Plaboy Interview: Malcolm X
Alex Haley interviews the Honorable Elijah Muhammad’s number two - Malcolm X - in a Harlem restaurant.
Alex Haley interviews the Honorable Elijah Muhammad’s number two - Malcolm X - in a Harlem restaurant.
Alex Haley, Malcolm X Playboy May 1963 35min Permalink
The life and death of Johnny Romano, the youngest pro skateboarder ever.
Michael Hall Texas Monthly Aug 2010 25min Permalink
The number one item confiscated by U.S. customs for four years in a row: fake shoes. As brands continue to crack down, counterfeiters continue to up their game.
Best Article Arts Music Travel
Horror-rap’s annual festival draws thousands of clown-makeup wearing Juggalos - devotees of Insane Clown Posse - for a weekend devoted to spraying Faygo soda, rioting, and discussions of the occult.
Thomas Morton Vice Oct 2007 20min Permalink
Lessons learned while temping at an Amsterdam coffee shop.
Wells Tower GQ Aug 2010 25min Permalink
A Barclays analyst leaves for a routine laser treatment and is never heard from again. Ten months later, authorities find her body under a concrete slab at the house of her doctor, who was in fact not a doctor at all.
Bryan Burrough Vanity Fair Jun 2004 30min Permalink
Why our entire understanding of copyright is due for an overhaul.
Lawrence Lessig The New Republic Jan 2010 25min Permalink
When Bob Dylan met Allen Ginsberg; a chapter from Sean Wilentz’s forthcoming Bob Dylan in America.
Sean Wilentz New Yorker Aug 2010 45min Permalink
In the British sport of “ferret legging,” underwear-less competitors tie their trousers at the ankles, stuff a pair of the carnivores down there, and hold on for as long as possible. Reg Mellor is the world’s best.
Donald Katz Outside Oct 1987 10min Permalink
Soap operas, enrollment in multiple graduate programs at once, student films alongside Hollywood blockbusters. Is James Franco’s entire career a piece of performance art?
Sam Anderson New York Jul 2010 25min Permalink
A psychological theory emerges to explain why young Americans are taking a while to grow up.
An interview with Sandy Koufax on “the management of excellence.”
Jack Olsen, Sandy Koufax Sports Illustrated Dec 1965 30min Permalink
Inside Rebecca West’s vast Black Lamb and Grey Falcon, an eerily timeless travelogue of the Balkans written on the eve of WWI.
Geoff Dyer The Guardian Aug 2006 15min Permalink
A firsthand account of prison’s dysfunctional relationships. The writer wasn’t able to gain access through official channels, so he completed guard training and took a job as a Sing Sing corrections officer.
Ted Conover New Yorker Apr 2000 40min Permalink
The bloody, often surreal, fight for Kosovo’s independence was led by a man moonlighting as a roofer in Switzerland.
William Langewiesche Vanity Fair Dec 2008 35min Permalink
Best Article Arts Business Music
In the early 1960s, Middle Eastern guys in Brooklyn introduced America to Arabic rock-and-roll.
Saki Knafo The Believer Jul 2010 10min Permalink
For nearly a decade, Laura Albert lived a double life as troubled teen turned cult writer J.T. Leroy, writing books, chatting constantly with celebrities, and convincing another woman to appear as J.T. Leroy in public.
Nancy Rommelmann LA Weekly Feb 2008 35min Permalink
A day in the political life of Barack Obama.
Todd Purdum Vanity Fair Aug 2010 Permalink
The New York Times reveals the deception of 27-year-old reporter Jayson Blair.
- New York Times May 2003 30min Permalink
After two New Jersey homes were robbed of their silver—only their silver—in the same night, the local police got a call from a detective in Greenwich, Connecticut. “I know the guy who’s doing your burglaries.”
Stephen J. Dubner New Yorker May 2004 35min Permalink
Arts Business World Media Music Religion
A new Egyptian TV channel called 4Shbab—“for youth” in Arabic—aims to get young people interested in Islam through music videos and reality shows.
Negar Azimi New York Times Magazine Aug 2010 Permalink
On the elegance and utility of the rice cooker.
Roger Ebert The Chicago Sun-Times Nov 2008 10min Permalink
An American, born into privilege, became a bootleg DVD kingpin in Shanghai and then, in an unprecedented development, landed in Chinese prison.
Joshua Davis Wired Oct 2005 25min Permalink
For many immigrants coming through Arizona, it’s not enough to pay a coyote to shepherd you across the border. You also need to pay the ransom demanded by your kidnapper after you arrive.
Monica Alonzo The Phoenix New Times Aug 2010 30min Permalink
The shooting death of the last wild Passenger Pigeon, atomic energy, mastodon watering holes, and other footnotes in Ohio history.
Geoffrey Sea The American Scholar Jan 2004 55min Permalink