A Feel-Good Katrina Story Turned Bad
Kathy Phipps was “rescued” by FEMA. Ten years later, she is so anxious she’s confined to her house.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_where to buy magnesium sulfate trihydrate.
Kathy Phipps was “rescued” by FEMA. Ten years later, she is so anxious she’s confined to her house.
Peter Moskowitz Buzzfeed Aug 2015 15min Permalink
Activist investor Bill Ackman set out to destroy the multilevel marketing company. But did he wind up helping it succeed instead?
Roger Parloff Fortune Sep 2015 45min Permalink
Pubs are closing all over London. One Camden establishment, the Golden Lion, decided to fight it.
Tom Lamont The Guardian Oct 2015 45min Permalink
On the stories we tell ourselves about happiness and the indecent questions we ask women who decided not to become moms.
Rebecca Solnit Harper's Nov 2015 10min Permalink
After his father died in an Airbnb rental, the writer investigates what the company can do to improve safety.
On tour with a man who has claimed to kill Bigfoot three different times.
Jeff Winkler Texas Monthly Dec 2015 40min Permalink
A trip to the zoo, Charlie Kaufman’s new film, and human despair.
Zadie Smith New York Review of Books Feb 2016 20min Permalink
On the science of being fooled.
The first principle is that you must not fool yourself--and you are the easiest person to fool.
Richard Feynman Caltech May 1974 Permalink
How corporations are using the First Amendment to destroy government regulation.
Haley Sweetland Edwards Washington Monthly Feb 2014 45min Permalink
An essay on how to turn a sizable book advance into a sizable debt.
Emily Gould Medium Feb 2014 20min Permalink
A private investigator asks a magazine to write a puff piece on his business. The journalist finds a real story.
Peter Crooks Diablo Magazine Apr 2011 Permalink
What happened when the U.S. Military decided to take its lead from America’s biggest brands.
Naomi Klein The Guardian May 2011 20min Permalink
What it means to be an entrepreneur in Argentina, where economic crashes are a way of life.
Max Chafkin Inc. May 2011 20min Permalink
When the greatest players in the world go head-to-head, things can get downright angsty.
Gerald Marzorati New York Times Magazine Aug 2011 20min Permalink
On the fascination, from Hollywood to Atlanta, with zombies.
Justin Heckert Atlanta Magazine Sep 2011 Permalink
His complete financial disaster tourism series for Vanity Fair, to date.
Michael Lewis Vanity Fair Nov 2011 3h45min Permalink
The case for why a cup of joe is about to become a luxury item.
A portrait of three high school kids in Arizona forced to live on their own after SB 1070.
John Faherty The Arizona Republic Dec 2011 35min Permalink
Alarmingly sophisticated imitations of American currency have turned up all over the world and the false-paper trail leads to North Korea.
Stephen Mihm New York Times Magazine Jul 2012 35min Permalink
How prison changed the mother and militant who was sentenced to 75 years for her role in a deadly 1981 Brinks truck heist.
Tom Robbins New York Times Magazine Jan 2012 25min Permalink
As mainstream news loses its relevance, Allred becomes only more relevant to mainstream news. She’s provided thousands of hours of titillating material that has helped keep cable networks from grinding to a halt. The players come and go. Past clients like Amber Frey and Tiger Woods Mistress No. 1 Rachel Uchitel slip back into obscurity. Scott Peterson rots disregarded on death row in San Quentin, and Woods’s sexual escapades no longer mesmerize. But Allred retains her significance. There are always new victims to premiere and promote, new serial sexual harassers or psychopaths to square off against. In this spectacle of scandal, grisly murder, and celebrity wrongdoing, Allred has made herself the stage manager, the content provider, the indispensable performer.
Ed Leibowitz Los Angeles Jan 2012 25min Permalink
Why “Father of Botox” Arnold Klein, whose famous clients once included Michael Jackson and Elizabeth Taylor, thinks everyone’s out to get him.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Mar 2012 35min Permalink
Exploring the relationship between authors and their parents.
It mattered to her that she could have, or might have, been a writer, and perhaps it mattered to me more than I fully understood. She watched my books appear with considerable interest, and wrote me an oddly formal letter about the style of each one, but she was, I knew, also uneasy about my novels. She found them too slow and sad and oddly personal. She was careful not to say too much about this, except once when she felt that I had described her and things which had happened to her too obviously and too openly. That time she said that she might indeed soon write her own book. She made a book sound like a weapon.
Colm Tóibín The Guardian Feb 2012 15min Permalink
Two Houston performance artists faux-marry an oak. Controversy ensues about the live installation’s relationship to the gay marriage debate.
Mimi Swartz Texas Monthly Mar 2012 25min Permalink
Twenty five years after a shooting left him “100% disabled,” a Baltimore police officer continues to fight for his life.
David Simon The Baltimore Sun Mar 2012 15min Permalink