Rukmini Callimachi discusses how she covers ISIS for The New York Times.
See also: Longform Podcast #129: Rukmini Callimachi (Part 2)
Rukmini Callimachi discusses how she covers ISIS for The New York Times.
See also: Longform Podcast #129: Rukmini Callimachi (Part 2)
Nov 2015 Permalink
How a tattooed video store clerk with a history of drinking and drug use ended up at an Islamic self-help class leading to the birth of ISIS.
Anonymous New York Review of Books Aug 2015 15min Permalink
Kaskade is a 44-year-old devout Mormon father of three who has never touched a drink. He makes over $500,000 a night as an EDM performer.
Reggie Ugwu Buzzfeed Nov 2015 15min Permalink
How English became the weirdest major language in modern use.
John McWhorter Aeon Nov 2015 15min Permalink
Paul Phua rose from a Borneo numbers runner to being the biggest bookmaker in the world. Then he found poker.
Brett Forrest ESPN Nov 2015 30min Permalink
“As the world’s best-known oceanographer—Sylvia is to our era what Jacques Cousteau was to an earlier one—she feels a heavy responsibility. In her lifetime, she has seen the ocean damaged in ways humans never thought it could be. The ongoing disaster leaves her mournful, desolate, and sometimes scary to talk to. Since her first dive, in a sponge-diver’s helmet in a Florida river when she was 16, she has spent 7,000 hours, or the better part of a year, underwater.”
Ian Frazier Outside Nov 2015 30min Permalink
A reckless billion-dollar industry that occasionally kills.
Jesse Hyde Rolling Stone Nov 2015 25min Permalink
Michael Phelps returns to his Olympic training after a 45-day stint at The Meadows.
Tim Layden Sports Illustrated Nov 2015 25min Permalink
“Missy (Misdemeanor) Elliott, the twenty-five-year-old hip-hop performer who is energetically redefining the boundaries of rap music, is a singer, a songwriter, an arranger, a producer, and a talent scout. Six months ago, few people outside the music industry had heard of her; six months from now, it will be necessary to pretend that you’ve known about Missy Elliott for years.”
Hilton Als New Yorker Oct 1997 20min Permalink
The ongoing question of forgiveness in Charleston, where Dylann Roof opened fire in a church on June 17th.
David Von Drehle Time Nov 2015 1h Permalink
A story of high school, sexuality, and tagging; from Puerto del Sol's first online issue.
Bryan Washington Puerto del Sol Nov 2015 20min Permalink
What happens when an impoverished island nation enters into a deal to sell its own citizenship in bulk.
Atossa Araxia Abrahamian The Guardian Nov 2015 20min Permalink
Morcellation was supposed to make gynecological surgeries easier on women. Instead, is it killing them.
Alison Motluk Maisonneuve Nov 2015 30min Permalink
Ed Caesar is a freelance writer based in England whose work has appeared in The New Yorker, British GQ, and The Sunday Times Magazine. He is the author of Two Hours: The Quest to Run the Impossible Marathon.
“That was a really horrific situation. People were being killed in the street in front of us. People were firing weapons in all directions. It was really chaotic and quite scary. It freaked me out. And I thought, ‘Actually, there's not a huge amount more of this I want to do in my life.’”
Thanks to MailChimp, MasterClass, The Message, RealtyShares, and Prudential for sponsoring this week's episode.
Nov 2015 Permalink
In 1993 a black teenager in London was randomly stabbed to death by a gang of white youths. Twenty years later, they would be at the center of the trial of the decade.
They were the New York crew that once pulled off the Lufthansa heist, one of the biggest thefts in American history and the basis for Goodfellas. Nearly 40 years later, most are dead. The survivors are old, broke, and snitching.
Stephanie Clifford New York Times Nov 2015 Permalink
In November 2012, Salvador Alvarenga went fishing off the coast of Mexico. Two days later, a storm hit and he made a desperate SOS. It was the last anyone heard from him—for 438 days.
Jonathan Franklin The Guardian Nov 2015 20min Permalink
Putin's daughter Katerina has been attending college under the surname Tikhonova and is one of the top "acrobatic rock'n'roll dance" competitors in the world.
She is the also the rumored spouse of the son of one of Russia's richest bankers. While Putin reported only $119,000 on last year's tax return, his daughter's fortune could now stretch into the billions.
Reuters Stephen Grey, Andrey Kuzmin, Elizabeth Piper Nov 2015 10min Permalink
How Raj Rajaratnam and a McKinsey chairman made millions off a maid.
Nilita Vachani Caravan Nov 2015 25min Permalink
The true love story of Peanuts.
Darryn King Vanity Fair Nov 2015 15min Permalink
On the history of political polls, which have become more influential and less reliable over time.
Jill Lepore New Yorker Nov 2015 25min Permalink
A second act for the former head of McSweeney’s.
Anne Helen Petersen Buzzfeed Nov 2015 15min Permalink
After his father died in an Airbnb rental, the writer investigates what the company can do to improve safety.
A profile of the writer.
Parul Sehgal New York Times Magazine Nov 2015 15min Permalink
Neale McShane’s jurisdiction in the Australian Outback is roughly the size of the United Kingdom. He patrols it alone.
Andrew McMillen Buzzfeed Nov 2015 25min Permalink