In Awe of Simone Biles' Greatness, With My Daughter and 25,000 Others
The author and his daughter make a pilgrimage to witness greatness.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_where to buy magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
The author and his daughter make a pilgrimage to witness greatness.
Kevin Van Valkenburg ESPN Jun 2021 10min Permalink
An ocean race from the Olympic Peninsula to Alaska, with no motors allowed.
Abe Streep Outside Oct 2015 20min Permalink
A respected professor shot dead through the mansion window. A quaint New England town shaken to its core. One all-consuming obsession in Whip City.
Deborah Halber Truly*Adventurous Jul 2021 25min Permalink
A broke music promoter and his detoxing son hatch a plan to solve all their problems. With Nas. On New Year’s Eve. In Angola.
Joshuah Bearman, Rich Schapiro Vulture Aug 2021 40min Permalink
In the countryside, the endless killing of civilians turned women against the occupiers who claimed to be helping them.
Anand Gopal New Yorker Sep 2021 40min Permalink
One writer travels to “La Serenissima” and finds that time is no match for Venice’s magic.
Harrison Hill Afar Aug 2021 10min Permalink
The singer-songwriter tries to hold down an uncertain moment.
Jia Tolentino New Yorker Sep 2021 20min Permalink
Scientists predict Tangier Island could be uninhabitable within 25 years. This is the story of the people willing to go down with it.
Elaina Plott Pacific Standard Sep 2018 20min Permalink
The enforcer for Oregon’s grocery industry made enemies. One tried to kill him with thallium.
Nigel Jaquiss Willamette Week Nov 2021 20min Permalink
Biden has a plan to make day care more affordable for parents—if the providers don’t go out of business first.
Claire Suddath Bloomberg Businessweek Nov 2021 20min Permalink
Evan Ratliff, a co-host of the Longform Podcast, discusses "The Oilman's Daughter," his new story in The Atavist.
"This woman was given the opportunity to take on a new identity. And it was a mistake. She never should've done it. If there was a way for her to go back and say, 'No, I don't want to know this. I want to be who I am,' then I think she should've taken that. … I'm fascinated with people who want to radically shift their identity. It almost never works out well."
Jun 2013 Permalink
On the oeuvre of Glenn Beck:
"The undisputed high point of Beck’s tenure in Baltimore was an elaborate prank built around a nonexistent theme park. The idea was to run a promotional campaign for the fictional grand opening of the world’s first air-conditioned underground amusement park, called Magicland. According to Beck and Gray, it was being completed just outside Baltimore. During the build-up, the two created an intricate and convincing radio world of theme-park jingles and promotions, which were rolled out in a slow buildup to the nonexistent park’s grand opening… On the day Magicland was supposed to throw open its air-conditioned doors, Beck and Gray took calls from enraged listeners who tried to find the park and failed. Among the disappointed and enraged was a woman who had canceled a no-refund cruise to attend the event." — from Alexander Zaitchik’s Common Nonsense: Glenn Beck and the Triumph of Ignorance
Tim Ferriss is the author of The Four-Hour Workweek and The Four-Hour Body.
“If you have a fitness magazine, you can’t just write one issue, ‘Here are the rules!’ ... My job, conversely, is to make myself obsolete. The last thing I want to be is a guru, someone people come to for answers. I want to be the person people come to for better questions.”
Thanks to TinyLetter and The Great Courses for sponsoring this week's episode.
Aug 2015 Permalink
How a small group of gamers has been able to “set the terms of debate in a $100 billion industry, even as they send women like Brianna Wu into hiding and show every sign that they intend to keep doing so until all their demands are met.”
Kyle Wagner Deadspin Oct 2014 20min Permalink
“There are people who are wired to be skeptics and there are people who are wired to be optimists. And I can tell you, at least from the last 20 years, if you bet on the side of the optimists, generally you’re right.’
Kevin Roose New York Oct 2014 25min Permalink
Georgia and Patterson Inman, 15-year-old twins, are the only living heirs to the $1 billion Duke tobacco fortune. They are also emotional wrecks, tortured by a hellacious childhood in which they were raised by drug addicts and left to fend for themselves in mansions across the country.
Sabrina Rubin Erdely Rolling Stone Aug 2013 40min Permalink
From a Neiman Marcus cosmetics counter in Dallas to a ghost haunting a high school in West Texas, the state’s gay marriage fight to the National Magazine Award-winning saga of Michael Morton — browse our complete archive of articles by Texas Monthly’s Pamela Colloff.
She was mocked for her clothes and for her hair. Tabloids published nude photos of her and covered her custody fight. The defense called her hysterical. The judge condescended to her. She lost. And then she became a punchline. Twenty years later, thanks in part to The People v. O.J. Simpson, Marcia Clark is finally being seen in full.
Rebecca Traister New York Feb 2016 15min Permalink
The son of a Red Sox legend, his trail of violent attacks runs back to his teen years. So does the line of judges who somehow saw fit, time and again, to give him one more chance. Now he’s on trial for murder.
Eric Moskowitz Boston Globe Mar 2014 30min Permalink
Despite no hurricanes in five years, Florida insurers are demanding yet more money from homeowners. At the same time, the capital that insurers have on hand to pay claims has shrunk. One reporter spent a year trying to figure out why.
Paige St. John The Sarasota Herald-Tribune Dec 2010 1h10min Permalink
The making of a lost generation:
According to the Unicef report, which measured 40 indicators of quality of life – including the strength of relationships with friends and family, educational achievements and personal aspirations, and exposure to drinking, drug taking and other risky behavior – British children have the most miserable upbringing in the developed world. American children come next, second from the bottom.
Maria Hampton Adbusters Aug 2011 Permalink
Using his good looks and charm to lure over young women into his VW, Bundy terrorized the Pacific Northwest and then Utah, leaving over 30 corpses in desolate forest gravesite clusters. After being caught in Colorado, he escaped twice, the second time fleeing to Florida by train and going on a murderous rampage.
Neither Jon nor Ian is legally married to Jaiya. Both are allowed to see other women. But the three of them live a lifestyle that—much of the time—isn't that different from a conventional marriage.
On the rise of polyandry, in which one woman settles down with two or more men.
Alex French Details Nov 2011 15min Permalink
Inside the relationship between the U.S. and Pakistan:
The U.S. government has lied to itself, and to its citizens, about the nature and actions of successive Pakistani governments. Pakistani behavior over the past 20 years has rendered the State Department’s list of state sponsors of terrorism effectively meaningless.
Jeffrey Goldberg, Marc Ambinder The Atlantic Dec 2011 40min Permalink
When Saul Bellow and Ralph Ellison were roommates.
He and I had our differences. I am not inclined to be sentimental about those Arcadian or Utopian days. He didn't approve of my way of running the place. I had complained also that his dog relieved himself in my herb garden. I asked, "Can't you arrange to have him do his shitting elsewhere?"
Saul Bellow News from the Republic of Letters Jan 1998 10min Permalink