The Target
A profile of Malala Yousafzai, the young activist from Pakistan who was just awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
A profile of Malala Yousafzai, the young activist from Pakistan who was just awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
Marie Brenner Vanity Fair Apr 2013 35min Permalink
The complexities of offering aid to a Syrian refugee camp.
Joshua Hersh VQR Oct 2014 30min Permalink
A digressive consideration of the popular new show.
John Leonard New York May 1990 20min Permalink
The reverberations of an avalanche.
Joe O’Connor National Post Sep 2014 15min Permalink
Woodward and Bernstein’s other anonymous sources.
Max Holland Newsweek Oct 2014 Permalink
A Jamaican cricket legend bowls in Brooklyn.
Alex Vadukul New York Times Sep 2014 10min Permalink
Don Van Natta Jr., a three-time Pulitzer Prize winner, writes for ESPN and is the author of several books, including Wonder Girl.
"The nature of the kind of work I do as an investigative reporter, every story you do is going to get attacked and the tires are going to get kicked. It’s going to get scrutinized down to every phrase and down to every letter. You have to have multiple sources for key facts on this type of story. We set out to get that and we got it."
Thanks to TinyLetter and Bonobos for sponsoring this week's episode.
Oct 2014 Permalink
A hardcore night of Dungeons & Dragons with artist Zak Smith and his coterie of porn star players.
Vanessa Veselka Matter Oct 2014 25min Permalink
How a doctor and an S.A.C. trader got entangled in a financial scandal.
Patrick Radden Keefe New Yorker Oct 2014 50min Permalink
A three-part investigation into links between the cocaine trade, Nicaragua’s CIA-backed Contra rebels, and California’s crack epidemic in the 1980s.
Backers of CIA-led Nicaraguan rebels brought cocaine to poor L.A. neighborhoods in the early 1980s to help finance war – and a plague was born.
How a smuggler, a bureaucrat and an ambitious teenager created the cocaine pipeline.
The impact of the crack epidemic.
Gary Webb San Jose Mercury News Aug 1996 Permalink
A pair of gamblers and a glitch too good to last.
Kevin Poulsen Wired Oct 2014 25min Permalink
“I am having a moment, but I only want more. I need more. I cannot merely be good enough because I am chased by the pernicious whispers that I might only be ‘good enough for a black woman.’”
Roxane Gay VQR Oct 2014 10min Permalink
What happens when humans get superpowers.
Benjamin Wallace-Wells New York Oct 2014 25min Permalink
How celebrity-led humanitarian aid exacerbated a crisis.
Alex Perry Newsweek Oct 2014 Permalink
The story of TWA Flight 841.
Hear Buzz Bissinger discuss this story, a Pultizer finalist now available online for the first time, on the Longform Podcast.
Buzz Bissinger St. Paul Pioneer Press May 1981 25min Permalink
America’s underground Chinese restaurant workers.
Lauren Hilgers New Yorker Oct 2014 25min Permalink
A teenager murdered by her best friends, a notorious cold case suddenly heats up and Diana Athill, 96, faces the end — the most-read articles this week in the new Longform App, available free for iPhone and iPad.
The murder of a West Virginia teenager by her two best friends.
Under the cover of curing addicts, they beat and brainwashed their charges in basements across California. When a cult deprogrammer crossed them, he found a rattlesnake in his mailbox.
Nearly 70 years after Bugsy Siegel’s unsolved murder in Beverly Hills, a family finally comes forward: they know who did it.
Amy Wallace Los Angeles 15min
The author, age 96, on the end.
Diana Athill The Guardian 10min
Sixteen-year-old Kalief Browder was accused of taking a backpack. He spent the next three years on Rikers Island, without trial.
The developer responsible for the tallest residential building in New York—the penthouse just sold for $90 million—lives in a two-story house in Queens.
Devin Leonard Businessweek Oct 2014 15min Permalink
A profile of Prince as Diamonds and Pearls was released, based mostly off a brief phone call, all the access he’ll allow.
Chris Heath Details Nov 1991 15min Permalink
The Nazis stole his family’s paintings, but Max Stern escaped and became one of Canada’s leading art dealers. Now, 20 after his death, he is changing the rules of restitution.
Sara Angel The Walrus Sep 2014 20min Permalink
A novelist and a psychotherapist discuss truth, fiction and the stories we tell ourselves.
JM Coetzee, Arabella Kurtz The Monthly Oct 2014 20min Permalink
Gamers, celebrities, military veterans, and publicists populate a capitalist future.
William Gibson Oct 2014 15min Permalink
The fall of Richard Roberts, anointed son and successor of televangelist Oral Roberts, who was fired as president of Oral Roberts University and evicted from the home he’d lived in for nearly 50 years.
Kiera Feldman This Land Press Oct 2014 35min Permalink
On Leon Botstein and the future of Bard College, which he has run for four decades.
Alice Gregory New Yorker Sep 2014 25min Permalink
Arlena Lindley’s boyfriend Alonzo Turner beat her for months and murdered her child. So why was she sent to prison for 45 years?
Alex Campbell Buzzfeed Oct 2014 30min Permalink