How Do You Explain Gene Weingarten?
A profile of the eccentric Gene Weingarten, the only person to twice win the Pulitzer for feature writing.
A profile of the eccentric Gene Weingarten, the only person to twice win the Pulitzer for feature writing.
Tom Bartlett Washingtonian Dec 2011 20min Permalink
Matt Taibbi on Thomas Friedman.
Matt Taibbi New York Press Apr 2005 10min Permalink
On the Daily Mail’s dominance of England.
Lauren Collins New Yorker Mar 2012 35min Permalink
Fact-checking David Sedaris.
Alex Heard The New Republic Mar 2007 15min Permalink
Can The Washington Post be saved?
Sarah Ellison Vanity Fair Apr 2012 30min Permalink
On New Yorker writer George W. S. Trow’s descent into madness.
Ariel Levy New York Mar 2007 25min Permalink
Sixty-nine years after publication, Fortune revisits “Let Us Now Praise Famous Men” – a story it commissioned but did not run.
David Whitford Fortune Sep 2005 15min Permalink
How investigators nabbed a key member of a group called “Lost Boy.”
John H. Tucker LA Weekly Jan 2012 25min Permalink
A profile of Rebekah Brooks, who started as a secretary at News of the World and became CEO of News International by 41, developing an incredibly close relationship with Rupert Murdoch along the way.
Suzanna Andrews Vanity Fair Jan 2012 30min Permalink
The dissolution of Brooklyn softcore skin-mag Jacques and the marriage of the couple that created it.
Jonathan Tayler Brooklyn Ink Jan 2012 10min Permalink
A former colleague visits the ‘Fire Fiend’ in prison.
Aaron Gell The New York Observer Dec 2011 15min Permalink
The limited vision of the news gurus.
Dean Starkman Columbia Journalism Review Nov 2011 30min Permalink
On Michael Lewis and the global financial crisis.
Previously: The Michael Lewis World Tour of Economic Collapse
John Lanchester New York Review of Books Nov 2011 15min Permalink
The Starbucks-fueled saga of how Jim Romenesko, beloved journalism blogger, took an early retirement.
Jim Romenesko jimromenesko.com Nov 2011 10min Permalink
An autopsy of the San Jose Mercury News.
Michael Shapiro Columbia Journalism Review Nov 2011 1h Permalink
An oral history of Ms. magazine.
Abigail Pogrebin New York Oct 2011 30min Permalink
In 1972, James Wolcott arrived in New York armed with a letter of recommendation from Norman Mailer. He hoped to land a job at The Village Voice. Excerpted from his memoir, Lucking Out.
How lucky I was, arriving in New York just as everything was about to go to hell. I had no idea how fortunate I was at the time, eaten up as I was by my own present-tense concerns and taking for granted the lively decay, the intense dissonance, that seemed like normality.
James Wolcott Vanity Fair Nov 2011 25min Permalink
On the writer and his impact on his subjects.
Jessica Pressler New York Oct 2011 15min Permalink
An oral history of “Page Six.”
Frank DiGiacomo Vanity Fair Dec 2004 50min Permalink
The death of the journalist who exposed dark secrets about Islamic extremism in Pakistan’s military.
Dexter Filkins New Yorker Sep 2011 35min Permalink
Extracted from the author’s memoir, Life Itself.
The British satirist Auberon Waugh once wrote a letter to the editor of the Daily Telegraph asking readers to supply information about his life between birth and the present, explaining that he was writing his memoirs and had no memories from those years. I find myself in the opposite position. I remember everything. All my life I've been visited by unexpected flashes of memory unrelated to anything taking place at the moment. These retrieved moments I consider and replace on the shelf.
Roger Ebert The Chicago Sun-Times Aug 2011 10min Permalink
Life inside the original Playboy Mansion.
Bryan Smith Chicago Magazine Jul 2009 Permalink
The anatomy of a 1930 epidemic that wasn’t:
Was parrot fever really something to worry about? Reading the newspaper, it was hard to say. “not contagious in man,” the Times announced. “Highly contagious,” the Washington Post said. Who knew? Nobody had ever heard of it before. It lurked in American homes. It came from afar. It was invisible. It might kill you. It made a very good story. In the late hours of January 8th, editors at the Los Angeles Times decided to put it on the front page: “two women and man in Annapolis believed to have 'parrot fever.'"
Jill Lepore New Yorker Jun 2009 15min Permalink
SHRIVER: Regarding your Playboy exposé, I know you've discussed this a great deal, but I'd like to ask you this: You've said that you were glad you did it. What role do you think that exposé played in your early career and the notoriety you've achieved? Is there a similar exposé that someone could do today--something that would be as shocking? STEINEM: It took me a very long time to be glad. At first, it was such a gigantic mistake from a career point of view that I really regretted it. I'd just begun to be taken seriously as a freelance writer, but after the Playboy article, I mostly got requests to go underground in some other semi-sexual way. It was so bad that I returned an advance to turn the Playboy article into a paperback, even though I had to borrow the money. Even now, people ask why I was a Bunny, Right-Wingers still describe me only as a former Bunny, and you're still asking me about it-almost a half-century later. But feminism did make me realize that I was glad I did it--because I identified with all the women who ended up an underpaid waitress in too-high heels and a costume that was too tight to breathe in. Most were just trying to make a living and had no other way of doing it. I'd made up a background as a secretary, and the woman who interviewed me asked, "Honey, if you can type, why would you want to work here?" In the sense that we're all identified too much by our outsides instead of our insides and are mostly in underpaid service jobs, I realized we're all Bunnies--so yes, I'm glad I did it. If a writer wants to do a similar exposé now, there's no shortage of stories that need telling. For instance, go as a pregnant woman into so-called crisis pregnancy centers and record what you're told to scare or force you not to choose an abortion-including harassing you, calling your family or employer. Or pretend to be a woman with a criminal record and see how difficult it is to get a job. Or use a homeless center as an address and see what happens in your life. Or work at an ordinary service job in the pink-collar ghetto, as Barbara Ehrenreich did in Nickel and Dimed. But be warned that if you're a woman journalist and you choose an underground job that's related to sex or looks, you may find it hard to shake the very thing you were exposing.
Maria Shriver Interview Aug 2011 30min Permalink
On Rupert Murdoch and the tabloid culture he created in the U.K.
Anthony Lane New Yorker Jul 2011 25min Permalink