The Longform Guide to Sad Retired Athletes
Iverson, DiMaggio, Dykstra, Canseco, TO — a collection of picks on post-career woe.
Iverson, DiMaggio, Dykstra, Canseco, TO — a collection of picks on post-career woe.
“Which is the largest country in the world, economically speaking? It’s America, the United States. Do you know why? Because way back—this is history, you can look it up on the Internet—the colonization was done by men who believed in the word of God. And they were tithers. That’s why you see on the dollar bill: ‘In God we trust.”
Alex Cuadros Businessweek Apr 2013 15min Permalink
“I love my mother a not-normal amount.”
Mary H K Choi Aeon Apr 2013 10min Permalink
Marketing research,the pre-Facebook history of ‘likeability,’ and why there will never be a ‘dislike’ button.
Robert W. Gehl The New Inquiry Mar 2013 Permalink
A profile of Alexey Navalny, a Russian anti-corruption crusader.
Julia Ioffe New Yorker Apr 2011 25min Permalink
Why awareness isn’t saving lives.
Peggy Orenstein New York Times Magazine Apr 2013 20min Permalink
When a 26-year-old Chinese entrepreneur pulled over to answer a text message he was carjacked by Boston bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev. This is what happened that night and how he escaped.
Eric Moskowitz The Boston Globe Apr 2013 10min Permalink
Aside from the wealthiest players, nine out of 10 NFL athletes are likely to be insolvent within 10 years of retirement. A new executive MBA program aims to change that.
Ben Austen GQ Apr 2013 20min Permalink
Arts Politics World Movies & TV
On dissident filmmakers in Syria.
Lawrence Wright New Yorker May 2006 30min Permalink
The Livingston Awards honor the year’s best work by journliasts under the age of 35. Finalists in local, national, and international reporting were announced today—see the full list.
Dinner with the novelist, the book critic and “Myshkin, a 14-year-old female dachshund who is deaf but decidedly not mute.”
Boris Kachka New York Apr 2013 15min Permalink
Sponsored
Our sponsor this week is Aeon, a great new digital magazine covering ideas and culture. Aeon publishes an original essay every weekday, several of which have been picked for Longform. Here are three recent favorites:
Spaced Out, by Greg Klerkx
Living in space was meant to be our next evolutionary step. What happened to the dream of the final frontier?
There’s an App for That, by John-Paul Flintoff
What to eat, when to meditate and whether to call your parents: can self-monitoring tools make a difference?
This Is Humankind, by Polina Aronson
If my grandfather could survive the Siege of Leningrad and still distinguish between a German and a Nazi, so can I.
Read those stories and more at aeonmagazine.com.
Dillie Nerios’s job is to convince people food is a right, not a luxury.
Eli Saslow Washington Post Apr 2013 10min Permalink
The harrowing first ascent of the mountain’s West Ridge.
Grayson Schaffer Outside Apr 2013 Permalink
Ted Conover is the author of five books and the recent Harper's article "The Way of All Flesh."
"My identity is a rubber band. It can stretch that way and it can stretch this way. When I get home it goes mostly back into the shape it's been, but not completely. And it's that not completely that is interesting and makes me who I am."</i>
Thanks to TinyLetter for sponsoring this week's episode!
</blockquote>
Apr 2013 Permalink
On the drone strikes that killed Anwar al-Awlaki and his U.S.-born son.
Jeremy Scahill The Nation Apr 2013 20min Permalink
The sole survivor of a 1966 shipwreck tells his tale.
Edward McClelland The Morning News Apr 2013 10min Permalink
A collection of war stories told by women who have seen combat while serving in the U.S. military.
Nathaniel Penn GQ May 2013 20min Permalink
Fifty years ago, a gay, cross-dressing, black singer named Jackie Shane scored a surprise radio hit. A few years later, he disappeared.
Carl Wilson Hazlitt Apr 2013 Permalink
“Dan Seavey stepped ashore the docks of Grand Haven, Michigan, armed with two of the most dangerous weapons known to man: booze and bad intentions.” The story of the early 20th century’s fiercest Great Lakes pirate.
Michael Bie Classic Wisconsin Jan 2009 10min Permalink
A trip to an uncompromising cattle ranch.
Mac McClelland Modern Farmer Apr 2013 10min Permalink
Best Article Politics Religion
In Ramapo, New York, the immigrant community and the growing population of Hasidic Jews had eyed each increasing wariness for years. Then the Hasidim took over the public schools, schools their children do not attend, and proceeded to gut them.
Benjamin Wallace-Wells New York Apr 2013 25min Permalink
On the history of Earth Day and the failure of the modern environmental movement.
Nicholas Lemann New Yorker Apr 2013 15min Permalink
Former Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling needed funding for his ambitious video-game startup. Rhode Island politicians needed jobs and a vision for how to transform the state’s beleaguered economy. The story of a $75 million bet gone bust.
Matt Bai New York Times Apr 2013 Permalink
The growth of an immersive universe that is “part game and part soap opera and part shadow economy.”
Ashlee Vance Businessweek Apr 2013 10min Permalink