Colony Collapse
The rise, and rise, of bee mortality in America.
The rise, and rise, of bee mortality in America.
Alex Morris Rolling Stone Aug 2015 25min Permalink
William Finnegan is a New Yorker staff writer and the author of Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life.
“I suppose in retrospect I was just trying to find out what the world held that nobody could tell me about until I got there. I was a big reader and had a couple of degrees by that point, but there was something out well over the horizon that I wanted to get near and record and understand, and I even felt like it would transform me.”
Thanks to TinyLetter, SquareSpace, and The Great Courses for sponsoring this week's episode.
Aug 2015 Permalink
Surfing San Francisco with a true believer.
William Finnegan New Yorker Aug 1992 1h15min Permalink
It was the failed dream of the heir to the Frank-o-Matic sausage-link machinery fortune.
Peter Rugg Inverse Oct 2015 15min Permalink
“The central conflict of domestic life right now is not men versus women, mothers versus fathers. It is family versus money.”
Stephen Marche The Atlantic Jul 2013 15min Permalink
“In an industry in which millions of people are invested in his success – in which he’s constantly being advised, praised and berated, often by total strangers – Revis’ tranquillity might be his greatest asset. He isn’t just an island. He’s a fortress.”
Mina Kimes ESPN Aug 2015 15min Permalink
The life and politics of Joan Didion.
Louis Menand New Yorker Aug 2015 20min Permalink
The tale of the first conviction overturned on faulty arson science.
Jeremy Stahl Slate Aug 2015 1h10min Permalink
The Chinese want to steal our genetically-engineered grain secrets. Why?
Ted Genoways The New Republic Aug 2015 15min Permalink
On the 1915 hanging of Leo Frank in Marietta, Georgia.
Steve Oney Esquire Sep 1985 35min Permalink
How an Italian businessman facing fraud charges and a Brazilian politician turned a billion dollar project to build the high speed Rio-São Paulo rail line into a farce.
Leandro Demori Medium Aug 2015 30min Permalink
The roots and effects of a biker shootout at the Twin Peaks in Waco, Texas.
Alan Jacobs Harper's Aug 2015 10min Permalink
Confessions of a presidential campaign reporter.
Michael Hastings GQ Oct 2008 20min Permalink
What happens to the people who film famous incidents of police violence.
Jon Swaine, Oliver Laughland Guardian Aug 2015 15min Permalink
Amazon, America’s most valuable retailer, is “conducting a little-known experiment in how far it can push white-collar workers, redrawing the boundaries of what is acceptable.”
Jody Kantor, David Straitfeld New York Times Aug 2015 25min Permalink
The stories of four women whose children joined the Islamic State.
Julia Ioffe Huffington Post Aug 2015 35min Permalink
“Whenever news of yet another horrifying murder or massacre somewhere in the country breaks, my friends and I often find ourselves asking if Mexico has 'hit bottom' yet... But some crimes move or frighten us in ways we hadn’t anticipated, and the Colonia Narvarte massacre is one of those.”
Francisco Goldman New Yorker Aug 2015 20min Permalink
Hanging out with one of America’s most hated pundits.
Mitchell Sunderland Broadly Aug 2015 20min Permalink
Observations at the dawn of an epidemic.
Barry Michael Cooper Spin Feb 1986 20min Permalink
A man had a gift for teaching people to beat the polygraph. Now he’s going to prison.
Drake Bennett Bloomberg Businessweek Aug 2015 20min Permalink
The story of H.H. Holmes, America’s first serial killer.
John Bartlow Martin Harper's Dec 1943 25min Permalink
The difference between being African and being African-American.
Yahdon Israel The New Inquiry Aug 2015 15min Permalink
The system of organized sexual slavery at the heart of ISIS.
Rukmini Callimachi New York Times Aug 2015 Permalink
A trip to the country turns into nightmare beset by mysterious creatures and body transformations.
"When we went over to look at the creature, it was mostly flattened. It looked like a crow, except the feathers had fallen off its back. Underneath, the flesh was scaly and pink. The exposed skin was split in half by a row of translucent spikes. The spikes were moving slightly, pointing first in this direction, then in that. The smell made me wrinkle my nose. It was an oddly sweet smell to find outdoors, like an open vat of lollipop flavoring."
Lincoln Michel Granta Magazine Aug 2015 30min Permalink
Catching up with N.W.A’s controversial former manager.
Amos Barshad Grantland Aug 2015 15min Permalink