The Empty Chamber
Why the U.S. Senate gets so little done.
Why the U.S. Senate gets so little done.
George Packer New Yorker Aug 2010 45min Permalink
The Appleseed Project is ostensibly a traveling marksmanship school - but what else is it teaching?
Selections from the leaked documents about the war in Afghanistan portray a military effort that is ineffective and frequently absurd. (Part of the NYT War Logs series.)
The forgotten life of Eva Tanguay, perhaps America’s first rock star.
Jody Rosen Slate Dec 2009 15min Permalink
David Sedaris on smoking and quitting.
David Sedaris New Yorker May 2008 15min Permalink
How a dental equipment salesman from Germany named Klaus Teuber invented the perfect board game, Settlers of Catan.
Andrew Curry Wired Mar 2009 15min Permalink
Kids are identifying as gay at younger ages, sometimes only 10 or 11. Their communities and parents are scrambling to adapt.
Benoit Denizet-Lewis New York Times Magazine Sep 2009 15min Permalink
The mother of a child born with a deformed brain responds, heartbreakingly, to an academic study claiming that people are happier without kids.
Jennifer Lawler Finding Your Voice Jul 2010 15min Permalink
The backstory of the publication of WikiLeaks’s Afghanistan logs.
Refugees arriving in the U.S. after receiving asylum face challenges that have led some to return to their war-torn homelands.
Mary Wiltenburg CS Monitor Jul 2009 10min Permalink
Frank Rich on The Promise, Jonathan Alter’s book about the first year of the Obama administration.
Frank Rich New York Review of Books Jul 2010 15min Permalink
When one of the best young chemists in the world took his own life, Harvard was forced to reconsider the relationship between PhD students and their (often Nobel Prize-winning) advisers.
Stephen S. Hall New York Times Magazine Nov 1998 25min Permalink
Inside the competitive, lucrative, swashbuckling world of DWI attorneys in Houston.
Mike Giglio Houston Press Nov 2009 20min Permalink
An interview with Lawrence Schiller, himself one of the great interviewers of his time, whose research fueled Norman Mailer’s Executioner’s Song.
Lawrence Schiller, Suzanne Snider The Believer May 2010 25min Permalink
An emerging school of therapy says that scripting your dreams while awake could eliminate the worst ones. Not everyone thinks that’s healthy.
Sarah Kershaw New York Times Jul 2010 Permalink
What the great romantic novels of history can tell us about “seduction theory” and the cult of the pickup artist.
Seventeen years after taking the iconic “Afghan Girl” photograph for National Geographic, Steve McCurry went back to find her.
Cathy Newman National Geographic Apr 2002 Permalink
Best Article Arts History Music
Vignettes of the residents of South Elliot Place.
Stacy Abramson New York Times Jul 2010 Permalink
A day in the life of a Brooklyn laundromat.
N. R. Kleinfield New York Times Jan 2010 10min Permalink
Should modern medicine shift its end-of-life priorities, focusing less on staving off death and more on improving a patient’s last days?
Atul Gawande New Yorker May 2011 50min Permalink
Is there really such a thing as brain death?
Gary Greenberg New Yorker Aug 2001 20min Permalink
A Hollywood screenwriter finds out his identity’s been stolen when a hooker calls–from his private office–demanding to be paid for the sex they didn’t just have.
Josh Friedman Huck's Blog Jul 2010 15min Permalink
John Friend, who founded a new school of yoga, says the practice should be about both exercise and spirituality. Oh, and making money.
Mimi Swartz New York Times Magazine Jul 2010 Permalink
A writer for Conan O’Brien on how The Tonight Show really ended and on how his boss got screwed.
Todd Levin GQ Jul 2010 20min Permalink
Erich Spangenberg is in the business of owning other people’s ideas. He makes a fortune.
Heather Skyler Good Jun 2009 10min Permalink