High Noon’s Secret Backstory
How Carl Foreman, while tangling with the House Un-American Activities Committee, turned a throwaway Western into an allegory for the Hollywood blacklist.
How Carl Foreman, while tangling with the House Un-American Activities Committee, turned a throwaway Western into an allegory for the Hollywood blacklist.
Glenn Frankel Vanity Fair Feb 2017 25min Permalink
The story of 1982’s Making Love.
Kate Aurthur Buzzfeed Feb 2017 30min Permalink
Two days with a broken-hearted Tom Hiddleston.
Taffy Brodesser-Akner GQ Feb 2017 15min Permalink
Franklin Leonard’s anonymous survey has launched careers, recognized four of the past eight Best Picture winners, and pushed movie studios to think beyond sequels and action flicks.
Alex Wagner The Atlantic Jan 2017 20min Permalink
The battle to make The Godfather pitted director Francis Ford Coppola against producers including Robert Evans, and the production itself against the real life mob.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Mar 2009 Permalink
Oliver Stone wanted a hit—and the chance to put America’s most iconic dissident onscreen. The subject wanted veto power. The Russian lawyer wanted someone to option the novel he’d written. The American lawyer just wanted the whole insane project to go away. Somehow a film got made.
Irina Aleksander New York Times Magazine Aug 2016 30min Permalink
He was just another coked-up agent (repping the likes of Steven Soderbergh) when he disappeared into Iraq, shooting heaps of footage he would attempt to package into a pro-war documentary. And that was just the beginning.
Evan Wright Vanity Fair Mar 2007 1h35min Permalink
Behind the scenes with Ice Cube, Cuba Gooding Jr., Angela Bassett, Laurence Fishburne, and a 22-year-old film student named John Singleton.
Sam Kashner Vanity Fair Aug 2016 25min Permalink
A conversation about race, Hollywood, and what it’s like to be able to conjure weed out of thin air.
E. Alex Jung New York Jul 2016 20min Permalink
Jonathan Kos-Read’s long, strange trip to movie stardom.
Mitch Moxley New York Times Magazine Jul 2016 10min Permalink
“Think about that: Kim has so thoroughly monetized the very act of living that the money she earns from being filmed going about her life constitutes a relatively small sum compared with the one she generates from allowing people to see pictures and cartoon drawings of the life she has already filmed. She has figured out how to spin the mundanity of being herself—something billions of people do every day for free—into a more lucrative business than being the most famous rapper in the world.”
Caity Weaver GQ Jun 2016 20min Permalink
A profile of Roseanne Barr and her multiple personalities.
Mike Sager Esquire Aug 2001 25min Permalink
Getting arrested was the best thing to ever happen to Jeremy Meeks.
Jessica Pressler New York Jun 2016 15min Permalink
Inside Friends of Abe, one of Hollywood’s most influential (and most discreet) political organizations.
Andy Kroll California Sunday May 2016 15min Permalink
Fifty years ago, Rona Barrett forged a Hollywood gossip empire. Then she left it all behind, her innovations attributed to others, her legacy almost entirely overlooked.
Anne Helen Petersen Buzzfeed May 2016 25min Permalink
How a 29-year-old actress, reeling from the death of her first love and battling Dustin Hoffman off-screen, found herself on the set of Kramer vs. Kramer.
Michael Schulman Vanity Fair Mar 2016 25min Permalink
“I made a pact with myself when I was 15 that if I was going to live this life, I'm only going to do it on my terms, and I'm only going to do it if I'm putting my middle finger up at society the whole time. So any time I've had yearnings to go, "Aw, gee, I wish I could be invited to the Emmys," I say, Ru, Ru, remember the pact you made. You never wanted to be a part of that bullshit. In fact, I'd rather have an enema than have an Emmy.”
E. Alex Jung Vulture Mar 2016 15min Permalink
How the director of Midnight Special thinks strategically about his art and his career.
Amy Wallace Wired Mar 2016 Permalink
Two years ago, the fitness guru abruptly disappeared from public life. His friends worry that he’s being held against his will inside his Hollywood Hills mansion, or something even worse.
Andy Martino New York Daily News Mar 2016 20min Permalink
Kate del Castillo, the actress who brought Sean Penn to Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, tells her side of the story.
Robert Draper New Yorker Mar 2016 25min Permalink
How David Milch, the creator of NYPD Blue and Deadwood, blew his $100 million fortune at the track.
Stephen Galloway, Scott Johnson The Hollywood Reporter Feb 2016 20min Permalink
Collections Business Sex Travel
Paris Hilton, Princeton phonies, and the prince who blew through billions—a collection of articles on young money.
“They cruise the city in chauffeured cars, blasting rap, selling pot to classmates. How some of New York’s richest kids joined forces with some of its poorest.”
Nancy Jo Sales New York Dec 1996 20min
Georgia and Patterson Inman, 15-year-old twins, are the only living heirs to the $1 billion Duke tobacco fortune. They are also emotional wrecks who have barely survived a hellacious childhood.
Sabrina Rubin Erdely Rolling Stone Aug 2013 40min
On the brother of the Sultan of Brunei, Prince Jefri Bolkiah, who has “probably gone through more cash than any other human being on earth.”
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Jul 2011 45min
An overachiever on what he did and didn’t learn at Princeton.
Walter Kim The Atlantic Jan 2005 35min
A profile of Paris Hilton at the height of her fame.
Vanessa Grigoriadis Rolling Stone Nov 2003 10min
An invite-only social network for Georgetown assholes.
Angela Valdez Washington City Paper Jul 2007 30min
How two sisters, heirs to the Bronfman fortune, may have blown $100 million supporting the cult-like group NXIVM.
Maureen Tkacik The New York Observer Aug 2010
A profile of Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, the Malibu-dwelling, “fantastically corrupt” dictator-in-waiting of Equatorial Guinea. Teodorin, as his friends call him, is considered by U.S. intelligence to be “an unstable, reckless idiot.”
Ken Silverstein Foreign Policy Mar 2011 20min
Dec 1996 – Aug 2013 Permalink
Harvey Levin runs a gossip site that operates like an intelligence agency.
Nicholas Schmidle New Yorker Feb 2016 45min Permalink
Angie Nwandu has no journalism experience. No publishing experience. She’s 25. And in less than two years she has created an entirely new way to cover — and profit from — celebrity gossip.
Doree Shafrir Buzzfeed Dec 2015 20min Permalink
Sundays at Hillsong, the church that saved Justin Bieber.
Taffy Brodesser-Akner GQ Dec 2015 25min Permalink