Deception Is Futile
In search of the perfect lie detector test.
In search of the perfect lie detector test.
Adam Higginbotham Wired Jan 2013 15min Permalink
On commercial diving, the third most deadly profession.
Nathaniel Rich New York Review of Books Jan 2013 20min Permalink
In this special episode with Stephen Rodrick, contributing writer at the New York Times Magazine and contributing editor at Men's Journal, Rodrick discusses his recent story "Here Is What Happens When You Cast Lindsay Lohan in Your Movie."
"Publicists don't want to give you access because they're afraid of what you're going to see. But if you spend enough time with anybody, short of Mussolini or Ghengis Khan, they're going to humanize themselves. Because they're human beings, like you are. And they have whatever demented battles they're fighting, their version of crazy, but if you get to spend some time with them as flesh and blood, they're going to come across as flesh and blood in the story."
Jan 2013 Permalink
Being injured in the NFL.
How an overzealous forensic pathologist and his odontologist sidekick put innocent Mississippi residents behind bars – and let killers run free.
Radley Balko The Huffington Post Jan 2013 30min Permalink
How PTSD spreads from returning soldiers to their families.
Mac McClelland Mother Jones Jan 2013 35min Permalink
Sponsored
Our sponsor again this week is Aeon, a new digital magazine of ideas and culture. Aeon publishes an original essay every weekday, several of which have been picked for Longform. Here is a trio of recent favorites:
Luddite Love
Claire L Evans on why old relationships should fade like a photograph, not haunt your social networks forever.
Earth's Holy Fool?
Michael Ruse on the Gaia paradox — some scientists hate it, the public loves it, and they may both be right.
World Enough
John Quiggin on the emerging opportunity to simultaneously end poverty and protect the environment.
Read those stories and more at aeonmagazine.com.
He was an 18 year old Marine bound for Iraq. She was a high school senior in West Virginia. They grew intimate over IM. His dad also started contacting her. No one was who they claimed to be and it led to a murder.
Nadya Labi Wired Aug 2007 15min
John Dirr’s son Eli didn’t really have cancer. In fact, neither Eli nor John Dirr ever existed. The story of a decade-long hoax.
Adrian Chen Gawker Jun 2012
On an affliction for the digital age, “Munchausen by internet.”
Cienna Madrid The Stranger Nov 2012 35min
How a 19-year-old actress and a few struggling Web filmmakers created a star.
Joshua Davis Wired Dec 2006 15min
How a Massachusetts psychotherapist fell for a Nigerian e-mail scam.
Michael Zuckoff New Yorker May 2006 20min
The story was told by Sports Illustrated, CBS News, and countless others: linbeacker Manti Te’o, Heisman trophy candidate and the face of Notre Dame football, was playing brilliantly despite the tragic loss of his girfriend to leukemia early in the season. The reporters missed one key element of Te’o’s story, however: the girl hadn’t died. She couldn’t have. She didn’t exist.
Timothy Burke, Jack Dickey Deadspin Jan 2013 15min
May 2006 – Jan 2013 Permalink
Steven Cohen, troubled founder a $14 billion hedge fund, has an eye for modern art.
Gary Sernovitz n+1 Jan 2013 15min Permalink
As NATO leaves, the Afghan National Army grapples with a resilient Taliban.
Luke Mogelson New York Times Magazine Jan 2013 20min Permalink
The story was told by Sports Illustrated, CBS News, and countless others: linbeacker Manti Te’o, Heisman trophy candidate and the face of Notre Dame football, was playing brilliantly despite the tragic loss of his girlfriend to leukemia early in the season. The reporters missed one key element of Te’o’s story, however: the girl hadn’t died. She couldn’t have. She didn’t exist.
Timothy Burke, Jack Dickey Deadspin Jan 2013 15min Permalink
In 1980, Richard Pryor doused himself in rum, lit himself, and streaked though the streets or Northridge in a ball of flames. He would go on to live another 25 years.
Julian Upton Bright Lights Film Journal May 2007 25min Permalink
Starlee Kine is a contributor to This American Life and the New York Times Magazine.
"There's a fearlessness I had when I was younger that I don't have now ... It threw me into a crisis, the Internet in general. You're more cautious about what you kind of have out there. There's that, that I just don't want people to know every single thing anymore, but there's [also] an inner fear that did not exist before, an inner censoring that was not there."
Thanks to TinyLetter for sponsoring this week's episode!
Jan 2013 Permalink
From pinball prohibition in 1940s NYC to Dave & Buster’s, the rise and fall of the American arcade.
Laura June The Verge Jan 2012 30min Permalink
On the casting process for New York’s cult leader-like spin instructors.
Alex Morris New York Jan 2013 10min Permalink
An inmate’s protest.
Ann Neumann Guernica Jan 2013 20min Permalink
Why parties, love, kids, conversation and more are so miserable (at least to Phillip Lopate).
Phillip Lopate Ploughshares Apr 1986 30min Permalink
An oral history of the University of Texas Tower massacre.
Pamela Colloff Texas Monthly Aug 2006 40min Permalink
A reassessment of the calm, cool JFK.
Benjamin Schwarz The Atlantic Jan 2013 20min Permalink
The psychology of cults and the scholars who fight about it.
Charlotte Allen Lingua Franca Dec 1998 20min Permalink
The rise of Israel’s far right.
David Remnick New Yorker Jan 2013 35min Permalink
Adventures in public speaking.
Rachel Aviv The Believer Feb 2007 20min Permalink
A bookkeeper’s $9 million swindle, her lavish second life, and the boss who didn’t notice.
Neil Swidey The Boston Globe Sep 2006 25min Permalink
A day in the economic life of the Nairobi’s Kibera, the largest shanty-town in Africa.
The Economist Dec 2012 15min Permalink
A eulogy for the activist.
Cory Doctorow BoingBoing Jan 2013 10min Permalink