The Dark Side of the Moon
Forty-five years ago, Buzz Aldrin became the second man to walk on the moon. It made him one of the most famous people in the world. And it has haunted the rest of his life.
Forty-five years ago, Buzz Aldrin became the second man to walk on the moon. It made him one of the most famous people in the world. And it has haunted the rest of his life.
Jeanne Marie Laskas GQ Dec 2014 25min Permalink
A New York lawyer’s attempt to secure an American aid worker’s release from ISIS.
Ali Younes, Shiv Malik, Spencer Ackerman, Mustafa Khalili The Guardian Dec 2014 25min Permalink
Aboard the JoCo Cruise Crazy, a ship captained by singer-songwriter Jonathan Coulton and built for nerds.
Adam Rogers Wired Dec 2014 30min Permalink
A group of journalists and researchers wade into ugly corners of the Internet to expose racists, creeps, and hypocrites. Have they gone too far?
Adrian Chen MIT Technology Review Dec 2014 15min Permalink
When should a football player, and in particular one who has suffered three concussions in 10 months, retire?
Kevin Van Valkenburg ESPN Dec 2014 10min Permalink
Climate change is giving rise to intermating between previously distinct species. Welcome to a world with “grolar bears.”
Tim McDonnell Nautilus Dec 2014 10min Permalink
For more than a century, boys were sent to the Florida School for Boys reformatory. Many were beaten brutally and bear the physical and psychological scars to this day. Many others, though, never came home.
A search for lost boys and the reasons why they died.
A neglected cemetery yields more bodies than expected, but names are harder to find.
Ben Montgomery Tampa Bay Times Dec 2014 50min Permalink
The inside story, involving low ratings, new ownership, suspected leaks, and a mandate that Meet the Press “loosen up.”
Luke Mullins Washingtonian Dec 2014 25min Permalink
<img src="http://longform.org/stuff/images/seven-month-old-twins-615.jpg" title=“babies and babies" class="bleed" alt=“”>The rise and murderous fall of a pecan dynasty in Texas, the inside story of how Marissa Mayer lost her way at Yahoo! and why a baby’s brain needs love to develop — the most read articles this week in the Longform App, available free for iPhone and iPad.
Notes on consuming a novel.
The rise and murderous fall of the Harkey family, the scions of a pecan dynasty.
Sonia Smith Texas Monthly 35min
The inside story of how Yahoo’s C.E.O. lost her way.
A baby’s brain needs love to develop.
Michael Brown beat the odds by graduating from high school before his death—odds that remain stacked against black students in St. Louis and the rest of the country.
Fears of witchcraft leave a trail of dismembered bodies in Buenaventura, Colombia.
Juan Camilo Maldonado Vice News Dec 2014 15min Permalink
A refugee survives the Rwandan genocide and finds a future in Atlanta.
Paige Williams Atlanta Magazine Oct 2007 40min Permalink
Creating, and then attempting to dismantle, a fake persona based on a man who died in 1984.
Andrew O'Hagan London Review of Books Dec 2014 35min Permalink
How the author writes best-selling non-fiction books without the ability to leave her house.
Wil S. Hylton New York Times Magazine Dec 2014 25min Permalink
Tracing the steps of migrants from the Middle East and Africa to the Kent countryside.
Daniel Trilling New Statesman Dec 2014 20min Permalink
On the fear-mongering history of sex education.
Lisa Hix Collectors Weekly Dec 2014 45min Permalink
Immune systems don’t make for clean narratives, even as we expect them to keep us pure.
Sara Black McCulloch The New Inquiry Dec 2014 10min Permalink
The rise and murderous fall of the Harkey family, the scions of a pecan dynasty.
Sonia Smith Texas Monthly Dec 2014 35min Permalink
Michael Brown beat the odds by graduating from high school before his death—odds that remain stacked against black students in St. Louis and the rest of the country.
Nikole Hannah-Jones ProPublica Dec 2014 20min Permalink
360 degree deals and the music industry’s new hostages.
Naomi Zeichner Buzzfeed Mar 2014 15min Permalink
The belief that hidden memories can be “recovered” in therapy has been discredited, but the mental health establishment does not always learn from its mistakes—and families are still paying the price.
Ed Cara Pacific Standard Nov 2014 25min Permalink
To be a foreigner is to be perpetually detached, but it is also to be continually surprised.
Pico Iyer Lapham's Quarterly Dec 2014 15min Permalink
Junky, out-of-date science fuels jury errors and tragic miscarriages of justice. How can we throw it out of court?
Douglas Starr Aeon Dec 2014 15min Permalink
A collection of picks about exile, defection, revolution, and the country’s future.
Cuba’s wary embrace of private enterprise.
Cynthia Gorney National Geographic Nov 2012 25min
The story of William Morgan: American, wanderer, Cuban revolutionary.
David Grann New Yorker May 2012 1h25min
The country’s uncertain future.
Witnessing an execution in war-torn Cuba.
Richard Harding Davis New York Journal Feb 1897 10min
The tale of a Cuban boxer leads a filmmaker to a larger story.
Brin-Jonathan Butler The Rumpus Dec 2012 20min
Exiled in 1962, a pair of brothers return home.
Paul Reyes VQR Nov 2009 35min
On baseball player Yasiel Puig’s escape from Cuba.
Scott Eden ESPN Apr 2014 10min
A crime novelist navigates Cuba’s shifting reality.
Jon Lee Anderson New Yorker Oct 2013 35min
Feb 1897 – Apr 2014 Permalink
Hanna Rosin is a senior editor at The Atlantic and a founder and editor at DoubleX.
“I often think of reporting as dating, or even speed dating. You’re looking for someone where there’s a spark there between you and them. Sometimes that happens right away and sometimes it takes forever. ... You have to determine if they're reflective, friendly, open. It could be love at first sight and they're still all wrong, which is really heartbreaking.”
Thanks to TinyLetter, Bonobos and The Los Angeles Times' Bookshelf Newsletter for sponsoring this week's episode.
Dec 2014 Permalink