Between the Lines
On the science of parking spaces.
On the science of parking spaces.
Dave Gardetta Los Angeles Dec 2011 25min Permalink
On a child diagnosed with autism:
The worst part was that I knew he sensed it, too. In the same way that I know when he wants vegetable puffs or puréed fruit by the subtle pitch of his cries, I could tell that he also perceived the change—and feared it. At night he was terrified to go to bed, needing to hold my fingers with one hand and touch my face with the other in order to get the few hours of sleep he managed. Every morning he was different. Another word was gone, another moment of eye contact was lost. He began to cry in a way that was untranslatable. The wails were not meant as messages to be decoded; they were terrified expressions of being beyond expression itself.
Amy Leal The Chronicle of Higher Education Oct 2011 15min Permalink
A 21-year-old falls into a coma from which he’ll never emerge. His mother, desperate to grant his wish of becoming a father, has his sperm preserved. Two years later, after a fruitless search for other alternatives, she finds a willing doctor and tries one last option: carrying her son’s child herself.
Dan P. Lee GQ Jun 2011 25min Permalink
Military recruiters reveal just how corrupted—and sometimes deadly—their job has become.
Michael Bronner Vanity Fair Sep 2005 40min Permalink
There is so much talk now about the art of the film that we may be in danger of forgetting that most of the movies we enjoy are not works of art.
Pauline Kael Harper's Feb 1969 1h Permalink
The unlikely people who’ve turned to selling weed in the recession.
Tony D'Souza Mother Jones Dec 2011 Permalink
A young couple’s story.
Amy Harmon New York Times Dec 2011 20min Permalink
A doctor reveals widespread organ harvesting of prisoners in China.
Ethan Gutmann The Weekly Standard Dec 2011 15min Permalink
Walter Isaacson’s book is long, dull, often flat-footed, and humorless. It hammers on one nail, incessantly: that Steve Jobs was an awful man, but awful in the service of products people really liked (and eventually bought lots of) and so in the end his awfulness was probably OK.
Gary Sernovitz n+1 Dec 2011 15min Permalink
A profile of Carrie Brownstein, riot grrrl and creator of Portlandia.
Margaret Talbot New Yorker Dec 2011 20min Permalink
A profile of John Williams.
John Jurgensen The Wall Street Journal Dec 2011 10min Permalink
TheFacebook, as it was then called, had just reached 1.5 million users:
In the end, Zuckerberg says, quarrels over money rarely come up because money is not their priority. “We’re in a really interesting place because if you look at the assets we have, we’re fucking rich,” Zuckerberg adds. “But if you look at like the cash and the amount of money we have to live with, we’re dirt poor. All the stuff we own is tied up in random assets” like servers and the company itself. “Living like we do now, it’s, like, not that big of a deal for us. We’re not like, Aw man, I wish I had a million dollars now. Because, like, we kind of like living like college students and being dirty. It’s fun."
Kevin J. Feeney The Harvard Crimson Feb 2005 20min Permalink
Coping with a brother’s suicide.
We tell stories about the dead in order that they may live, if not in body then at least in mind—the minds of those left behind. Although the dead couldn’t care less about these stories—all available evidence suggests the dead don’t care about much—it seems that if we tell them often enough, and listen carefully to the stories of others, our knowledge of the dead can deepen and grow. If we persist in this process, digging and sifting, we had better be prepared for hard truths; like rocks beneath the surface of a plowed field, they show themselves eventually.
