world’s most famous fruitcake company. He was tired of feeling invisible, so he started stealing — and got a little carried away.
Katy Vine Texas Monthly Dec 2015 30min Permalink
The real journalists who inspired the movie look back on their investigation.
Sarah Larson New Yorker Dec 2015 20min Permalink
A car race goes tragically wrong.
Michael Graff SB Nation Jun 2015 35min Permalink
She was a young plutonium worker whose Honda Civic Hatchback ran off the road and smashed into the wall of a concrete culvert. In her trunk were manila folders full of documents, which immediately went missing.
Howard Kohn Rolling Stone Jan 1977 50min Permalink
On the quarterback everyone loves to hate.
Taffy Brodesser-Akner ESPN Dec 2015 20min Permalink
How PCC, once an inmate soccer team and now Brazil’s most notorious prison gang, coordinated seven days of riots throughout São Paulo using mobile phones.
William Langewiesche Vanity Fair Apr 2007 40min Permalink
On Dec. 18, 2007, the school board in Pinellas Country, Florida, voted to abandon integration. They justified the decision with bold promises: Schools in poor, black neighborhoods would get more money, more staff, more resources. They delivered none of that. A 5-part investigation.
What it’s like to drive tourists around the Australian outback.
Robert Skinner The Monthly Jun 2015 15min Permalink
The whole thing began over a puddle in the driveway. Eight years later, Peter Nygard and his neighbor Louis Bacon, who own houses next to each other in paradise, have spent tens of millions in a constantly escalating legal war. Neither man spends much time on the island anymore.
Eric Koningsberg Vanity Fair Dec 2015 25min Permalink
When James Brown died on Christmas Day 2006, he left behind a fortune worth tens, maybe hundreds, of millions of dollars. The problem is, he also left behind fourteen children, sixteen grandchildren, eight mothers of his children, several mistresses, thirty lawyers, a former manager, an aging dancer, a longtime valet, and a sister who’s really not a sister but calls herself the Godsister of Soul anyway.
Sean Flynn GQ Apr 2009 50min Permalink
Bobby Fischer unravels before the 1972 World Chess Championships, a.k.a. the “Match of the Century.”
Brad Darrach Playboy Jul 1973 1h10min Permalink
On feminism and the limitations of outrage online.
Jia Tolentino Jezebel Dec 2015 15min Permalink
Checking up on an ambitious, controversial conservation initiative, 20 years later.
Ben Goldfarb Orion Dec 2015 20min Permalink
An investigation of the infamous alleged assault.
J.K. Trotter Gawker Dec 2015 30min Permalink
Doug McGray is the co-founder and editor-in-chief of California Sunday and Pop-Up.
“Your life ends up being made up of the things you remember. You forget most of it, but the things that you remember become your life. And if you can make something that someone remembers, then you’re participating in their life. There’s something really meaningful about that. It feels like something worth trying to do.”
Thanks to MailChimp, Smart People Podcast, Howl, and CreativeLive for sponsoring this week's episode.
Dec 2015 Permalink
Angie Nwandu has no journalism experience. No publishing experience. She’s 25. And in less than two years she has created an entirely new way to cover — and profit from — celebrity gossip.
Doree Shafrir Buzzfeed Dec 2015 20min Permalink
Brian Chavez was supposed to be the one who made it out of Odessa. It didn’t turn out that way.
Dave McKenna Deadspin Dec 2015 25min Permalink
Searching for a ghost of Meyer Lansky’s Cuba, a sex-show star who quietly disappeared from the island and was later immortalized in The Godfather Part II.
Mitch Moxley Roads & Kingdoms Dec 2015 Permalink
Inside “a surreal world of pseudo-scientific methods and jargon, traumatizing psychodramas and nude cuddling with counselors.”
Zoë Schlanger Newsweek Dec 2015 Permalink
Life as the most famous children’s musician on earth.
Sheila Heti New York Dec 2015 25min Permalink
The making of the drone.
Arthur Holland Michel Wired Dec 2015 20min Permalink
“You read enough books in which people like you are disposable, or are dirt, or are silent, absent, or worthless, and it makes an impact on you. Because art makes the world, because it matters, because it makes us. Or breaks us.”
Rebecca Solnit Literary Hub Dec 2015 10min Permalink
Since the Syrian rebel leader Hassan Aboud joined ISIS, taking with him fighters and weapons, he has been behind a sprawling mix of battlefield action and crime.
C.J. Chivers New York Times Dec 2015 Permalink
The bribery scandal, involving tests given for coveted government jobs and medical school admissions, began implicating high-ranking officials. Then people started turning up dead.
Aman Sethi The Guardian Dec 2015 25min Permalink