Being Ringo Starr
Life behind the Beatles curtain, with the man whose real name is actually Richard Starkey.
Life behind the Beatles curtain, with the man whose real name is actually Richard Starkey.
Stephen Rodrick Rolling Stone Apr 2015 25min Permalink
One famous critic (Adler) takes another (Pauline Kael) to task for a collection of reviews that is “without Kael- or Simon-like exaggeration, not simply, jarringly, piece by piece, line by line, and without interruption, worthless.”
Renata Adler New York Review of Books Aug 1980 30min Permalink
On Kendall Jenner, public versus private lives, and the American Dream.
Zach Baron GQ May 2015 15min Permalink
A story of the very complicated demographics of small-town life.
"But I’m no country bumpkin, let me tell you. Cultural institutions in Spencer include a glass studio, a community theater, and a bona fide art school, which relocated in 2008 from the city of Detroit, which as you might have guessed, did not make the cut for Relocate-America.com’s Top 100 Places to Live for 2007. Hence, the art school moving to Spencer. If you’re wondering how a city gets on the list, it says on Relocate-America.com’s website that theirs is the “only list that is determined by statistics and feedback of the people who live, work & play in these communities.” So basically, they take in consideration both fact and opinion and process them in a secret formula to produce a totally non-biased ranking based not just on numbers but also on the enthusiasm of Real People Who Definitely Live There. This explains why we are only three slots down from San Francisco, California on the rankings, because we are definitely on par with a major metropolitan, ocean-bordering melting pot with a majority-minority population of close to a million people where it Doesn’t Snow Ever; anyone who’s ever been to Spencer, Iowa can attest to that."
Marléne Zadig Split Lip Magazine Apr 2015 Permalink
The author discovers devastating secrets while going through her late father’s belongings.
David Chase, the creator of The Sopranos and director of the series finale, analyzes the final scene shot-by-shot.
James Greenberg Directors Guild of America Apr 2015 10min Permalink
Rachel Syme has written for The New Yorker, The New York Times, Grantland, and more.
“You have this sense that you’re bonding, but at the same time you're also going to betray them. Because if you hear this quote that they say or you see it in a mannerism, you write it in your notebook and you think ‘I got it.’”
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Apr 2015 Permalink
The double life of Aaron Hernandez.
Paul Solotaroff, Ron Borges Rolling Stone Aug 2013 15min Permalink
The complicated class politics of American eating habits.
Chris Offutt Oxford American Apr 2015 Permalink
On his anxiety as a teenager, the treatment he was given for it, and the way that the psychiatry of the day failed his family.
Merrill Weiner Cuepoint Apr 2015 10min Permalink
On the parallel sadness of Thom Gunn and Elizabeth Bishop.
Colm Tóibín The Guardian Apr 2015 10min Permalink
The woman that the mixed martial arts star beat nearly to death tells her side of the story.
Jane McManus ESPN W. Apr 2015 15min Permalink
The man who killed John Wilkes Booth was a eunuch. By choice.
Bill Jensen Washingtonian Apr 2015 15min Permalink
The writer’s obsession with a genus of snake known as “indigo.”
Padgett Powell Garden and Gun Apr 2015 30min Permalink
Tracing the 3,339 miles the Canadian ran in 1980, on one good leg and one prosthetic limb.
John Brant Runner's World Jan 2007 25min Permalink
John Barrymore once had a totem pole on his Beverly Hills estate. But where did it come from?
Paige Williams New Yorker Apr 2015 25min Permalink
Joan Didion versus the boys on the bus:
American reporters “like” covering a presidential campaign (it gets them out on the road, it has balloons, it has music, it is viewed as a big story, one that leads to the respect of one’s peers, to the Sunday shows, to lecture fees and often to Washington), which is one reason why there has developed among those who do it so arresting an enthusiasm for overlooking the contradictions inherent in reporting that which occurs only in order to be reported.
Joan Didion New York Review of Books Oct 1988 40min Permalink
An interview with the author, who died Monday.
Elizabeth Gaffney The Paris Review Jun 1991 30min Permalink
The “zone of sacrifice” that is Oxnard, California, where low-income workers are paying the price for pesticide use and chemical dumping.
Natalie Cherot Latterly Apr 2015 Permalink
In 1965, a mother was charged with killing her 5-year-old son and 4-year-old daughter in Queens. Fifty years later, it still isn’t clear if she did it.
Albert Borowitz The Daily Beast Apr 2014 30min Permalink
Fake news stories. Doctored photographs. Staged TV clips. Armies of paid trolls.
Peter Pomerantsev The Guardian Apr 2015 20min Permalink
Everyone just wants to know if he’s going to the football game.
Jason Smith Matter Apr 2015 25min Permalink
The process of claiming a loved one’s body after a massacre at a Kenyan university.
Jina Moore Buzzfeed Apr 2015 15min Permalink
A mystery embedded deep within the Amazon.
David Grann New Yorker Sep 2005 1h20min Permalink
Doug Dodd was a drug kingpin in high school. And now, like the narrator of a Scorcese film, he wants to tell his own story.
Guy Lawson Rolling Stone Apr 2015 30min Permalink