Family Secrets
How your family tree could catch a killer.
How your family tree could catch a killer.
Raffi Khatchadourian New Yorker Nov 2021 50min Permalink
In Oakland, California, when it comes to Black homelessness and dispossession, dystopia is already here.
Carina Chocanohelsea Edgar Places Journal Nov 2021 40min Permalink
For nearly 200 years, San Francisco has been the last stop of petty thieves, con artists and killers. Iva Kroeger was all three.
Katie Dowd SFGate Nov 2021 Permalink
In Austin and cities around the country, prices are skyrocketing, forcing regular people to act like speculators. When will it end?
Inside an international smuggling operation.
Clare Fieseler The Walrus Nov 2021 Permalink
Scandal, conspiracy, and cover-ups in the theft of the “Irish Crown Jewels” from Dublin Castle.
Dan Nosowitz Atlas Obscura Nov 2021 Permalink
The primate who ruled the news vanished again. A quest to find him led deep into Florida’s monkey kingdom.
Stephanie Hayes Tampa Bay Times Nov 2021 Permalink
He brought Pokémon, Yu-Gi-Oh!, and Cabbage Patch Kids to our living rooms. He made and lost fortunes. Can Al Kahn stay in the game?
Scott Eden Inc. Nov 2021 Permalink
Federal agencies have long struggled to stop illegal fishing and drug smuggling in the Gulf of Mexico. In recent years, it’s only gotten worse.
John Burnett Texas Monthly Nov 2021 Permalink
It started with a candle in an abandoned warehouse. It ended with temperatures above 3,000 degrees and the men of the Worcester Fire Department in a fight for their lives.
Sean Flynn Esquire Jul 2000 1h Permalink
A profile of the anthropologist.
Molly Fischer New York Nov 2021 Permalink
Why can’t the military fix its violence against women problem? Congress is on the precipice of ushering in the biggest shift in military policy since the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. But would it have saved 21-year-old airman Natasha Aposhian?
Molly Langmuir Elle Nov 2021 Permalink
Casey Johnston is a journalist and editor who writes the column "Ask A Swole Woman," which now appears in her newsletter ”She's a Beast.”
”I feel more comfortable lately with a sort of beloved-local-restaurant level of success. What's nice about Substack is that we've come to this place, that I hope lasts, where we can have this sort of local-restaurant relationship with writers, or I can have that with readers, where I don't have to be part of this big machine in order to do something that I really like.”
Nov 2021 Permalink
An intrepid expert with dozens of books to his name, Stéphane Bourgoin was a bestselling author, famous in France for having interviewed more than 70 notorious murderers. Then an anonymous collective began to investigate his past.
Scott Sayare The Guardian Nov 2021 Permalink
The enforcer for Oregon’s grocery industry made enemies. One tried to kill him with thallium.
Nigel Jaquiss Willamette Week Nov 2021 20min Permalink
Scientists predict Tangier Island could be uninhabitable within 25 years. This is the story of the people willing to go down with it.
Elaina Plott Pacific Standard Sep 2018 20min Permalink
With her new book, the model tries to escape the oppressions of the male gaze. So our writer is keeping some of her secrets.
Andrea Long Chu New York Times Magazine Nov 2021 30min Permalink
They executed people for the state of South Carolina. For some, it nearly destroyed them.
Chaira Eisner The State Nov 2021 Permalink
There’s no way to confirm that a crop was grown organically. Randy Constant exploited our trust in the labels—and made a fortune.
Ian Parker New Yorker Nov 2021 Permalink
Inside Robert Sarver’s 17-year tenure as owner.
Baxter Holmes ESPN Nov 2021 Permalink
Can suicide be predicted?
Will Stephenson Harper's Jul 2021 25min Permalink
Platforms like OnlyFans mean people with big followings online can earn money. Where does that leave the sex workers who were there first?
Rebecca Jennings Vox Nov 2021 25min Permalink
For 187 harrowing minutes, the president watched his supporters attack the Capitol—and resisted pleas to stop them.
How much sand can a half-billion dollars dredge up? Almost certainly not enough.
Polly Mosendz, Eric Roston Bloomberg Green Oct 2021 15min Permalink
An Instagram account called Yo Te Creo started naming alleged abusers in Puerto Rico. Did it go too far?
Andrea González-Ramírez The Cut Nov 2021 20min Permalink