We Should All Be More Afraid of Driving
He covered car accidents for a years as a journalist. Then he was in two himself.
He covered car accidents for a years as a journalist. Then he was in two himself.
Joshua Sharpe The Atlantic May 2021 10min Permalink
Deana Lawson’s regal, loving, unburdened photographs imagine a world in which Black people are free from the distortions of history.
Jenna Wortham New York Times Magazine May 2021 30min Permalink
Dee Dee Blancharde was a model parent: a tireless single mom taking care of her gravely ill child. But after Dee Dee was killed, it turned out her daughter Gypsy had never been sick at all.
Michelle Dean Buzzfeed Aug 2016 35min Permalink
Looking back on the George Floyd rebellion.
Armed only with their psychotic courage, they were running, dancing, singing, smashing, burning, screaming, storming heaven: all rapturous varieties of Baraka’s “magic actions.” I listened to 19-year-olds talk nonstop throughout the night we spent in jail, as they howled insults at the officers and swapped stories of humiliation by police. It struck me that they were too young to have seen even the initial phase of BLM. Though well-acquainted with power and violence, they were tasting “politics” for the first time. Whatever the fate of the movement, I suspect that much of their future thinking will be measured against the feelings that filled the nights of 2020: the vastness and immediacy, the blur and brutal clarity.
Tobi Haslett n+1 May 2021 40min Permalink
Two ordinary Americans, inspired by right-wing extremism, plan to kidnap a cop.
Ashley Powers California Sunday Jul 2015 25min Permalink
An interview with Chase Strangio, who has won a series of landmark court cases in his role as ACLU deputy director for transgender justice.
Saeed Jones GQ May 2021 20min Permalink
A cohort of journalists is drowning in burnout, trauma, and moral injury.
Olivia Messer Study Hall May 2021 Permalink
For centuries, dowsers have claimed the ability to find groundwater, precious metals, and other quarry using divining rods and an uncanny intuition. Is it the real deal or woo-woo?
Dan Schwartz Outside May 2021 20min Permalink
Jackie Thomas was $29,134 in debt and in trouble with state regulators. She hadn’t slept in days. If a judge ruled against her, she’d fail the mothers who could only keep their jobs thanks to the 24-hour child care she offered.
Lizzie Presser ProPublica May 2021 25min Permalink
When a gossip rag went after the CEO, he retaliated with the brutal, brilliant efficiency he used to build his business empire.
Brad Stone Bloomberg Businessweek May 2021 20min Permalink
Anna Sale is the host of Death, Sex & Money. Her new book is Let’s Talk About Hard Things.
“What hard conversations can do is—you can witness what's hard. You can be with what's hard. Admit what's hard. That can be its own relief. … Some hard conversations … are successful when they end in a place that's like, Oh, we're not going to agree on this. … I think you can get used to the feeling of feeling out of control and that makes them less scary.”
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May 2021 Permalink
Deer can regrow their antlers, and humans can replace their liver. What else might be possible?
Matthew Hutson New Yorker May 2021 20min Permalink
A writer tries to understand his dad through the space race.
Nicholas Schmidle GQ Apr 2021 15min Permalink
Lawyer Richard Luthmann was a Roger Stone-worshipping member of the Staten Island political scene. Then the fake Facebook posts began.
James D. Walsh New York Apr 2021 20min Permalink
In the wartime Balkans, an encounter with a solider produced an unwanted baby, a test of international justice, and a decades-long yearning for peace.
Stacy Sullivan Elle Mar 2021 Permalink
A two-part story on Bill Gates and his revolutionary machine.
Jimmy Maher Ars Technica Jun 2017 20min Permalink
Between 1920 and 2020, the average human life span doubled. How did we do it? Science mattered—but so did activism.
Steven Johnson The New York Times Magazine Apr 2021 30min Permalink
Sentenced to life in prison at 16, Adolfo Davis hoped a Supreme Court ruling would give him a chance at a new beginning. But nothing about freedom turned out as he expected.
Maddy Crowell The Atavist Magazine May 2021 40min Permalink
The first major interview with The Simpsons’ most prolific and legendary writer.
Mike Sacks New Yorker May 2021 Permalink
The soul of an octopus.
Sy Montgomery Orion Oct 2011 20min Permalink
For decades, flying saucers were a punch line. Then the U.S. government got over the taboo.
Gideon Lewis-Kraus New Yorker Apr 2021 50min Permalink
On India’s Covid catastrophe.
Arundhati Roy Guardian Apr 2021 20min Permalink
For decades, thousands of people came to Trinidad, Colorado, to have gender confirmation surgery done by Dr. Stanley Biber. This excerpt from Going To Trinidad tells his—and one of his patient’s—poignant stories.
Martin J. Smith 5280 Apr 2021 20min Permalink
Blake Bailey was my favorite teacher. Years later, he forced himself on me. Why did I seek his approval for so long?
Eve Crawford Peyton Slate Apr 2021 15min Permalink
New research is intensifying the debate — with profound implications for the future of the planet.
Ferris Jabr New York Times Magazine Apr 2021 20min Permalink