‘You don’t understand, Captain. He has a gun’: The Hijacking of Flight 1320
An Eastern Airlines shuttle to Boston 50 years ago started out routine. It ended up changing how America flies.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Suppliers of Magnesium sulfate.
An Eastern Airlines shuttle to Boston 50 years ago started out routine. It ended up changing how America flies.
Neil Swidey The Boston Globe Mar 2020 40min Permalink
How a fearsome, fast-talking union boss became a leading figure in cannabis legalization while shaking down the very people he was supposed to be helping.
Jason Fagone San Francisco Chronicle, Epic Magazine Mar 2020 1h15min Permalink
Production was shut down three times, the stars often clashed, and studio executives were baffled. Here’s how a difficult shoot led to an Oscar-winning masterpiece.
Kyle Buchanan New York Times May 2020 20min Permalink
“Peril is generational for black people in America—and incarceration is our current mechanism for ensuring that the peril continues.”
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic Sep 2015 1h20min Permalink
How do you write about Hollywood’s most self-referential screenwriter at a destabilizing moment in history? It takes more than one draft.
Jon Mooallem New York Times Magazine Jul 2020 25min Permalink
The All-American Girls Professional Baseball League did everything it could to keep lesbians off the diamond. Seventy-five years later, its gay stars are finally opening up.
Britni de la Cretaz Narratively May 2018 15min Permalink
In a district where parents are epidemiologists and health policy experts, the meltdown happened one Zoom meeting at a time
Noreen Malone Slate Dec 2020 30min Permalink
The psychologist taught us that what we remember is not fixed, but her work testifying for defendants like Harvey Weinstein collides with our traumatized moment.
Rachel Aviv New Yorker Mar 2021 35min Permalink
Should humans try harder to protect even wild creatures from predators and disease? Should we care whether they live good lives? Some philosophers and scientists have an unorthodox answer.
Dylan Matthews Vox Apr 2021 15min Permalink
Rédoine Faïd loved the movies, and his greatest crimes were laced with tributes: to Point Break, Heat, and Reservoir Dogs. When he landed in a maximum-security prison, cinema provided inspiration once again.
Adam Leith Gollner GQ Apr 2021 15min Permalink
For centuries, dowsers have claimed the ability to find groundwater, precious metals, and other quarry using divining rods and an uncanny intuition. Is it the real deal or woo-woo?
Dan Schwartz Outside May 2021 20min Permalink
When a gossip rag went after the CEO, he retaliated with the brutal, brilliant efficiency he used to build his business empire.
Brad Stone Bloomberg Businessweek May 2021 20min Permalink
Thirty years ago, the biggest celebrities on earth opened a chain restaurant. For a few years, it was the hottest ticket in town. Then it went bankrupt. Twice.
Kate Storey Esquire Jun 2021 25min Permalink
It seemed like an easy crime to stop: protected Indonesian rainforest, cut for coffee farms. But a globalized economy can undermine even the best-laid plans.
Wyatt Williams New York Times Magazine Aug 2021 30min Permalink
Fifty years ago, The Last Picture Show changed the way the world saw small-town Texas and, in turn, the way the small town saw itself
Michael J. Mooney Texas Highways Aug 2021 10min Permalink
Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah is an essayist. Her 2017 GQ piece “A Most American Terrorist: The Making of Dylann Roof” won the National Magazine Award and the Pulitzer Prize.
“I remember feeling like ‘you’re playing chess with evil, and you gotta win.’ Because this is the most terrible thing I’d ever seen. And I was so mad. I still get so mad. Words aren’t enough. I’m angry about it. I can’t do anything to Dylann Roof, physically, so this is what I could do.”
Thanks to MailChimp, Read This Summer, and Netflix for sponsoring this week's episode.
Jul 2018 Permalink
Samin Nosrat is a food writer, educator, and chef. She is the author of Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat and hosts a series by the same name on Netflix.
“I kind of couldn’t exist as just a cook or a writer. I kind of need to be both. Because they fulfill these two totally different parts of myself and my brain. Cooking is really social, it’s very physical, and also you don’t have any time to become attached to your product. You hand it off and somebody eats it, and literally tomorrow it’s shit. … Whereas with writing, it’s the exact opposite. It’s super solitary. It’s super cerebral. And you have all the time in the world to get attached to your thing and freak out about it.”
Thanks to MailChimp, and Pitt Writers for sponsoring this episode.
Dec 2018 Permalink
“When it comes down to it, really, genes don’t make you who you are. Gene expression does. And gene expression varies depending on the life you live.”
David Dobbs Pacific Standard Sep 2013 25min Permalink
Despite its association with piracy, BitTorrent is a company in its own right, and one desperate to hit upon a way to monetize its revolutionary file transfer technology.
Sarah Kessler Fast Company Mar 2014 15min Permalink
How Derrick Hamilton went from wrongfully convicted to legal scholar to free.
Jennifer Gonnerman New Yorker Jun 2016 30min Permalink
Life at Marvel Comics in the mid-1960s.
An excerpt from Marvel Comics: The Untold Story.
On Aint It Cool News’ Harry Knowles, who built an influential empire on insider movie news while wheelchair-bound and at one point weighing over 500 pounds, then lost it all.
Hal Espen, Borys Kit The Hollywood Reporter Mar 2013 15min Permalink
Life in Green Bank, West Virginia, a town without cell signals and a haven people with electromagnetic hypersensitivity (a disease that may or may not exist).
Joseph Stromberg Slate Apr 2013 15min Permalink
On an Indonesian town that serves both as stopping point for those seeking to reach Australia by boat and a hotspot for short term ‘contract marriage,’ which allows Saudi tourists a loophole to engage in Islamic-sanctioned prostitution.
Aubrey Belford The Global Mail Apr 2013 15min Permalink
How a struggling comedian became a pimp who eventually started sending teenage hookers on bank robbery missions that earned them notoriety as the “Starlet Bandits.”
Gene Maddaus LA Weekly Jul 2013 20min Permalink