When Thugs and Hustlers Ruled Dark Alleys
The gamblers and teenage cons who haunted New York City’s 60s-era all night bowling alleys.
The gamblers and teenage cons who haunted New York City’s 60s-era all night bowling alleys.
Gianmarc Manzione New York Times Nov 2012 10min Permalink
“His seeming ease belies the anxiety and emotion that advisers say he brings to his historic position: pride in what he has accomplished, determination to acquit himself well and intense frustration.”
Jodi Kantor New York Times Oct 2012 10min Permalink
“The dateline is Elyria, Ohio, a city of 55,000 about 30 miles southwest of Cleveland. You know this town, even if you have never been here.”
Dan Barry New York Times Oct 2012 55min Permalink
On Queens’ stubbornly unchanging Roosevelt Avenue, where immigrants pay $2 a song to grind against hired dancers and shuttered houses of prostitution have given way to rolling brothel-vans.
Sarah Maslin Mir New York Times Oct 2012 10min Permalink
The complete (to date) New York Times series on the globalization of high tech industries.
New York Times Jan 2012 1h55min Permalink
For the first time, the giants of the tech industry are spending more on creating, buying, and fighting patents than they are on R&D.
Part of New York Times’ ongoing iEconomy series.
Charles Duhigg, Steve Lohr New York Times Jan 2012 20min Permalink
The environmental impact of server farms.
James Glanz New York Times Sep 2012 20min Permalink
Inside the business of manufacturing online product reviews.
David Streitfeld New York Times Aug 2012 15min Permalink
A profile of the Aurora shooter.
Dan Frosch, Erica Goode, Jack Healy, Serge F. Kovaleski New York Times Aug 2012 10min Permalink
A profile of Salvatore Strazzullo, who represents celebrities, whether major or minor, who get themselves in trouble in Manhattan after dark.
Alan Feuer New York Times Aug 2012 10min Permalink
How the self-proclaimed “inventor of all things streaming” went from dot-com millionaire to crime ring accomplice.
Russ Buettner New York Times Aug 2012 10min Permalink
The emotional toll on drone pilots.
Elisabeth Bumiller New York Times Jul 2012 Permalink
“Calça de veludo ou bunda de fora.” Why Neymar, one of the world’s best talents hasn’t taken the money and run.
Sam Borden New York Times Jul 2012 Permalink
A congressional hearing exposes the hypocrisy of American superiority.
"So that’s where you need these cheap inflation dollars so everybody can pay everybody back, right? See we had this neat idea of this here trickle down theory only it didn’t work out so good, I mean it all like got stuck at the top where 15 years ago this richest 1 percent of the nation held 27 percent of the wealth now they’ve got almost 36 percent, I mean it mostly like trickled up. And see where the Administration’s goal was to end inflation it worked so good that this sudden massive collapse of it brought these terrific budget deficits so like now we’re this world’s biggest debtor nation where if these here Japanese weren’t like buying $60 billion in Treasury bonds a year we couldn’t hardly pay the gas bill, right?"
William Gaddis New York Times Jan 1987 Permalink
On life in Los Angeles, and the specter of a second riot.
Thomas Pynchon New York Times Jun 1966 20min Permalink
A profile of Italian soccer star Mario Balotelli.
Jeré Longman New York Times Jul 2012 Permalink
A look at Apple stores, where jobs are high stress, with low pay and little opportunity for advancement.
David Segal New York Times Jun 2012 15min Permalink
A three-part investigation into New Jersey’s halfway house system.
Sam Dolnick New York Times Jun 2012 55min Permalink
During World War II, a young soldier gives a dance lesson to General Eisenhower.
"The two MPs walked him to the door, which opened as they reached it, and a dapper-looking lieutenant asked Kelly to come in and have a drink. He said that his name was Lieutenant Mason, and that he was General Eisenhower’s aide-de-camp. The MPs noted carefully the look on Kelly’s face. They went away with their chins clenched in an effort to suppress belly laughter."
Michael Chabon New York Times Jan 2001 10min Permalink
On the Mexican drug cartel accused of laundering money with race horses.
Ginger Thompson New York Times Jun 2012 Permalink
She was a thirteen-year-old from the Chabad Lubavitch community who would dip into a barbershop bathroom to swap her orthodox clothes for those of a streetwalker. Her pimping and rape allegations against a group of black men in their twenties, repeatedly recanted and then reaffirmed, would send the D.A.’s office into disarray.
Alan Feuer, Colin Moynihan New York Times Jun 2012 10min Permalink
The search for a missing ultramarathoner in New Mexico’s Gila Wilderness, and the life that lead him there.
Barry Bearak New York Times May 2012 25min Permalink
An investigation into McWane, Inc., “one of the most dangerous employers in America.”
David Barstow, Lowell Bergman New York Times Jan 2003 1h10min Permalink
The tables have been turned – brutally – on Qaddafi loyalists.
Robert F. Worth New York Times May 2012 20min Permalink
The author muses on the markers we use to identify ourselves and other people – from names to photographs to fingerprints.
Errol Morris New York Times May 2012 1h25min Permalink