Branded For Life
What it’s like to be Enzyte’s “Smiling Bob,” and other tales of acting as a product’s public face.
What it’s like to be Enzyte’s “Smiling Bob,” and other tales of acting as a product’s public face.
Felix Gillette Businessweek Sep 2012 15min Permalink
An oral history of Cheers.
Brian Raftery GQ Sep 2012 45min Permalink
Wandering through the Frankfurt Book Fair.
Gideon Lewis-Kraus Harper's Mar 2009 Permalink
Vegetables are “blue” in Japanese and other observations on the uneasy relationship between color and language.
Aatish Bhatia Empirical Zeal Jun 2012 20min Permalink
Scientology’s stronghold on Tom Cruise’s dating life.
Maureen Orth Vanity Fair Sep 2012 30min Permalink
A day at the mall with the cast of Here Comes Honey Boo Boo.
Rich Juzwiak Gawker Sep 2012 15min Permalink
Westerners’ spiritual quests in India gone wrong.
Scott Carney Details Sep 2012 15min Permalink
Gideon Lewis-Kraus is the author of A Sense of Direction.
"My best friend, who is a fiction writer, she once said to me that she saw a lot of the things I was doing as 'wring tenderness from absurdity.' That wouldn't have occurred to me to put it that way, but that does seem to me [what] I like to do ... I am someone who can very easily be dismissive, or even contemptuous. And one of the things I like about reporting a story, particularly reporting a story that is ultimately, counterintuitively, positive, is that it gives me a chance to work through that, and be the more tender, sympathetic person that I would like to be in real life."
Sep 2012 Permalink
How a group of farmers came to believe that their relatives were returning from the grave.
Abigail Tucker Smithsonian Sep 2012 10h Permalink
A conversation on the “bedeviling sorts of indeterminacies one encounters the deeper one drills.”
Errol Morris, Lawrence Weschler Public Books Jun 2012 25min Permalink
On China’s pop music charm offensive.
Bruce Einhorn, Susan Berfield Businessweek Sep 2012 15min Permalink
The evolution of an obsession.
Lisa Hix, Steven Martin Collectors Weekly Sep 2012 25min Permalink
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A remembrance of JFK, Jr.
Frank DiGiacomo The New York Observer Jul 1999 10min Permalink
“Redistricting today has become the most insidious practice in American politics—a way, as the opportunistic machinations following the 2010 census make evident, for our elected leaders to entrench themselves in 435 impregnable garrisons from which they can maintain political power while avoiding demographic realities.”
Robert Draper The Atlantic Sep 2012 20min Permalink
Stephanie had cancer, until she didn’t.
Maciej Ceglowski Idle Words Sep 2012 20min Permalink
A profile of Kermit Oliver, a reclusive, critically acclaimed artist who designs scarves for Hermès and works nights at the Waco post office.
Jason Sheeler Texas Monthly Oct 2012 Permalink
The rise of drug-resistant gonorrhea.
Jerome Groopman New Yorker Sep 2012 15min Permalink
The environmental impact of server farms.
James Glanz New York Times Sep 2012 20min Permalink
Exploring remote atolls in the South Pacific.
Andrew McCarthy Travel + Leisure Oct 2012 10min Permalink
The invention of political consulting.
Jill Lepore New Yorker Sep 2012 25min Permalink
Debates surrounding physician-assisted dying in the U.S.
Marcia Angell New York Review of Books Oct 2012 15min Permalink
The story of a device that delivers electric shocks to students at a school for special needs.
Paul Kix Boston Magazine Jul 2008 Permalink
An attempt at writing about the football coach.
J. R. Moehringer Los Angeles Dec 2007 45min Permalink
What the wife of a ponzi schemer knew.
Tony D'Souza Sarasota Magazine Sep 2012 Permalink