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August 11, 2010

Arts Crime Movies & TV

Jukeboxes on the Moon

Slumdog Millionaire, the 2008 Mumbai attacks, and the arrival of “New India” in the American imagination.

Rafil Kroll-Zaidi Triple Canopy Jul 2010 Permalink

Sex

Girls! Girls! Girls!

Tony Judt on sex, the academy, and dating a graduate student while chairing NYU’s History Department.

Tony Judt New York Review of Books Mar 2010 Permalink

Crime Politics World

The War for Drugs

How Juarez became the murder capital of the world.

Sarah Hill Boston Review Jul 2010 Permalink

Crime

Prison Without Walls

Is letting convicts roam free under electronic surveillance better than putting them behind bars?

Graeme Wood The Atlantic Aug 2010 10min Permalink

August 10, 2010

Sports Tech

The Franchise

How Madden NFL went from a programmer’s childhood dream to a $3 billion business.

Patrick Hruby ESPN Jul 2010 30min Permalink

Arts Music

Van Morrison's Moments of Disbelief

An interview with Greil Marcus on the songs of Van Morrison and why people are afraid of imagined things.

Colin Marshall, Greil Marcus 3quarksdaily Aug 2010 25min Permalink

Arts

Roald Dahl’s Darkest Hour

An excerpt from a new biography explores the trio of tragedies that struck Dahl’s family just as his career was taking off.

Donald Sturrock The Telegraph Aug 2010 20min Permalink

August 9, 2010

Arts Music

The Music-Copyright Enforcers

There is someone whose job it is to try to extract royalty money from anyone who plays music in a place of business. Most people do not react well to this request.

John Bowe New York Times Magazine Aug 2010 Permalink

Politics World

The Mussolini of Ass

How sex scandals have made Silvio Berlusconi even more powerful in Italy.

Devin Friedman GQ Jun 2010 25min Permalink

Science

Night

Tony Judt on his own amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and the experience of being “left free to contemplate at leisure and in minimal discomfort the catastrophic progress of one’s own deterioration.”

Tony Judt New York Review of Books Jan 2010 Permalink

Politics World

After the Crackdown

A year after dozens died protesting his election and hundreds more were imprisoned, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad grants a rare interview to an American journalist.

John Lee Anderson New Yorker Aug 2010 30min Permalink

August 6, 2010

Arts

Pynchon in Poland

A Pynchon conference in Lublin, Poland may say more about the men (yes, only men) who attend Thomas Pynchon conferences than the works of the reclusive author.

Nick Holdstock n+1 Aug 2010 10min Permalink

Arts Crime

Stealing Mona Lisa

Was the 1911 theft of the Mona Lisa from the Louvre actually a smokescreen to obscure an even more audacious art crime?

Dorothy Hoobler, Thomas Hoobler Vanity Fair May 2009 25min Permalink

Best Article Business World

The Billion-Dollar Shack

A reporter heads to Nauru, a tiny island nation in the Pacific, to track down the hub of a worldwide money-laundering operation—a shack filled with computers, air-conditioners, and little else.

Jack Hitt New York Times Magazine Dec 2000 20min Permalink

August 5, 2010

History

Pandora’s Briefcase

In “Operation Mincemeat” a vagrant’s corpse, raided from a London morgue, washed up on a beach in Spain, setting in motion an elaborate piece of espionage that fooled Nazi intelligence. Or did it?

Malcolm Gladwell New Yorker May 2010 20min Permalink

Dead Man Talking

Brian Hickey, a journalist who was induced into a coma after being left for dead following a hit and run accident, reports the story of his recovery.

Brian Hickey Philadelphia Magazine May 2009 15min Permalink

Science

Hot for Creature

Fifteen years ago, William Dranginis saw Bigfoot. He’s still trying to prove it.

Eric Wills Washington City Paper Jul 2008 20min Permalink

August 4, 2010

Media

The Savior of Condé Nast

Scott Dadich, 34, has been described by a former boss as a “combination of Pelé and Jesus” and is now tasked with figuring out the future of the magazine. All he’s got in his new Times Square office: an iPad and a book of George Lois’ Esquire covers.

John Koblin The New York Observer Aug 2010 Permalink

Sex

The Confessions of Bob Greene

Evidence of a decades-old hotel trist with a teenage intern costs a beloved Chicago columnist his job - and his identity.

Bill Zehme Esquire Apr 2003 40min Permalink

August 3, 2010

Arts Movies & TV

That 70's Look

An interview with cinematographer Harris Savides on the enduring appeal of the visual style of films shot in the 1970s.

David Schwartz Moving Image Mar 2010 20min Permalink

Crime Sports

The Boy Who Cried Cal

Kevin Hart wanted a scholarship to play Division I college football. It didn’t come. So he made one up–and called a press conference.

Tom Friend ESPN Jan 2009 35min Permalink

August 2, 2010

Best Article Politics Religion

The Christian with Four Aces

Pat Robertson was 29 years old, possessionless, and living in a Bed-Stuy brownstone when he announced that God had told him to buy a fledgling TV station in Virginia. Here’s what happened next.

Bill Sizemore The Virginia Quarterly Review 40min Permalink

World

China's Cyberposse

When members of China’s massive bulletin-board forums perceive wrongdoing, they form a “human flesh search engine” and seek out real world vigilante justice.

Tom Downey New York Times Magazine Mar 2010 Permalink

The Empty Chamber

Why the U.S. Senate gets so little done.

George Packer New Yorker Aug 2010 45min Permalink

July 30, 2010

Firing Line

The Appleseed Project is ostensibly a traveling marksmanship school - but what else is it teaching?

Mattathias Schwartz New York Times Magazine Jul 2010 Permalink

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