The Bulger Mystique
A four-part investigation of brothers William and James ‘Whitey’ Bulger. One was president of the Massachusetts Senate for 17 years. The other was on the lam for 16 years before being captured.
A four-part investigation of brothers William and James ‘Whitey’ Bulger. One was president of the Massachusetts Senate for 17 years. The other was on the lam for 16 years before being captured.
Christine Chinlund, Dick Lehr, Kevin Cullen The Boston Globe Sep 1998 1h15min Permalink
How modernity – and an eruption of violence – changed “the most remote inhabited island on the Atlantic seaboard.”
Geoffrey Douglas Yankee Sep 2011 Permalink
Inside a small town revived by an influx of immigrants and then destroyed by a Homeland Security raid.
Maggie Jones New York Times Magazine Jul 2012 15min Permalink
A three-part investigation into New Jersey’s halfway house system.
Sam Dolnick New York Times Jun 2012 55min Permalink
The decline and fall of Cabrini-Green, Chicago’s infamous public housing development.
Ben Austen Harper's May 2012 Permalink
The political fight over a new football stadium in Minnesota.
Steve Marsh Grantland May 2012 25min Permalink
The author reflects on his mayoral run with Norman Mailer against John Lindsay.
At the bar one night a couple of weeks after the primary, I looked up from a drink and saw my face and Norman's face floating across the screen on the NBC First Tuesday show. It is a network thing, and they did a 20-minute look at our campaign. The show reinforced my opinion that Norman and I had some of the most terrific lows in the history of anything that ever took place in this city. And, perhaps, a couple of highs that could be recognized as time passes a bit. Like maybe colleges for years will be using the things Norman Mailer was saying out in the streets.
Jimmy Breslin New York Jul 1969 25min Permalink
On the science of parking spaces.
Dave Gardetta Los Angeles Dec 2011 25min Permalink
After decades of failed revitalization strategies, a town of 10,000 tries another.
Jonathan Mahler New York Times Magazine Dec 2011 30min Permalink
On the American Legislative Exchange Council, a D.C. nonprofit with a library of more than 800 pieces of fill-in-the-blank legislation ready for state legislatures across the country.
Alison Fitzgerald, Brendan Greeley Businessweek Dec 2011 20min Permalink
A charismatic entrepreneur, an ex-con turned devout Christian, and the politicians who championed them.
The story of a $36 billion Ponzi scheme in Minnesota.
Mariah Blake The New Republic Oct 2011 35min Permalink
On the politics of North Carolina.
Jane Mayer New Yorker Oct 2011 40min Permalink
From Vallejo to San Jose, a tour of local government despair:
The relationship between the people and their money in California is such that you can pluck almost any city at random and enter a crisis.
More Lewis: the complete financial disaster tourism series to date.
Michael Lewis Vanity Fair Nov 2011 45min Permalink
It’s 11 p.m. when Larson at last agrees to meet me in the lobby of the Hampton Inn, next door to the Gurnee Grand. He’s just come out of a marathon closed-door meeting with his fellow exiled senators. Tall, gap-toothed, and handsome, but with a squished, broad nose, Larson appears in a fitted black overcoat, a sedate suit with a Wisconsin flag lapel pin, and an athletic backpack. He looks shockingly young, younger than his thirty years, and seems to be relieved that I am even a few years younger myself. We jump in my Chevy and head for the town’s late-night diner: Denny’s. By the time we settle into a booth, Larson has dropped the routine political affectations—the measured language, the approved talking points, the inauthentic humor. We’re cracking up comparing Republicans to evildoers on South Park and shit-talking mutual acquaintances in Milwaukee. And then, just as Larson is about to take a bite of his veggie burger, I ask the freshman senator if he is scared. “What would I be scared about?” he replies.
Natasha Vargas-Cooper Slake Aug 2011 20min Permalink
The first profile of Michele Bachmann.
G.R. Anderson Jr. City Pages Oct 2006 20min Permalink
This new strain of Republican is not one Wisconsin, nor the United States, has ever seen...The new Republicans are corporate wrecking crews, given a sledgehammer, a piece of legislation and a command to "make it fit."
On who will bear the burden of the financial crisis facing cities across America. “Will it be articulated in terms of bond defaults or larger kindergarten classes—or no kindergarten classes at all?”
Kansas City’s most powerful political journalist is a 36-year-old blogger who resides in a porn lair in his mother’s basement, posting rants on local government and bikini shots 24-hours-a-day.
How a journalism professor named Dan Sinker became the most entertaining part of the Chicago mayoral race.
Alexis Madrigal The Atlantic Feb 2011 10min Permalink
The Gabrielle Giffords shooting, from the vantage point of three central figures: Daniel Hernandez helped save the congresswoman’s life; Patricia Maisch stopped the shooter from reloading; Bill Badger tackled him.
Amy Wallace GQ Mar 2011 15min Permalink
On the evolution of New Jersey’s governor.
Matt Bai New York Times Magazine Feb 2011 Permalink
On 30 years of Long Island politics.
Steve Kornacki Capital New York Feb 2011 Permalink
On the enduring racial segregation in Chicago and why it’s an issue no mayoral candidate is willing to touch.
Steve Bogira Chicago Reader Feb 2011 Permalink
How a young state rep from Missouri, seemingly guaranteed political greatness, ended up behind bars.
Jason Zengerle The New Republic Jan 2011 25min Permalink
On the political climate in Arizona.
Ken Silverstein Harper's Jul 2010 Permalink