Country Music's Sparkle King
A profile of fashion designer Nudie Cohn, who made clothing for Elvis, Glen Campbell, Johnny Cash, and others.
A profile of fashion designer Nudie Cohn, who made clothing for Elvis, Glen Campbell, Johnny Cash, and others.
Jason Diamond Tablet May 2012 Permalink
A profile of Fleshlight inventor Steve Shubin.
Dan Solomon The Austin Chronicle May 2012 10min Permalink
A profile of Univision’s Jorge Ramos.
Laura M. Colarusso Washington Monthly May 2012 40min Permalink
A profile of singer-songwriter Will Oldham.
He has settled into character as an uncanny troubadour, singing a sort of transfigured country music, and he has become, in his own subterranean way, a canonical figure. Johnny Cash covered him, Björk has championed him (she invited him to appear on the soundtrack of “Drawing Restraint 9”), and Madonna, he suspects, has quoted him (her song “Let It Will Be” seems to borrow from his “O Let It Be,” though he says, “I’m fully prepared to accept that it’s a coincidence”).
Kelefa Sanneh New Yorker Jan 2009 20min Permalink
A profile of former Bosnia Serb military commander Ratko Mladic, whose war crimes trial began, and was abruptly suspended, this week.
Robert Block The New York Review of Books Oct 1995 20min Permalink
A posthumous profile of Whitney Houston.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Jun 2012 35min Permalink
“Being Justin Bieber means having an endless number of T-shirts to destroy.” A profile of the pop star just after his 18th birthday.
Drew Magary GQ May 2012 15min Permalink
A profile of Salam Fayyad, the Palestinian Prime Minister.
Ben Birnbaum The New Republic May 2012 20min Permalink
A profile of Maurice Sendak.
Cynthia Zarin New Yorker Apr 2006 20min Permalink
The Beastie Boys on tour in Los Angeles shortly after the release of their debut album, Licensed to Ill.
Chuck Eddy Creem May 1987 15min Permalink
A profile of Laura Knight, a Florida mother of five who investigates the paranormal.
Thomas French The St. Petersburg Times Feb 2000 1h30min Permalink
A profile of the hardworking Samuel L. Jackson, whose movies have grossed more than any actor’s ever.
Pat Jordan New York Times Magazine Apr 2012 15min Permalink
On Marilyn Monroe and the pains of post-war America.
Jacqueline Rose London Review of Books Apr 2012 40min Permalink
“That learning to cook could lead an American woman to success of any kind would have seemed utterly implausible in 1949; that it is so thoroughly plausible 60 years later owes everything to Julia Child’s legacy.”
Michael Pollan New York Times Magazine Jul 2009 35min Permalink
A profile of environmental activist Van Jones.
Elizabeth Kolbert New Yorker Jan 2009 25min Permalink
Neal punctuated Jack’s riffing with his “yesses” and “that’s rights,” head bobbing on his neck like a novice prizefighter’s. After four years of New York nihilism and intellection, Neal – wiping Jack’s face with his handkerchief – Neal – who looked so much like Jack himself, an athlete like Jack – celebrated lover of women and sharer of Allen’s passionate dark soul – finally the long-lost brother who said, “Go ahead, everything you do is great” – “a Western kinsmen of the sun” – “a wild yea-saying over-burst of American joy.”
The life and myth of Neal Cassady, Beat companion and muse for Kesey, Wolfe, Kerouac, Ginsberg, The Grateful Dead and more.
Steve Silberman The Golden Road Mar 1989 45min Permalink
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
A profile of Robert Caro, who’s been working on a biography on Lyndon Johnson for nearly 40 years.
Chris Jones Esquire Apr 2012 30min Permalink
A profile.
When we're introduced, I spend a long moment trying to conjugate the reality of James Brown's face, one I've contemplated as an album-cover totem since I was thirteen or fourteen: that impossible slant of jaw and cheekbone, that Pop Art slash of teeth, the unmistakable rage of impatience lurking in the eyes. It's a face drawn by Jack Kirby or Milton Caniff, that's for sure, a visage engineered for maximum impact at great distances, from back rows of auditoriums.
Jonathan Lethem Rolling Stone Jun 2006 50min Permalink
Stylistically speaking, in terms of clothing, they arrived in shirts and pants and shoes (there’s really no other way to say it). They had haircuts, but it didn’t really look it. While other bands were mumbling or over-enunciating their dreary positions or penny-candy philosophies, Pavement kind of screamed for a generation. But they did it in a way that was so deeply American that it was almost Scandinavian.
Playwright Will Eno profiles the band and their cult as they grow up and prepare for a reunion.
A profile of the “acrobatic genius of the trapeze”:
As he spoke, he looked up at the pipes and swings in the arena ceiling. A mechanic was working on the rigging, but Tito spoke thoughtfully, for he seemed to be seeing something else. "Sometimes I see movies of myself in the air and I say, 'Jesus, how can I do that?' I wonder who do I think I am ... but, yes, I do admire myself in films sometimes as if I am watching another person. I have sometimes dreamed my tricks at night, you know, and then tried to master them from the dream."
William Johnson Sports Illustrated Apr 1974 25min Permalink
The Republican candidate works a room, as excerpted from Richard Ben Cramer’s biography of the senator:
No one can do that day after day, week after week, for years ... without some rock-hard certainty that can't be milled away by nonsense and stress. He has to know: Why him? And: Why now? ... He has to know that he is The One. And if he's strong enough to keep going-if he's able, smart, and lucky-then, he'll get to the final twist in the road, when things catch fire, he can see how his words make the people feel, he can feel how those words now matter to him. He can make all the difference just by walking into a room. There are thousands of people -- and they want him. He and his campaign fill the lives of people who are almost strangers, and he takes over the life of everyone dear to him. He has to, it's all right -- because it's that important. Now, he knows: Not only should I be President, I am going to be President!
Richard Ben Cramer Frontline Oct 1996 15min Permalink
The artist discusses her latest record, Biophilia, science and music education.
Up until she developed a vocal-cord nodule a few years ago, Björk made a point of not investigating how that instrument worked. “With arrangements and lyrics,” she says, squinting over her coffee, “I work more with the left side of my brain. But my voice has always been very right brain. I didn’t try to analyze it at all. I didn’t even know until I started all this voice work, two years ago, what my range was. I didn’t want to let the academic side into that—I worried the mystery would go.”
Nitsuh Abebe New York Feb 2012 10min Permalink
The Mouth of the South is leading a relatively quiet life.
Stephen Galloway The Hollywood Reporter Feb 2012 25min Permalink
A pilgrimage to J.D. Salinger’s New Hampshire home:
The silence surrounding this place is not just any silence. It is the work of a lifetime. It is the work of renunciation and determination and expensive litigation. It is a silence of self-exile, cunning, and contemplation. In its own powerful, invisible way, the silence is in itself an eloquent work of art. It is the Great Wall of Silence J.D. Salinger has built around himself.
Ron Rosenbaum Esquire Jun 1997 35min Permalink