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RSS Sponsor: Forlue.com
This week, Longform.org’s RSS feed is sponsored by forlue.com, a community news website about business.
Sponsored
This week, Longform.org’s RSS feed is sponsored by forlue.com, a community news website about business.
Inside the complicated world of running The New York Times.
A ride-along with the guys tasked with demolishing the city’s 10,000 “abandoned, godforsaken homes.”
Howie Kahn GQ May 2011 20min Permalink
America's fascination with murder has not yet extended to its aftermath. As a result, the victims' survivors must seek comfort from one another.
Eric Schlosser The Atlantic Sep 1997 35min Permalink
On Kimora Lee Simmons, then the head of the Baby Phat clothing company and wife of Russell Simmons.
“Let me take off my glasses,” she says, removing her large frames. “I want you to see my eyes. I will beat a bitch’s ass!”
Nancy Jo Sales Vanity Fair Apr 2005 30min Permalink
An investigation into the death of Victoria Arellano at a Los Angeles County immigration detention facility.
Ben Ehrenreich Los Angeles Sep 2008 25min Permalink
A rare interview with Gene Hackman, who says Welcome to Mooseport was his last movie, unless he “could do it in my own house.”
Gene Hackman, Michael Hainey GQ Jun 2011 10min Permalink
On Lance Armstrong’s return to racing after cancer.
Michael Specter New Yorker Jul 2002 35min Permalink
Why your phone may (or may not) be killing you.
Nathaniel Rich Harper's May 2010 Permalink
What it means to be an entrepreneur in Argentina, where economic crashes are a way of life.
Max Chafkin Inc. May 2011 20min Permalink
Sponsored
This week, Longform.org’s RSS feed is sponsored by forlue.com, a community news website about business.
On Colombia’s “macabre alliance”:
In February 2003, the mayor of a small town on Colombia’s Caribbean coast stood up at a nationally televised meeting with then President Álvaro Uribe and announced his own murder.
Daniel Wilkinson New York Review of Books Jun 2011 15min Permalink
On the evolving design and industrialization of the American outdoors.
Martin Hogue Places Journal May 2011 25min Permalink
Timothy Brown was diagnosed with HIV in the ’90s. In 2006, he found that a new, unrelated disease threatened his life: leukemia. After chemo failed, doctors resorted to a bone marrow transplant. That transplant erased any trace of HIV from his body, and may hold the secret of curing AIDS.
Tina Rosenberg New York May 2011 15min Permalink
These were the people I lived with, these were my friends, these were my family, this was myself. I’d photograph people dancing while I was dancing Or people having sex while I was having sex. Or people drinking while I was drinking.
Nan Goldin, Stephen Westfall BOMB Magazine Sep 1991 15min Permalink
A profile of John Lasseter, chief creative officer at Pixar.
Five prostitutes disappear. Bodies turn up on a Long Island beach. On the women lost, and the families left behind.
Robert Kolker New York May 2011 25min Permalink
What happened when the U.S. Military decided to take its lead from America’s biggest brands.
Naomi Klein The Guardian May 2011 20min Permalink
The author gets a security guard job at this aging textile factory. Part of the City by City project.
Aaron Lake Smith n+1 May 2011 20min Permalink
She surveyed her former possessions, the stuff of a world now lost. "I'd be happy with just walking away from all of this," she concluded. "Dump it all and just start over. Happy birthday — I'm alive."
David Von Drehle Time May 2011 10min Permalink
A reporter on his first time covering a disaster.
Brian Stelter The Deadline May 2011 10min Permalink
How the Jesuit Church refused to stop pedophile priest:
"He truly is the Hannibal Lecter of the clerical world. He did more psychological and physical damage to children than anyone else. And what makes it worse is that the Jesuits knew about it, and did nothing."
Peter Jamison San Francisco Weekly May 2011 20min Permalink
American demand for drugs gave birth to the cartel war that is paralyzing Mexico, but American guns purchased legally across the Southwest and smuggled over the border have made it staggeringly lethal.
James Verini Portfolio Jun 2008 Permalink
A commencement address to the graduates of Harvard Medical School on how their chosen profession is changing and what they’ll need to learn now that they’re out of school.
Atul Gawande New Yorker May 2011 10min Permalink
In 1983, I wrote an article about sex and disabled people. In interviewing sexually active men and women, I felt removed, as though I were an anthropologist interviewing headhunters while endeavoring to maintain the value-neutral stance of a social scientist. Being disabled myself, but also being a virgin, I envied these people ferociously
Mark O'Brien The Sun Magazine May 1990 25min Permalink