Bullsh*t.
An inside look at how an ad agency sells a car in 2015.
An inside look at how an ad agency sells a car in 2015.
Jessica Pressler New York May 2015 20min Permalink
On equating beauty with self-worth.
Lucy Grealy Nerve Oct 1997 10min Permalink
Gregg Bemis is an 87-year-old retired venture capitalist who owns the salvage rights to the Lusitania. He’s determined to prove an alternate theory as to why the ship was attacked in 1915. Unfortunately, the Irish government isn’t so into his plan.
Richard B. Stolley Fortune May 2015 15min Permalink
Investigating what Mexico’s government really knows about disappearance of dozens of students.
Ryan Devereaux The Intercept May 2015 45min Permalink
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How smartphones are changing the way soldiers fight wars on the ground.
An orphan named Patience and an argument for open immigration.
Stephan Faris Deca Jul 2014 40min Permalink
A meditation on life in the black “upper class.”
Margo Jefferson Guernica Jun 2014 15min Permalink
He went from a viral pop hit to an arrest for conspiracy to murder charges in just under six months. Was Bobby Shmurda “too real” for his label?
Robert Kolker New York May 2015 25min Permalink
How the overdiagnosis of disease makes for unnecessary treatment, high anxiety, and ballooning costs.
Atul Gawande New Yorker May 2015 35min Permalink
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A conversation with Fred Seibert, who helped launch the Cartoon Network, co-created Nick at Nite, ran Hanna-Barbera and is now behind a YouTube animation behemoth with 17 million subscribers.</p>
“We don’t meander at the beginning of the story, making the assumption that people will just hang out with us. When we produced the latest episodes of Bee and PuppyCat, we didn’t have a theme song, which is how TV cartoons open. We just started the story.”
Chuck Salter HP Matter Apr 2015 Permalink
Following two leading figures of the #BlackLivesMatter movement through five months of protests.
Jay Caspian Kang New York Times Magazine May 2015 25min Permalink
Harsh sentences have given us an aging prison population, and all the medical problems that come with age are beginning to choke the system.
Sari Horwitz Washington Post May 2015 Permalink
John Beale was an exemplary employee at the Environmental Protection Agency. He also led a double life, though not the rumored one at the CIA his colleagues whispered about.
Michael Gaynor Washingtonian Mar 2014 15min Permalink
On women, monarchy, and breeding.
Hilary Mantel London Review of Books Feb 2013 20min Permalink
A steep discount on pharmaceutical drugs leads to a mass-murder case.
Kurt Eichenwald Newsweek Apr 2015 Permalink
Pacquiao and his entourage.
Pablo Torre ESPN the Magazine May 2015 25min Permalink
Arthur Mondella took over his family’s maraschino cherry business reluctantly. But once he had it, he started a second enterprise. Behind an unmarked roll-down gate, behind some of his prized luxury cars, behind a pair of closet doors, behind a set of button-controlled shelves, behind a fake wall and down a ladder in a hole in the floor, Mondella built a 2,500-square-foot marijuana factory. When the police finally found it, he shot himself.
Vivian Yee New York Times May 2015 10min Permalink
The multimillionaire David Gundlach had trouble, all his life, reading social cues. For reasons no one quite understands, he left most of his fortune to Elkhart, Indiana.
Allison Copenbarger Vance Indianapolis Monthly Jul 2014 20min Permalink
On the second-class status of women film directors.
Jessica P. Ogilvie LA Weekly Apr 2015 15min Permalink
“Quebec is the Saudi Arabia of maple syrup,” and it has the authoritarian regulatory regime to prove it.
Peter Kuitenbrouwer National Post Apr 2015 15min Permalink
“Russian humor is slapstick, only you actually die.”
Ian Frazier New York Review of Books Apr 2015 15min Permalink
On Juliana Buhring, a former cult member who became the first woman to bike around the world.
Grayson Schaffer Outside Apr 2015 15min Permalink
What happens when a successfully funded Kickstarter product fails to launch?
Gideon Lewis-Kraus New York Times Magazine Apr 2015 20min Permalink
The last all-male clubs in Britain are contemplating admitting women. But a significant proportion of their members still want to preserve the spaces as male-only.
Amelia Gentleman The Guardian Apr 2015 20min Permalink
A group buys the city of Detroit with lottery winnings.
"We stayed on our street all day for a couple of weeks, doing all the work we needed to do to convince people we weren’t a problem. We never got around to telling anyone that we’d bought the city, because we weren’t having the kinds of conversations where you’d bring that up. We told people we’d lost our jobs instead, that Detroit was cheap. They’d nod. We smoked up a lot and drank plenty of the lemonade stuff, which was yellow Crystal Light mixed with water and vodka."
Kashana Cauley The Common Apr 2015 15min Permalink