A Lost Boy Grows Up
The journey from a Sudanese refugee camp to an Atlanta police academy.
The journey from a Sudanese refugee camp to an Atlanta police academy.
Kevin Sack New York Times Magazine Dec 2013 20min Permalink
In 2009, three followers of an Oprah-endorsed motivational speaker named James Arthur Ray died in an Arizona sweat lodge. Now, after serving two years in prison for negligent homicide, Ray is trying to get back on the self-help circuit.
Matt Stroud The Verge Dec 2013 25min Permalink
Jason Fagone, a contributing editor at Wired and a writer-at-large for Philadelphia, is the author of Ingenious.
"It seemed like all the big guys in American society had let us down, all the elites. And here was a contest that was explicitly looking to the little guy and saying, 'We don't care what you've done before or how much money you have in your pocket. If you solve this problem, you win the money.' There was something so optimistic and hopeful and cool about that to me."
Thanks to TinyLetter and Squarespace for sponsoring this week's episode.
Dec 2013 Permalink
One woman’s beautiful, strange, and troubling final days.
Justin Heckert Indianapolis Monthly Dec 2013 30min Permalink
On the volunteer “Wikipedians” who devote their free time to editing Wikipedia.
Jonathan Dee New York Times Magazine Jul 2007 20min Permalink
A profile of Avishek Sengupta, who drowned at the Walk the Plank obstacle during an endurance race last year.
Elliott D. Woods Outside Dec 2013 30min Permalink
On the sudden death of an up-and-coming rapper.
Eli Rosenberg The Fader Dec 2013 10min Permalink
In 1902, a poet attempts to stage the world’s first “perfume concert.”
Michelle Legro The Believer May 2013 20min Permalink
Visiting Cambodia, and a Khmer Rouge prison camp, 30 years after the genocide.
Michael Paterniti GQ Jul 2009 40min Permalink
The war between Major League Baseball and Alex Rodriguez, “fought with six-figure payoffs in the tanning salons and strip malls of South Florida.”
Steve Fishman New York Dec 2013 30min Permalink
He was the poster boy for the movement to repeal “don’t ask, don’t tell.” Now Dan Choi is sleeping on a couch, smoking too much weed, watching TED talks and wondering what he’ll do with the rest of his life.
Gabriel Arana The American Prospect Dec 2013 30min Permalink
On Ambien and the search for the next blockbuster insomnia drug.
Ian Parker New Yorker Dec 2013 45min Permalink
At 9:14pm on November 22, 1987, sportscaster Dan Roan was doing the Bears highlights on Chicago’s WGN-TV when the station’s signal was hijacked. Someone wearning a rubber Max Headroom mask appeared, silently, on TV screens around the city. A few hours later, Headroom popped up again on another channel, this time for longer and with audio. Despite FBI and FCC investigations, the case remains unsolved.
Chris Knittel Motherboard Nov 2013 25min Permalink
How the American worker got screwed.
Harold Meyerson The American Prospect Oct 2013 20min Permalink
In the ’90s, a gynecologist named Gao Yaojie exposed an AIDS epidemic in rural China and the ensuing government cover-up. Forced to leave, she’s now 85 and living alone in New York.
Kathleen McLaughlin Buzzfeed Dec 2013 20min Permalink
The conspiracy theories surrounding the 1931 death of Hitler’s niece and object of affection.
Ron Rosenbaum Vanity Fair Apr 1992 55min Permalink
On the factories of India and the women whose lives they ruin.
Dana Liebelson Mother Jones Nov 2013 15min Permalink
A collection of picks by and about the former editor of the New York Observer, who died Friday.</p>
A Bosnian social psychologist who studies guilt and responsibility in the collective memory (and denial) of Sreberbica, which is “among the most scientifically documented mass killings in history.”
Tom Bartlett The Chronicle of Higher Education Nov 2013 25min Permalink
The death of a Russian dissident and how radioactive poison became a tool of assassins.
Will Storr Matter Nov 2013 35min Permalink
A profile of the world’s top photo retoucher, who typically can retouch over 100 images in a single issue of Vogue.
Lauren Collins New Yorker May 2008 25min Permalink
A political history of Donald Rumsfeld.
Mark Danner New York Review of Books Nov 2013 20min Permalink
On Silvio Berlusconi’s hedonism.
Berlusconi is Italy’s waning Hugh Hefner, alternately reviled and admired for his loyalty to his own appetites—except that he’s supposed to be running the country.
Ariel Levy New Yorker May 2011 40min Permalink
Lyndon Baines Johnson in retirement.
Leo Janos The Atlantic Jul 1973 Permalink
Amy Wallace is an editor-at-large for Los Angeles and a correspondent for GQ .
"I've written about the anti-vaccine movement. I love true crime. I've written a lot of murder stories. The thing that unites all of them—whether it's a celebrity profile or a biologist who murdered a bunch of people or Justin Timberlake—it's almost trite to say, but there's a humanity to each of these people. And figuring out what's making them tick in the moment, or in general, is interesting to me. In a way, that's my sweet spot."
Thanks to TinyLetter and Warby Parker for sponsoring this week's episode.
Nov 2013 Permalink