The Mystery of Why Marine Noah Pippin Went AWOL
The search for a missing soldier.
The search for a missing soldier.
Mark Sundeen Outside Apr 2012 45min Permalink
On living alone, which more people are doing today than ever before.
Nathan Heller New Yorker Apr 2012 15min Permalink
A writer’s trip home to Hot Springs, Arkansas, and the racetrack inextricably linked with the histories of his family and his hometown.
David Hill Grantland Apr 2012 25min Permalink
Life after a stint on The Real World.
John Jeremiah Sullivan GQ Jul 2005 25min Permalink
The toll of being a cop on the most successful force in the country.
Chris Smith New York Apr 2012 25min Permalink
From grizzlies in Alaska to whales at SeaWorld, stories of animals turning on humans. At Slate.
A history of the cell phone ringtone.
Many recent hip-hop songs make terrific ringtones because they already sound like ringtones. The polyphonic and master-tone versions of “Goodies,” by Ciara, for example, are nearly identical. Ringtones, it turns out, are inherently pop: musical expression distilled to one urgent, representative hook. As ringtones become part of our environment, they could push pop music toward new levels of concision, repetition, and catchiness.
Sasha Frere-Jones New Yorker Mar 2005 Permalink
On the empire built by “Painter of Light” Thomas Kinkade.
Susan Orlean New Yorker Oct 2001 20min Permalink
How the golfer hasn’t changed, post-scandal.
Try as his publicity squad might, it's tough to maintain—or now restore—the Tiger Image when former insiders sprout secret-sharing campaigns. "It's always a divorce," David Feherty, longtime commentator and golf-gab-show host, told me recently. "Tiger expects the curtains to remain drawn, and when somebody opens them, it pisses him off. He has appeared superhuman for so long, and it's like he feels the need to perpetuate that myth."
Daniel Riley GQ May 2012 15min Permalink
The complicated case of Brigitte Harris, who, after years of abuse, accidentally killed her father by cutting off his penis.
Robert Kolker New York Apr 2012 15min Permalink
Life and death inside a NATO hospital in Afghanistan.
Corinne Reilly The Virginian Pilot Jul 2011 45min Permalink
How movies, music and literature reproduce the disaster.
Andrew Wilson Smithsonian Mar 2012 4h15min Permalink
Why dealing with the IRS is so difficult – and the woman charged with making it easier:
[Nina] Olson noted that the IRS relied on computers to audit all but the highest-income brackets. “We’re getting to a situation where the only people who will get face-to-face audits are the 1 Percent,” she said. “For the majority of taxpayers, the IRS has become faceless, nameless, with no accountability and no liability.”
Elizabeth Dwoskin Businessweek Apr 2012 15min Permalink
An anonymous essay on time spent in “protective custody” at a Nazi camp.
Dr. X The Atlantic Sep 1939 15min Permalink
On the Texas-sized trash island floating in the Pacific.
Thomas Morton Vice Feb 2008 Permalink
The inside story of Pennsylvania’s governor and the fall of Joe Paterno.
Don Van Natta Jr. ESPN Apr 2012 25min Permalink
He is a cheerful old farmer who jokes as he serves rice cakes made by his wife, and then he switches easily to explaining what it is like to cut open a 30-year-old man who is tied naked to a bed and dissect him alive, without anesthetic.
Nicholas Kristof New York Times Mar 1995 10min Permalink
A profile Hunter Moore, the founder of the controversial revenge-porn site Is Anyone Up.
Camille Dodero Village Voice Apr 2012 20min Permalink
Every year, more than $6 billion is raised by breast cancer charities. A look at how much of that money ends up in the hands of scammers.
Lea Goldman Marie Claire Sep 2011 Permalink
A father and his daughter’s brain tumor.
Aleksandar Hemon New Yorker Jun 2011 25min Permalink
From Tetris to Angry Birds, an examination of “stupid games.”
Sam Anderson New York Times Magazine Apr 2012 20min Permalink
A report from the KKK’s 2012 Faith and Freedom conference in Arkansas:
It's quite disconcerting in this modern age to be in a room full of white people who are all spouting the most vile racist slurs that one can imagine, openly, while everyone else laughs and applauds it. There is a Twilight Zone feeling to it, as if you'd stumbled into a secret clubhouse where white people can say those forbidden things—the Valhalla of dumb racist jokes.
Hamilton Nolan Gawker Apr 2012 15min Permalink