Livin' Thing: An Oral History of Boogie Nights
The making and near unmaking of Paul Thomas Anderson’s breakout film.
The making and near unmaking of Paul Thomas Anderson’s breakout film.
Alex French, Howie Kahn Grantland Dec 2014 1h Permalink
Why do we honor dead soldiers rather than the fighters who deserted and the activists who demanded peace?
Adam Hochschild In These Times Dec 2014 10min Permalink
A holiday tradition in the Netherlands involving blackface has sparked a debate about race, the legacy of slavery, and the vestiges of colonialism.
Emily Raboteau VQR Dec 2014 25min Permalink
The mainstreaming of livestreaming.
Adrian Chen New York Dec 2014 15min Permalink
Ann Casey pulled herself out of poverty by becoming one of the most revered wrestlers in America. Then she was shot by a drug-running truck driver. This is the story of her comeback.
Jeff Maysh Victory Journal Dec 2014 25min Permalink
The short-lived literary career of Breece DʼJ Pancake and his roadmap to a world of oppressive poverty.
Samantha Hunt The Believer Oct 2005 15min Permalink
Without fanfare—indeed, with some misgivings about its new status—China has just overtaken the United States as the world’s largest economy.
Joseph E. Stieglitz Vanity Fair Dec 2014 10min Permalink
Women who kill their newborns usually claim to have been in denial about their pregnancies. Can you carry a child to term without realizing it?
Nabeelah Jaffer Pacific Standard Dec 2014 20min Permalink
The president of Kiribati goes to Norway to bear witness to climate change.
John van Tiggelen The Monthly Dec 2014 20min Permalink
Learning about death from a sixth-generation funeral director.
Eric Puchner Matter Nov 2014 25min Permalink
A tango dancer’s tragic accident ends her career and makes her briefly dependent on her roommate’s compassion.
Tamzin Baker Guernica Dec 2014 15min Permalink
A surgeon opens up about medical mistakes, Chris Rock discusses Ferguson and Cosby, and the story of a woman who survived her husband's repeated attempts to have her killed — the most read articles this week in the Longform App, available free for iPhone and iPad.
In the gentrifying Bywater, the intertwined destinies of a legendary gay pool-bar and a woman who was drugged there.
On Ferguson, Cosby, and what ‘racial progress’ really means.
Frank Rich New York 30min
The old axiom that more is better is no longer true.
Bill McKibben Mother Jones 30min
Opening up about medical mistakes.
Atul Gawande The Guardian 10min
Nancy and Frank Howard were happily married for three decades. Then he fell in love with another woman, embezzled $30 million, and hired a parade of inept hit men to kill her.
Michael J. Mooney D Magazine 25min
How solitary confinement can lead to suicide.
Patrick White The Globe and Mail Dec 2014 Permalink
What it was like to edit The New Republic at its most contentious.
One of the little tweaks I made the first time I got the job was to change the slogan on the table of contents from “A Journal of Politics and the Arts” back to the original: “A Weekly Journal of Opinion.” All the fine reporting notwithstanding, what The New Republic did best, had always done best, was opinion. Its politics were polemical, its art was the art of argument.
Hendrik Hertzberg New Republic Nov 2014 10min Permalink
After 13 years of war, the United States has helped create a nation ruled by drug lords.
Matthieu Aikins Rolling Stone Dec 2014 25min Permalink
An essay on PTSD.
Tom Ricks New Yorker Dec 2014 10min Permalink
Opening up about medical mistakes.
Atul Gawande The Guardian Dec 2014 10min Permalink
Telephone poles began to appear around the same time that white Americans started lynching black Americans.
Three men are exonerated, almost 40 years after a 12-year-old’s coerced testimony led to their murder convictions.
Kyle Swenson Cleveland Scene Dec 2014 30min Permalink
What the first-sale doctrine means for the future of copyright.
Doug Kari Ars Technica Nov 2014 20min Permalink
The author’s long-running relationship with the grotesque.
Alana Massey Pacific Standard Dec 2014 15min Permalink
A brutal assault and the struggle for justice at the University of Virginia.
Note 12/5/14: Rolling Stone has stated that they now doubt details of the facts reported in "A Rape on Campus."
More information is available in T. Rees Shapiro's "U-Va. Fraternity to Rebut Claims of Gang Rape in Rolling Stone" from The Washington Post.
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Sabrina Rubin Erdely Rolling Stone Nov 2014 40min Permalink
On the border of Utah and Arizona, Mormon fundamentalists have long lived according to their own rules. When a former sect member and his family moved to the town where he’d grown up, they expected a homecoming. What they got was a war.
Ashley Powers California Sunday Dec 2014 Permalink
75 years ago, Marguerite Perey unearthed an element while working as a technician in Marie Curie’s lab. Her achievement came at a great cost.
Veronique Greenwood New York Times Magazine Dec 2014 15min Permalink
In the gentrifying Bywater, the intertwined destinies of a legendary gay pool-bar and a woman who was drugged there.
Kat Stoeffel Talking Points Memo Dec 2014 10min Permalink