The Most Dangerous Gamer
Jonathan Blow is both the video game industry’s most cynical critic and its most ambitious game developer. As he finishes his indescribable game-opus, a trip inside the head of a videogame auteur.
Jonathan Blow is both the video game industry’s most cynical critic and its most ambitious game developer. As he finishes his indescribable game-opus, a trip inside the head of a videogame auteur.
Taylor Clark The Atlantic May 2012 30min Permalink
From high school gyms in New York to beaches in Hawaii, our favorite stories by the New Yorker writer. Orlean’s archive on Longform.
How group of misfits in Texas including Willie Nelson and Waylon Jennings snubbed Nashville and brought the hippies and rednecks together. An oral history of outlaw country.
John Spong Texas Monthly Apr 2012 50min Permalink
An early profile of Lena Dunham.
Rebecca Mead New Yorker Nov 2010 20min Permalink
On a Victorian-era murder case, and the novel it inspired.
Rachel Cooke The Guardian Apr 2012 10min Permalink
On fashion, gender, a finding oneself in a pair of drop-crotch pants.
E. Alex Jung The Morning News Apr 2012 25min Permalink
A Supreme Court Justice revisits a rape trial from the 1950s.
On singer-songwriters Harry Nilsson, Randy Newman and Van Dyke Parks.
I get the sense that the labels' attitude toward these guys wasn't altogether different from a parent's attitude toward gifted children: Get them through the system, but make sure to give them a clean little corner to doodle in and pat them on the head when they show you what they've done, whether you understand it or not.
Mike Powell Pitchfork Apr 2012 15min Permalink
The expansion of private-security contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan is well known. But armed security personnel account for only about sixteen per cent of the over-all contracting force. The vast majority—more than sixty per cent of the total in Iraq—aren’t hired guns but hired hands. These workers, primarily from South Asia and Africa, often live in barbed-wire compounds on U.S. bases, eat at meagre chow halls, and host dance parties featuring Nepalese romance ballads and Ugandan church songs. A large number are employed by fly-by-night subcontractors who are financed by the American taxpayer but who often operate outside the law.
Sarah Stillman New Yorker Jun 2011 30min Permalink
An investigation of the county’s Tactical Narcotics Team and, in particular, a Christmas-themed sting dubbed “Santa’s Helper”:
A two-month investigation by New Times has found that Santa's Helper was a colossal waste of police resources. Of the 112 suspects arrested, 73 people were charged only with misdemeanor pot possession. The vast majority of the busted pot smokers were either released within 24 hours or avoided jail by promising to show up in court. Of the 73 alleged tokers, 68 of them — including Dante Level and his siblings — had no violent criminal record. If they were guilty of anything, it was smoking a joint on their own front porch.
Francisco Alvarado The Miami New Times Apr 2012 20min Permalink
The real-life events that inspired the new Richard Linklater dark comedy Bernie:
It’s a story about people believing what they want to believe, even when there’s evidence to the contrary. It’s a story about people not being what they seem. And it’s a story, as the movie poster says, “so unbelievable it must be true.” Which it is. I know this because the widow in the freezer was, in real life, my Aunt Marge, Mrs. Marjorie Nugent, my mother’s sister and, depending on whom you ask, the meanest woman in East Texas. She was 81 when she was murdered, and Bernie Tiede, her constant companion and rumored paramour, was 38. He’ll be eligible for parole in 2027, when he’ll be 69.
Joe Rhodes New York Times Magazine Apr 2012 20min Permalink
On the road with the band:
Axl Rose is carrying on like an Apache. He stormed into his home state for a concert and compared the fans there to prisoners at Auschwitz. He showed up two hours late for a New York show and launched into a tirade against his record company and various other institutions, including this magazine. He steamrolled into St. Louis, and before he left town, a riot had broken out. During an encore in Salt Lake City, he got ticked off because the Mormons weren't rocking and said, "I'll get out of here before I put anybody else to sleep." Then he did.
Kim Neely Rolling Stone Sep 1991 30min Permalink
In 1999, “original superagent” Leigh Steinberg represented 86 NFL athletes. His life today:
At age 63, Steinberg -- for years hailed as the real-life Maguire -- now finds himself a bankrupt, recovering alcoholic, plotting a comeback from the bottom. And before 10 p.m. tonight, as mandated by the California Bar Association, he must show that his urine is clean.
Daniel Roberts, Pablo S. Torre Fortune Apr 2012 15min Permalink
A young man’s personal account of undergoing “ex-gay treatment.”
Gabriel Arana The American Prospect Apr 2012 20min Permalink
A profile of Robert Caro, who’s been working on a biography on Lyndon Johnson for nearly 40 years.
Chris Jones Esquire Apr 2012 30min Permalink
What happens when Moneyball-style statistical analysis is applied to mixed martial arts.
Leon Neyfakh The Boston Globe Apr 2012 10min Permalink
A profile of Kanye West.
David Samuels The Atlantic Apr 2012 Permalink
A history of a small Texas town deep in the Chihuahuan desert:
The isolation is such that if you laid out the islands of the Hawaiian archipelago, and the deep ocean channels that separate them, on the road between Marfa and the East Texas of strip shopping and George Bush Jr., you’d still have 100 miles of blank highway stretching away in front of you.
Sean Wilsey McSweeney's Mar 1999 45min Permalink
A profile from his days living as a mountain monk in Southern California.
The life of an A-list Hollywood stylist.
Molly Young GQ Apr 2012 20min Permalink
BARR: What makes you laugh? BERNHARD: Well, it's really a myriad of things, but usually it's something that's very organic. It's something that happens on the street. BARR: Like fat people falling down? BERNHARD: No, no . . . [laughs] BARR: That really cracks me up. It's terrible.
Roseanne Barr Interview Apr 2012 15min Permalink
How KFC brought fried chicken to China and Africa as U.S. sales slumped.
Diane Brady Businessweek Mar 2012 10min Permalink
From shipbreakers in India to a plane crash in Brazil, organized crime in Naples to pirates in the Gulf of Aden—16 stories by a master of narrative non-fiction. Our Langewiesche archive.
The enduring system of organized crime in Naples.
William Langewiesche Vanity Fair Apr 2012 35min Permalink
Colonialism, the convertible peso, and the strange dance between the cheap beach tourist and the tour guide tout.
Chris Turner The Walrus Apr 2012 30min Permalink