The Case of the Closely Watched Courtesans
Why 18th-century French police obsessively tracked elite sex workers.
Why 18th-century French police obsessively tracked elite sex workers.
Nina Kushner Slate Apr 2014 15min Permalink
Sixty years after Brown v. Board of Education, Southern schools have been resegregated.
Nikole Hannah-Jones ProPublica Apr 2014 40min Permalink
Barack Obama wanted to endorse gay marriage on his own timetable. Joe Biden had other plans.
Jo Becker New York Times Magazine Apr 2014 25min Permalink
Inside the lack of an investigation into Florida State Heisman Trophy winner Jameis Winston.
Walt Bogdanich New York Times Apr 2014 20min Permalink
Sam Biddle writes for Valleywag.
"It's a lot of overgrown, entitled manchildren pulling price tags out of the ether and passing them around. Considering Silicon Valley worthy of contempt is the first premise that we work from."
Thanks to TinyLetter for sponsoring this week's episode.
Apr 2014 Permalink
On addiction and addiction narratives.
Lauren Quinn Vela Apr 2014 10min Permalink
Do jellyfish have minds?
Oliver Sacks New York Review of Books Apr 2014 15min Permalink
Deep inside the world of Cartoon Network’s most popular show.
Maria Bustillos The Awl Apr 2014 35min Permalink
On a basketball coach starting over at the lowest levels of the game after his ascendant NCAA career ended in a hazy tabloid scene at a Cleveland crackhouse.
Scott Raab GQ Dec 1992 25min Permalink
Yasiel Puig’s journey to the Dodgers.
Jesse Katz Los Angeles Apr 2014 30min Permalink
A family’s story, one year after the Boston Marathon bombing.
David Abel Boston Globe Apr 2014 55min Permalink
The dark and dangerous world of extreme cavers.
Burkhard Bilger New Yorker Apr 2014 40min Permalink
A diagnosis in question.
James Ross Gardner Seattle Met Apr 2014 20min Permalink
Shai Agassi had nearly $1 billion in funding and a dream to replace gas guzzlers with electric cars. All he was missing was a plan.
Max Chafkin Fast Company Apr 2014 35min Permalink
On the trail of the phantom women who changed American music and vanished without a trace.
John Jeremiah Sullivan New York Times Magazine Apr 2014 55min Permalink
A fragile relationship teeters during a family vacation.
Amanda Miska Storychord Apr 2014 10min Permalink
How to buy college football players, in the words of a man who delivers the money.
Steven Godfrey SB Nation Apr 2014 20min Permalink
Robert Aaron was a veteran horn player who sold bags of heroin to friends to support his own habit. Then his friend Philip Seymour Hoffman overdosed.
John Leland New York Times Apr 2014 10min Permalink
A profile of photographer Ryan McGinley.
Alice Gregory GQ Apr 2014 20min Permalink
The story of a massacre in El Salvador.
Mark Danner New Yorker Dec 1993 2h45min Permalink
“In the recent history of American music, there’s no figure parallel to Lehrer in his effortless ascent to fame, his trajectory into the heart of the culture — and then his quiet, amiable, inexplicable departure.”
Ben Smith, Anita Badejo Buzzfeed Apr 2014 20min Permalink
“Since we live in an age in which silence is not only criminal but suicidal, I have been making as much noise as I can…”
An ode to aging.
Mark Jacobson New York Apr 2014 20min Permalink
Leslie Jamison, author of The Empathy Exams, on crying in movie theaters, “attention whores” and David Foster Wallace.
Svati Kirsten Narula, Leslie Jamison The Atlantic Apr 2014 10min Permalink
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