A Declaration of Cyber-War
“While its source remains something of a mystery, Stuxnet is the new face of 21st-century warfare: invisible, anonymous, and devastating.”
“While its source remains something of a mystery, Stuxnet is the new face of 21st-century warfare: invisible, anonymous, and devastating.”
Michael Joseph Gross Vanity Fair Apr 2011 30min Permalink
Best Article History Tech Media
The challenges facing the historians of the internet.
Ariel Bleicher IEEE Spectrum Mar 2011 15min Permalink
Kansas City’s most powerful political journalist is a 36-year-old blogger who resides in a porn lair in his mother’s basement, posting rants on local government and bikini shots 24-hours-a-day.
A profile of Alex Jones, who draws a bigger online audience than Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh combined.
Alexander Zaitchik Rolling Stone Mar 2011 15min Permalink
Relative to the total national income, American corporations are making more money than they have since 1947. The connection behind soaring profits and stagnant unemployment.
Harold Meyerson The American Prospect Mar 2011 15min Permalink
The comedian and veteran of MTV’s The State on a peculiar brand of stardom. “Often people would be like, I’m such a big fan of your work. I think you’re amazing. I want to have a career like yours. And I’m like, great, can you buy me a slice of pizza?”
David Wain, Toph Eggers The Believer Mar 2011 15min Permalink
A profile of the (now former) director of the House of Dior, John Galliano.
Michael Specter New Yorker Sep 2003 30min Permalink
The Jheri Curl revisited.
Roxane Gay Defunct Oct 2010 Permalink
The man who brought together heat, yoga, monthly fees to use his methods, and raw sexuality, on allegations that he has slept with scores of his followers: “Only when they give me no choice! If they say to me, ‘Boss, you must fuck me or I will kill myself,’ then I do it! Think if I don’t! The karma!”
Clancy Martin GQ Feb 2011 Permalink
How the culture of academia helped Amy Bishop, a University of Alabama scientist who murdered colleagues during a faculty meeting, fall apart.
Amy Wallace Wired Mar 2011 35min Permalink
On the future of the liberal Israeli newspaper Haartez.
David Remnick New Yorker Feb 2011 45min Permalink
How a journalism professor named Dan Sinker became the most entertaining part of the Chicago mayoral race.
Alexis Madrigal The Atlantic Feb 2011 10min Permalink
A manifesto from one of the first professional bloggers on a new ‘golden age of journalism.’
Andrew Sullivan The Atlantic Nov 2008 20min Permalink
First-person accounts from the 2004 siege of a Russian school in Beslan by Chechen terrorists.
C.J. Chivers Esquire Mar 2007 Permalink
“One evening, my home phone rang. ‘You have a collect call from Bernard Madoff, an inmate at a federal prison,’ a recording announced. And there he was.”
Steve Fishman New York Mar 2011 30min Permalink
GQ moved up the release of this Charlie Sheen profile: ”The fucking AA shit. The sobriety shit. It was always for other people. I just wanted to get a job back and get enough money to tell everybody to go fuck themselves and then roll like Errol Flynn and Frank Sinatra—the good parts of those guys.”
Amy Wallace GQ Apr 2011 Permalink
On existing as a girl in the boy’s club that is the world.
Molly Lambert This Recording Feb 2011 25min Permalink
The Gabrielle Giffords shooting, from the vantage point of three central figures: Daniel Hernandez helped save the congresswoman’s life; Patricia Maisch stopped the shooter from reloading; Bill Badger tackled him.
Amy Wallace GQ Mar 2011 15min Permalink
At the very bottom of the porn totem pole is the “mope”, a barely paid assistant who hangs around and occasionally performs. Stephen Hill was mope-ing for Ultima Studios in exchange for pocket money and a place to crash. Learning he was going to be evicted, he sharpened a prop machete.
Michael Albo LA Weekly Feb 2011 15min Permalink
On the structural underpinnings of the revolts currently shaking the Arab world.
Max Rodenbeck New York Review of Books Mar 2011 15min Permalink
She was last seen leaving a pickup bar, her body was found the next morning in the dirt beside a football field. He was ten. Thirty-six years later, the author investigates his mother’s murder.
James Ellroy GQ Jul 1994 15min Permalink
Tackling the science of cooking, one perfect french fry at a time.
Mark McClusky Wired Mar 2011 20min Permalink
The American medical establishment has gone to extraordinary lengths—some of which read like conspiracy theory—to discredit the notion (and its most visible promoter, Dr. Atkins) that carbohydrates, not fat, are the cause of obesity. It looks like they were wrong.
Gary Taubes New York Times Magazine Jul 2002 30min Permalink
Five years ago, Mel Gibson was one of Hollywood’s few genuine family-men and a leading box office attraction; inside his wild descent from star to pariah.
Peter Biskind Vanity Fair Mar 2011 30min Permalink
On the evolution of New Jersey’s governor.
Matt Bai New York Times Magazine Feb 2011 Permalink