My Long War
A mission in Baghdad to let a photojournalist get a shot of an insurgent corpse ends up getting a Marine killed.
A mission in Baghdad to let a photojournalist get a shot of an insurgent corpse ends up getting a Marine killed.
Dexter Filkins New York Times Magazine Aug 2008 25min Permalink
Adventures in something called “Radical Honesty.”
A.J. Jacobs Esquire Jul 2007 20min Permalink
A 1988 profile of Bill Murray, then at the peak of his box office power and living in a secluded farmhouse in the Hudson River Valley.
Ty Cobb, who would go on to be the greatest baseball player of his time, was a 17-year-old minor league prospect when his mother shot and killed his father at home in Georgia.
K. Rheinheimer Blue Ridge Country Jun 2010 Permalink
Are video games capable of emotion?
Jason Fagone Esquire Nov 2008 25min Permalink
Saad Mohseni, Afghanistan’s first media mogul and a business partner of Rupert Murdoch, produces everything from nightly news broadcasts to the controversial Afghan version of American Idol.
Ken Auletta New Yorker Jun 2010 35min Permalink
75 years after its founding, it’s still hard to explain exactly why Alcoholics Anonymous works.
Brendan Koerner Wired Jun 2010 20min Permalink
How an L.A. high school dropout became an enforcer for Mexican cartels and ended up on the F.B.I. Most Wanted List.
Christine Pelisek Dallas Observer Jun 2010 20min Permalink
An unidentified body found near the beach in Australia in 1948. An unclaimed suitcase. A coded note.
For the members of UCLA’s undocumented immigrant club, going to school means fighting for an education most students take for granted.
Douglas McGray West Apr 2006 25min Permalink
The story of the most popular music video of all time, including memories of a then-25-year-old Michael Jackson on and off the set. Director John Landis: “I dealt with Michael as I would have a really gifted child.”
Nancy Griffin Vanity Fair Jun 2010 30min Permalink
One of the founders of Google discovered that he carried a gene that meant a 50% chance of developing Parkinson’s. In response, he is working to change and expedite the way that Parkinson’s research is conducted.
Thomas Goetz Wired Jun 2010 30min Permalink
Will we deplete the worldwide Bluefin Tuna population beyond repair?
A Dutch traffic engineer showed that streets without signs are safer than those cluttered with arrows, painted lines, and lights.
Tom Vanderbilt Wilson Quarterly Jun 2008 25min Permalink
How Warren Beatty seduced the studios into making the comedy Ishtar, which set the modern bar for cinematic debacles. (An excerpt from Peter Biskind’s Star.)
Peter Biskind Vanity Fair Feb 2010 35min Permalink
Clay Shirky, writing in 1999 on the Web eclipsing TV’s reach: “We will always have massive media, but the days of mass media are over, killed by the explosion of possibility and torn into a thousand niches.”
Clay Shirky Feed Apr 1999 10min Permalink
The rise and fall of Design Within Reach.
Jeff Chu Fast Company Dec 2009 Permalink
Is Mike Huckabee the GOP’s best hope in 2012? Mike Huckabee’s not so sure.
Ariel Levy New Yorker Jun 2010 35min Permalink
The importance of the sports metaphor in the American consciousness and why Lewis Lapham didn’t join the C.I.A.
Lewis Lapham Lapham's Quarterly Jun 2010 15min Permalink
Carl Malamud is on a quest to change the way average citizens can interface with the government – by scanning its paperwork and making it available free online. And he’s financing his effort with his own credit cards.
Nancy Scola The American Prospect Jun 2010 10min Permalink
An hour-by-hour account of the explosion and rescue effort on the Deepwater Horizon oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico.
Sean Flynn GQ Jun 2010 30min Permalink
After a racial hazing incident, the first black head of South Africa’s University of Free State confronts the myths of the reconciliation era.
Eve Fairbanks The New Republic Jun 2010 20min Permalink
A woman posing as a non-profit worker kidnaps a formerly homeless pregnant woman and tries to claim her baby. [PART 2]
Liza Mundy Washington Post Jun 2010 Permalink
A woman posing as a non-profit worker kidnaps a formerly homeless pregnant woman and tries to claim her baby. [PART 1]
Liza Mundy Washington Post Jun 2010 10min Permalink
The urban legend about the guy who hooked a rocket up to the back of his car and drove/flew it into a mountain? The anonymous author claims the story is about him and some of his small town high school buddies.