The End of Food
The story of Soylent, a Silicon Valley concoction designed to replace your meals.
The story of Soylent, a Silicon Valley concoction designed to replace your meals.
Lizzie Widdicombe New Yorker May 2014 25min Permalink
A dispatch from the Central African Republic.
Graeme Wood The New Republic May 2014 25min Permalink
A profile of rapper Bun B, “the unofficial mayor of Houston.”
Katy Vine Texas Monthly Apr 2014 Permalink
Revisiting a high school hoax.
Sandy Allen Buzzfeed May 2014 25min Permalink
The life and mysterious death of dissident Bulgarian writer and radio journalist Georgi Markov.
Dimiter Kenarov The Nation Apr 2014 20min Permalink
A son goes to visit his dying father.
For a daily short story recommendation from our editors, try Longform Fiction or follow @longformfiction on Twitter.
Sam Lipsyte New Yorker May 2014 20min Permalink
An investigation into allegations that Rwandan President Paul Kagame is assassinating exiled dissidents.
Geoffrey York, Judi Rever The Globe and Mail May 2014 20min Permalink
“A story is a kind of biopsy of human life.”
Elizabeth Gaffney, Lorrie Moore The Paris Review Jun 2001 35min Permalink
In appreciation of meaningful, ubiquitous, enduring applications.
Previously: Paul Ford on the Longform Podcast.
Along for the ride with a boatload of refugees risking their lives.
The haunted past of Amy Bishop, a University of Alabama neurobiologist who shot six colleagues during a staff meeting.
Heartbreak at the edge of the earth.
Ariel Levy New Yorker 15min
“Oh, my God. This is going to be a huge one.”
“Who would expect the Embassy of Cambodia? Nobody. Nobody could have expected it, or be expecting it. It’s a surprise, to us all. The Embassy of Cambodia!”
Zadie Smith New Yorker 35min
Why medical bills are killing us. [sub req’d]
On May 16, 1913, after he’d spent years earning a chance at American stardom, Canary Islander shortstop Alfredo Cabrera played his one and only Major League Baseball game.
Erik Malinowski Buzzfeed May 2013 20min Permalink
Shamir is 15, bored and broke and balancing right on the edge.
Mosi Secret New York Times Magazine May 2014 20min Permalink
The undoing of Tina Brown.
Luke O'Brien Politico Magazine May 2014 30min Permalink
Can an illegal drug heal PTSD?
Lessley Anderson The Verge Apr 2014 Permalink
</h2>The voting booth, the jury box, the bench and the chair — a collection of picks on all sides of capital punishmet.
Some passions are more dangerous than others.
Wendy Brenner Oxford American Dec 2005 20min Permalink
Susan Dominus is a staff writer at the New York Times Magazine.
"A lot of reporting is really just hanging around and not going home until something interesting happens."
Thanks to TinyLetter for sponsoring this week's episode.
Apr 2014 Permalink
A tour with the Stones, an appearance on The Munsters, and a song about “how Boston is a shit hole.”
Legs McNeil Vice Apr 2014 20min Permalink
Inside Atlanta’s 80s-era queer underground.
The controversy-filled world of shipping pallets.
Jacob Hodes Cabinet Apr 2014 20min Permalink
Policing the world of experimental research in the age of TED talks and Freakonomics.
Jerry Adler Pacific Standard May 2014 20min Permalink
Policing Tottenham Hotspur fans.
David Peisner Buzzfeed Apr 2014 30min Permalink
At a high-profile Libertarian conference, everyone agrees government should be smaller, but what should replace it is much more contested.
Livia Gershon Aeon Apr 2014 15min Permalink
“Which is how, despite the drinking, the stealing, the racist outburst, the abysmal courtroom performance, the disbarment, and the ultimate imprisonment of his lead attorney, an intellectually disabled man has ended up on the verge of execution.”
Marc Bookman Mother Jones Apr 2014 20min Permalink
A trip to Turkey for a soccer game between bitter rivals and its accompanying madness.
Spencer Hall SB Nation Apr 2014 30min Permalink