Madam Would-Be Mayor
A profile of Christine Quinn, odds-on favorite to be the next mayor of New York City.
A profile of Christine Quinn, odds-on favorite to be the next mayor of New York City.
Jonathan Van Meter New York Jan 2013 30min Permalink
Dr. Elisabeth Targ became famous for running scientific experiments that appeared to prove the healing power of faith. Then she got sick and became a test subject herself.
Po Bronson Wired Dec 2002 25min Permalink
On Luddites, “bands of men, organized, masked, anonymous, whose object was to destroy machinery used mostly in the textile industry,” and their literary spawn.
On the tortured psyche of former 49ers coach Bill Walsh and how it led to Finding the Winning Edge, his 550-page guide to the game that has become the football’s bible.
Seth Wickersham ESPN Jan 2013 20min Permalink
The life and work of Aaron Swartz, in context.
Tim Carmody The Verge Jan 2013 25min Permalink
After being diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, a 30-year-old woman loses most of her memory.
Craig Juer Washington Post Jan 2013 15min Permalink
Why Iran punished two leading AIDS doctors.
Tina Rosenberg Prospect Sep 2012 Permalink
Catch shares are touted by the government and environmental groups as the solution to overfishing. But for a new generation under the system, the economics consist mainly of “absentee landlords, brokers and bankers, [and] fish quota that costs more than your house.”
Lee van der Voo Seattle Weekly Jan 2013 Permalink
The outgoing treasury secretary on his financial crisis regrets, putting policy before politics, and whether Washington will ever be able to strike a grand bargain.
Liaquat Ahamed, Timothy Geithner The New Republic Jan 2013 15min Permalink
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Calculating restitution for victims of child pornography.
Emily Bazelon New York Times Magazine Jan 2013 20min Permalink
“Hillary Clinton was never a shy person.”
Connie Bruck New Yorker May 1994 2h10min Permalink
A history of the Hollywood publicity racket.
Anne Helen Petersen The Virginia Quarterly Review Jan 2013 30min Permalink
On being stalked in the age of the Internet.
James Lasdun The Chronicle of Higher Education Jan 2013 20min Permalink
Susan Orlean is a staff writer at The New Yorker.
"There's always the fear, which comes with having done it for a long time, that you're repeating yourself. That's actually a genuine concern—you worry that you're becoming an imitiation of yourself ... The funny thing is that you spend the first half of your career wanting desperately to have a voice that's distinctive and recognizable, then you go to the other side of that and think oh my god, all my stories sound the same."
Thanks to TinyLetter and Digg for sponsoring this week's episode!
Jan 2013 Permalink
Twenty years ago, Ramaphosa was by Mandela’s side as apartheid ended and in line to become deputy president. He didn’t get the job. Now one of the richest men in Africa, he’s finally getting the chance.
Bill Keller New York Times Magazine Jan 2013 20min Permalink
Digging for Return of the Jedi set remnants in the desert.
Jon Mooallem Harper's Mar 2009 30min Permalink
On the cranky king of New York sports talk.
Joe DePaolo SB Nation Jan 2013 30min Permalink
A scholarly dispute devolves into criminal impersonation.
Batya Ungar-Sargon Tablet Jan 2013 10min Permalink
The science behind why high school sucks.
Jennifer Senior New York Jan 2013 20min Permalink
How the United States came to spend more on defense than all the other nations of the world combined.
Jill Lepore New Yorker Jan 2013 20min Permalink
Afghanistan’s Kyrgyz nomads survive in one of Earth’s most remote places, a pocket of land 14,000 feet high where the currency is sheep, the dream is a road, and many will go an entire lifetime without ever seeing a tree.
Michael Finkel National Geographic Feb 2013 15min Permalink
When the East Coast mob showed up in L.A. in 1946, the LAPD formed a ruthess special unit to run them out of town: the Gangster Squad.
Paul Lieberman The Los Angeles Times Oct 2008 30min Permalink
Learning of a plot against the life of the newly elected Lincoln, Alan Pinkerton decamps to Baltimore and infiltrates the conspiracy.
Daniel Stashower Smithsonian Jan 2013 Permalink
A trip to CES, “what a World’s Fair might look like if brands were more important than countries.”
Lydia DePillis The New Republic Jan 2013 20min Permalink