The Little Gray Wolf
The world’s greatest animator, Yuri Norstein, hasn’t released a new film in 37 years.
The world’s greatest animator, Yuri Norstein, hasn’t released a new film in 37 years.
Brian Phillips MTV Nov 2016 40min Permalink
Ryan Mac and Craig Silverman are reporters at BuzzFeed News. Together they won this year's George Polk Award for Business Reporting for their coverage of Facebook's handling of disinformation on its platform.
This is the second in a week-long series of conversations with winners of this year's George Polk Awards in Journalism.
Apr 2021 Permalink
Secret codes. Legal threats. Betrayal. How one couple built a device to fix McDonald’s notoriously broken soft-serve machines—and how the fast-food giant froze them out.
Andy Greenberg Wired Apr 2021 30min Permalink
Caliphate and the perils of reporting online.
James Harkin Harper's Apr 2021 20min Permalink
A typo investigation.
Katie Notopoulos Buzzfeed Apr 2021 15min Permalink
Tristan Ahtone is the former Indigenous Affairs editor at High Country News and is currently the editor-in-chief at The Texas Observer. His High Country News article “Land-Grab Universities,” co-authored with Robert Lee, won the 2021 George Polk Award for Education Reporting.
This is the first in a week-long series of conversations with winners of this year's George Polk Awards in Journalism.
Apr 2021 Permalink
The country’s cyber forces have raked in billions of dollars for the regime by pulling off schemes ranging from A.T.M. heists to cryptocurrency thefts. Can they be stopped?
Ed Caesar New Yorker Apr 2021 40min Permalink
He planned to write a memoir, The Life of a Migrant. Its central thesis: The American Dream is a lie.
Emily Kaplan Guernica Mar 2021 30min Permalink
On the questions DNA tests answer and the new ones they create.
Emma Gilchrist Maisonneuve Apr 2021 30min Permalink
On October 17, 1973, John McClamrock was paralyzed playing high school football. Doctors doubted he would make it through the night. But he and his mother refused to give up—for more than three decades.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly May 2009 30min Permalink
An essay about artificial intelligence, emotional intelligence, and finding an ending.
By the time I got access to the model, it was late July, 2020. In the fifth month of quarantine, having recently moved home to face my teenage journals, I wasn’t sure if I missed talking to strangers or to Omar. But I wanted to know if, with enough prodding, I could turn GPT-3 into either, or at least convince myself that I had.
Pamela Mishkin The Pudding Mar 2021 20min Permalink
Nick Lim provides tech support to the U.S. networks of White nationalists and conspiracy theorists banned by the likes of Amazon.
William Turton, Joshua Brustein Bloomberg Businessweek Apr 2021 10min Permalink
A story of gambling addiction, in seven parts.
Jay Caspian Kang The Morning News Oct 2010 Permalink
In 2019, the body of a man fell from a passenger plane into a garden in south London. Who was he?
Sirin Kale Guardian Apr 2021 25min Permalink
In 1974, John Patterson was abducted by the People’s Liberation Army of Mexico—a group no one had heard of before. The kidnappers wanted $500,000, and insisted that Patterson’s wife deliver the ransom.
Brendan I. Koerner The Atlantic Apr 2021 25min Permalink
A profile of the professional wrestler.
Molly Langmuir Elle Apr 2021 25min Permalink
Dana Goodyear is a staff writer for The New Yorker and host of the new podcast Lost Hills.
“I do find people who take risks—artistic and physical or even intellectual risks—really interesting. ... There are so many people that I have written about who take a really long time with their projects, whether years or decades, and they might or might not work out. ... They just don't go along with what's received, and they—at a great personal cost—often do things that are very different. And then those things are the things in our world that are the most fascinating or feel the most human.”
Thanks to Mailchimp and CaseFleet for sponsoring this week's episode.
Apr 2021 Permalink
The Permian Basin is ground zero for a billion-dollar surge of zombie oil wells.
Clayton Aldern, Christopher Collins, Naveena Sadasivam Grist, Texas Observer Apr 2021 25min Permalink
“And while maybe you don’t care if Justin Bieber ever does make his way back to a kind of normalcy, perhaps you can admit there is at least something admirable, in the abstract, about someone finding a way to survive, and even to become kind, when all they’ve been taught since a young age, by millions of adoring people, is that there is no need for them to be kind at all. And if that doesn’t move you, then maybe you can at least find sociological interest in the process that Bieber is about to recount here, which is how you turn into someone you don’t want to be, and what you do about it once you decide you want to be someone else. Someone better, even.”
Zach Baron GQ Apr 2021 25min Permalink
How a self-taught linguist came to own an indigenous language.
Alice Gregory New Yorker Apr 2021 30min Permalink
Bitcoin partying at an Orlando hotel with worshippers of the blockchain.
Sam Biddle Gawker Dec 2014 15min Permalink
What will it take to get the world’s choral musicians back together again?
Kim Tingley The New York Times Magazine Apr 2021 25min Permalink
A reporter watches as a Hindu nationalist government uses tech from the companies he covers to destroy a secular democracy.
Pranav Dixit Buzzfeed News Apr 2021 20min Permalink
The jewels of America’s landscape should belong to America’s original peoples.
David Treuer The Atlantic Apr 2021 30min Permalink
Hundreds of workers at a Tampa lead smelter have been exposed to dangerous levels of the neurotoxin. The consequences have been profound.
Corey G. Johnson, Rebecca Woolington, Eli Murray Tampa Bay Times Apr 2021 30min Permalink