Inside Marilyn Chambers
A profile of a porn star on trial.
A profile of a porn star on trial.
Pat Jordan GQ Sep 1987 25min Permalink
In 1988, 59 fifth graders in Washington D.C. were promised a free college education. This is the story of what followed.
Paul Schwartzman Washington Post Dec 2011 40min Permalink
On the “horrible weirdness” of Kim Jung Il’s Korea.
Philip Gourevitch New Yorker Sep 2003 1h Permalink
A portrait of Czech President Václav Havel as he left office.
David Remnick New Yorker Feb 2003 25min Permalink
Why little has changed in popular American style in the last 20 years.
Why is this happening? In some large measure, I think, it’s an unconscious collective reaction to all the profound nonstop newness we’re experiencing on the tech and geopolitical and economic fronts. People have a limited capacity to embrace flux and strangeness and dissatisfaction, and right now we’re maxed out.
Kurt Andersen Vanity Fair Jan 2012 15min Permalink
A year in the life of an oxycodone addict.
John Pendygraft, Lane DeGregory The St. Petersburg Times Dec 2011 40min Permalink
How a Texas woman pushed for autopsy reform.
Clinical autopsies, once commonplace in American hospitals, have become an increasing rarity and are conducted in just 5 percent of hospital deaths. Grief-stricken families like the Carswells desperately want the answers that an autopsy can provide. But they often do not know their rights in dealing with either coroners or medical examiners, who investigate unnatural deaths, or health-care providers, who delve into natural ones.
Marshall Allen ProPublica Dec 2011 10min Permalink
Our picks for the top 10 tech stories of the year, including work by Ashlee Vance (Businessweek), Alex Blumberg and Laura Sydell (Planet Money), and Maciej Ceglowski (Pinboard).
See the full list.
After decades of failed revitalization strategies, a town of 10,000 tries another.
Jonathan Mahler New York Times Magazine Dec 2011 30min Permalink
A great journalist’s greatest magazine stories.
Christopher Hitchens 10min
Christopher Hitchens 20min
Christopher Hitchens 10min
Christopher Hitchens 40min
Christopher Hitchens 45min
Christopher Hitchens 10min
Christopher Hitchens 40min
On the recovery of snowboarder Kevin Pearce, who suffered a massive brain injury five days before the 2010 Olympics.
Jonah Lehrer Outside May 2011 20min Permalink
James Wood on Saul Bellow:
One realizes, with a shock, that Bellow has taught one how to see and how to hear, has opened the senses. Until this moment one had not really thought of the looseness of a lightbulb filament, one had not heard the saliva bubbling in the harmonica, one had not seen well enough the nose pitted with black pores, and the demolition ball’s slow, heavy selection of its victims. A dozen good writers–Updike, DeLillo, others–can render you the window of a fish shop, and do it very well; but it is Bellow’s genius to see the lobsters “crowded to the glass” and their “feelers bent” by that glass–to see the riot of life in the dead peace of things.
James Wood The New Republic Jan 2000 30min Permalink
After the United States demanded the extradition of a drug lord, a bloodletting ensued.
Mattathias Schwartz New Yorker Dec 2011 30min Permalink
An attempt to recruit black students at Virginia’s most famous “segregation academy.”
Kevin Sieff Washington Post Dec 2011 10min Permalink
The story of twin boys who became brother and sister.
Bella English The Boston Globe Dec 2011 35min Permalink
In the fantasy and superhero realm, the most chilling and compelling villain of the year was surely Magneto, who in X-Men: First Class is more of a proto-villain, a victim of human cruelty with a grudge against the nonmutants of the world rooted in bitter and inarguable experience. Magneto is all the more fascinating by virtue of being played by Michael Fassbender, the hawkishly handsome Irish-German actor whose on-screen identity crises dominated no fewer than four movies in 2011. Magneto, more than the others, also evokes a curious kind of self-reproach, because his well-founded vendetta is, after all, directed against us.
A.O. Scott New York Times Magazine Dec 2011 Permalink
On February 10, 1982, Lucy Dixon’s daughter was raped. Against all odds, she and her family brought the man to justice.
Scott Kraft The Associated Press Jul 1984 15min Permalink
The ascendant breed of grown-ups who are redefining adulthood.
This is an obituary for the generation gap. It is a story about 40-year-old men and women who look, talk, act, and dress like people who are 22 years old. It’s not about a fad but about a phenomenon that looks to be permanent.
Adam Sternbergh New York Mar 2006 25min Permalink
On prospecting for space rocks in Kansas.
Ben Paynter Wired Jan 2007 10min Permalink
The same forces that put his family in the slum also gave him the golf course on the other side of the wall, and the teachers and sponsors, and the strange ability to hit a ball with a club. But it still doesn't make sense. Sometimes it seems as if fate is wrestling with itself, making sure the circumstances of his birth are always conspiring to take away whatever gifts might allow him to escape it. He lives in two worlds, each one pulling away from the other. Anil is in the middle, trying to keep his balance.
Wright Thompson ESPN Dec 2011 25min Permalink
An essay drawn from the introduction of Davidson’s iconic book Subway, first published in 1986:
To prepare myself for the subway, I started a crash diet, a military fitness exercise program, and early every morning I jogged in the park. I knew I would need to train like an athlete to be physically able to carry my heavy camera equipment around in the subway for hours every day. Also, I thought that if anything was going to happen to me down there I wanted to be in good shape, or at least to believe that I was. Each morning I carefully packed my cameras, lenses, strobe light, filters, and accessories in a small, canvas camera bag. In my green safari jacket with its large pockets, I placed my police and subway passes, a few rolls of film, a subway map, a notebook, and a small, white, gold-trimmed wedding album containing pictures of people I’d already photographed in the subway. In my pants pocket I carried quarters for the people in the subway asking for money, change for the phone, and several tokens. I also carried a key case with additional identification and a few dollars tucked inside, a whistle, and a small Swiss Army knife that gave me a little added confidence. I had a clean handkerchief and a few Band-Aids in case I found myself bleeding.
Bruce Davidson New York Review of Books Dec 2011 10min Permalink
On the Final Exit Network, a controversial right-to-die organization, and the death of their client John Celmer.
Charles Bethea Atlanta Magazine Mar 2010 25min Permalink
Before the market crashed and home prices tumbled, before federal investigators showed up and hauled away the community records, before her property managers pled guilty for conspiring to rig neighborhood elections, and before her real estate lawyer allegedly tried to commit suicide by overdosing on drugs and setting fire to her home, Wanda Murray thought that buying a condominium in Las Vegas was a pretty good idea.
Felix Gillette Businessweek Dec 2011 20min Permalink
How the Mosley Motel, off U.S. 19 in Florida, became the temporary home to at least 27 families turned away from full shelters.
Leonora LaPeter Anton The St. Petersburg Times Nov 2011 10min Permalink
After being interrogated by the Worcester Police, Nga Truong confessed to smothering her baby.
David Boeri WBUR Dec 2011 25min Permalink