The Lawyer, the Addict
A high-powered Silicon Valley attorney dies. His ex-wife investigates, and finds a web of drug abuse in his profession.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Good Quality Magnesium Sulfate in China.
A high-powered Silicon Valley attorney dies. His ex-wife investigates, and finds a web of drug abuse in his profession.
Eilene Zimmerman New York Times Jul 2017 15min Permalink
“My cousin became a convicted felon in his teens. I tried to make sure he got a second chance. What went wrong?”
Danielle Allen New Yorker Jul 2017 35min Permalink
Video-game designer Zoë Quinn in the aftermath of Gamergate, an act of web harassment with world-altering implications.
Noreen Malone New York Jul 2017 25min Permalink
The consumer giant looks to social responsibility in the age of big business.
Thomas Buckley Bloomberg Business Aug 2017 15min Permalink
Articles about meditation, solitude, and the quietest square inch in America.
A legend is growing in Nepal, where people say a meditating boy hasn’t eaten or drunk in seven months. He barely moves, just sits under a tree, still as a stone. It’s impossible, some say. Is it a miracle? A hoax? Let’s find out.
George Saunders GQ Jun 2006 40min
A trip to one of America’s quietest places with a man who has dedicated his life to keeping it that way.
Kathleen Dean Moore Orion Nov 2008 15min
Silent since a car accident nine years before, Erik Ramsey prepares to speak again.
Joshua Foer Esquire Oct 2008
A speech on the value of being alone with your thoughts, delivered to the plebe class at West Point.
William Deresiewicz American Scholar Apr 2010 25min
John Cage’s art of noise.
Alex Ross New Yorker Oct 2010 20min
A trip to India for total silence.
Michael Finkel Men’s Journal Aug 2012 20min
The Barden family today.
Eli Saslow The Washington Post Jun 2013 25min
Jun 2006 – Jun 2013 Permalink
Forgetting a child in the backseat of a car is a horrifying mistake. But is it a crime?
Gene Weingarten Washington Post Mar 2009 35min Permalink
How infighting splintered a group of players once unified in the movement started by Colin Kaepernick.
Howard Bryant ESPN Jan 2018 15min Permalink
A profile of the leader of America’s bobsled team, who is competing in the Olympics months after the death of his mentor.
Nick Pachelli Esquire Feb 2018 10min Permalink
How she has controlled the GOP and gun law in Florida.
Mike Spies The Trace Feb 2018 30min Permalink
A car trip north ends in a terrifying slide off the highway.
John Seabrook New Yorker Apr 2018 25min Permalink
Animal rescue centers have been buying dogs at auction from the very puppy mills they protest. Those dogs are then adopted out in exchange for significant donations,.
Kim Kavin Washington Post Apr 2018 20min Permalink
On history, race, and guns in America.
Kiese Laymon Unruly Bodies Apr 2018 10min Permalink
A look at the rapper’s decade-plus ordeal.
Jessica Brand, Ethan Brown In Justice Today Apr 2018 25min Permalink
Five Mexican fishermen head out with enough supplies for several days. They’re gone for nine months. A story of survival in the South Pacific.
Mark Singer New Yorker Feb 2007 45min Permalink
The inside story of the first homicide in America’s most secure prison.
Chris Outcalt The Atavist Magazine Apr 2018 30min Permalink
How the Congressional baseball shooting didn’t become the deadliest political assassination in American history.
Kate Nocera, Lissandra Villa Buzzfeed May 2018 30min Permalink
In her fight to end sexual abuse, the Olympic champion is challenging the very institutions she led to glory.
Mina Kimes ESPN the Magazine Jul 2018 20min Permalink
“Success for us will be determined by our ability to move faster than everyone else in this space.”
Robert Safian Fast Company Aug 2018 25min Permalink
Is the Chinese government behind one of the boldest art-crime waves in history?
Alex W. Palmer GQ Aug 2018 20min Permalink
Millions of American children were placed in the Catholic orphanage system. Some didn’t make it out alive.
Christine Kenneally Buzzfeed Aug 2018 1h50min Permalink
“It is not so difficult to get Paul McCartney to talk about the past, and this can be a problem. Anyone who has read more than a few interviews with him knows that he has a series of anecdotes, mostly Beatles-related, primed and ready to roll out in situations like these. Pretty good stories, some of them, too. But my goal is to guide McCartney to some less manicured memories—in part because I hope they'll be fascinating in themselves, but also because I hope that if I can lure him off the most well-beaten tracks, that might prod him to genuinely think about, and reflect upon, his life.
And so that is how—and why—we spend most of the next hour talking about killing frogs, taking acid, and the pros and cons of drilling holes in one's skull.”
Chris Heath GQ Sep 2018 1h Permalink
A 23-year-old living in Chile was suddenly attacked and buried alive by her roommate. She later learned she wasn’t his first – or last – victim.
Francesca Mari Texas Monthly Jun 2015 45min Permalink
A reporter encounters the echoes of family and the struggle for civil rights in Mississippi.
Nikole Hannah-Jones ProPublica Jul 2014 30min Permalink
Victims of Mexico’s drug violence often end up in unmarked graves. This man set out to find them.
Matthew Bremner Men’s Journal Nov 2018 15min Permalink
Two angry men submerged themselves in the far-right internet. One committed murder. The other walked away. Why?
Joseph Bernstein Buzzfeed Nov 2018 15min Permalink