Philip Connors Lapham's Quarterly Dec 2011 15min Permalink
How Viennese psychologist Ernest Dichter transformed advertising:
What makes soap interesting? Why choose one brand over another? Dichter’s first contract was with the Compton Advertising Agency, to help them sell Ivory soap. Market research typically involved asking shoppers questions like “Why do you use this brand of soap?” Or, more provocatively, “Why don’t you use this brand of soap?” Regarding such lines of inquiry as useless, Dichter instead conducted a hundred so-called “depth interviews”, or open-ended conversations, about his subjects’ most recent scrubbing experiences. The approach was not unlike therapy, with Dichter mining the responses for encoded, unconscious motives and desires. In the case of soap, he found that bathing was a ritual that afforded rare moments of personal indulgence, particularly before a romantic date (“You never can tell,” explained one woman). He discerned an erotic element to bathing, observing that “one of the few occasions when the puritanical American [is] allowed to caress himself or herself [is] while applying soap.” As for why customers picked a particular brand, Dichter concluded that it wasn’t exactly the smell or price or look or feel of the soap, but all that and something else besides—that is, the gestalt or “personality” of the soap.
The Economist Dec 2011 15min Permalink
In 2008, a 38-year old Oklahoma nurse whom I'll call Kelly adopted an eight-year old girl, "Mary," from Ethiopia. It was the second adoption for Kelly, following one from Guatemala. She'd sought out a child from Ethiopia in the hopes of avoiding some of the ethical problems of adopting from Guatemala: widespread stories of birthmothers coerced to give up their babies and even payments and abductions at the hands of brokers procuring adoptees for unwitting U.S. parents. Now, even after using a reputable agency in Ethiopia, Kelly has come to believe that Mary never should have been placed for adoption.
Kathryn Joyce The Atlantic Dec 2011 15min Permalink
Why it took more than a decade for the posthumous pardon of Tim Cole, even after another inmate confessed to the brutal crime that put Cole away.
Beth Schwartzapfel Mother Jones Jan 2012 Permalink
The author travels to North Korea in the years after Kim Jong Il’s succession. He also gets a haircut:
But suddenly the whole chair starts vibrating and I find myself surrendering to her, as she begins to knead the acupressure points on my forehead and neck. Next it's ginseng unguent all over my face. Gobs of pomade smelling like bubble gum go on my hair. Then, like a true daughter of the revolution, she upholsters her blow dryer and begins combing in the pomade and sculpting my now subdued hair. The pungent aroma of heated pomade, like fat frying in a pan, fills the room. My stylist gives my hair a little twist with the comb. It feels like she's making a Dairy Queen curl on top. Then she fries it in place with the dryer. Another dab of pomade. More mincing motions with the comb. Another blast of hot air. Suddenly I feel a moist breeze around my ears. She's taken out a can of imported aerosol spray and is cementing her creation in place. She's delicately patting my new coiffure now the way a baker taps a loaf of bread to see if it's springy to the touch. She murmurs something. I'm breathless with expectation. I open my eyes and gaze into the mirror. Magnifique! It looks like I have a loofah sponge on my head! I am reborn -- a cross between Elvis and a 1950s Bulgarian hydrology expert! At last I have become a true son of Pyongyang!
Orville Schell Harper's Jul 1996 30min Permalink
What happened when Pakistan shut down the vitally important Karachi to Kabul trucking line.
Shahan Mufti Businessweek Dec 2011 20min Permalink
How shrunken heads ended up in downtown Chicago.
Mary Roach Outside Jan 2012 15min Permalink
Inside the shadowy meetings between Chicago’s violent gang members and its elected officials.
The Vancouver riots and an unforgettable image.
Chris Ballard Sports Illustrated Dec 2011 20min Permalink
Alarmingly sophisticated imitations of American currency have turned up all over the world and the false-paper trail leads to North Korea.
Stephen Mihm New York Times Magazine Jul 2012 35min Permalink
He was the world’s foremost collector of presidential memorabilia, an outsider with a pathological need to fit in. He was also a thief.
Eliza Gray The New Republic Dec 2011 30min Permalink
A former colleague visits the ‘Fire Fiend’ in prison.
Aaron Gell The New York Observer Dec 2011 15min Permalink
The search for what makes identical twins different.
Peter Miller National Geographic Dec 2011 15min Permalink