Revealing the Man Behind @MayorEmanuel
How a journalism professor named Dan Sinker became the most entertaining part of the Chicago mayoral race.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate.
How a journalism professor named Dan Sinker became the most entertaining part of the Chicago mayoral race.
Alexis Madrigal The Atlantic Feb 2011 10min Permalink
A New Orleans football legend reached the pinnacle of the sport, playing in three Super Bowls. Then he disappeared.
Ted Jackson The Times-Picayune Feb 2018 25min Permalink
For years, it was the largest portal for sex on the internet. Now its fate could shape the future of Silicon Valley.
Christine Biederman Wired Jun 2019 25min Permalink
The story of a lifelong addict and an unlikely friendship.
Matthew Van Meter The New Republic Jun 2019 30min Permalink
He dreamed of educating the children in his village. But soon he learned that it was dangerous for the Rohingya to dream.
Sarah A. Topol New York Times Magazine Aug 2019 50min Permalink
Can the king of ultrarunning conquer a race as short as the marathon?
Joseph Bien-Kahn New York Times Magazine Feb 2020 30min Permalink
On the racially motivated destruction of Tulsa’s Greenwood district.
Victor Luckerson The Ringer Jun 2018 25min Permalink
Why did Christie Smythe upend her life and stability for Martin Shkreli, one of the least-liked men in the world?
Stephanie Clifford Elle Dec 2020 20min Permalink
On the segregation of Slovakia’s Gypsies.
Aaron Lake Smith Vice Apr 2013 45min Permalink
The downfall of Hugo Schwyzer, feminist.
Mona Gable Los Angeles Apr 2014 25min Permalink
An oral history of “Page Six.”
Frank DiGiacomo Vanity Fair Dec 2004 50min Permalink
A chance encounter with a movie star on an airplane.
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Miranda July New Yorker Jun 2007 10min Permalink
John Dirr’s son Eli didn’t really have cancer. In fact, neither Eli nor John Dirr ever existed.
A decade-long Internet hoax unravels.
Adrian Chen Gawker Jun 2012 Permalink
In 1970, he was plucked from Saigon to attend West Point. He got his degree and went home to fight, but instead spent six years in a reeducation camp. Then, somehow, he ended up teaching high school in D.C.
Chip Scanlan Washington Post Magazine Jul 1992 30min Permalink
Chris Barry was born into Washington D.C. royalty. He died alone, essentially homeless, just a year after losing a race for his father’s former seat.
Harry Jaffe Washingtonian Jan 2017 20min Permalink
His father was a notorious figure in Providence organized crime. Boxing offered a different path for Jarrod Tillinghast—but it didn’t stop him from slipping into his old ways and robbing drug dealers with his neighborhood friends.
Tim Struby Victory Journal Dec 2017 20min Permalink
Most tycoons give big to one or two universities as their children approach college age. David Shaw gave to seven.
Ava Kofman, Daniel Golden ProPublica Sep 2019 20min Permalink
“As the world’s best-known oceanographer—Sylvia is to our era what Jacques Cousteau was to an earlier one—she feels a heavy responsibility. In her lifetime, she has seen the ocean damaged in ways humans never thought it could be. The ongoing disaster leaves her mournful, desolate, and sometimes scary to talk to. Since her first dive, in a sponge-diver’s helmet in a Florida river when she was 16, she has spent 7,000 hours, or the better part of a year, underwater.”
Ian Frazier Outside Nov 2015 30min Permalink
The corruption and cruelty of the state’s response to suspected jihadis and their families seem likely to lead to the resurgence of the terror group.
Ben Taub New Yorker Dec 2018 45min Permalink
The author’s then-six-year-old ended up with the original artwork for one of the cards in Magic’s Alpha series—but he’s not selling, so don’t even ask.
Ben Marks Collector's Weekly Nov 2019 20min Permalink
Memories of the author’s teenage years, when his father pulled up stakes on a comfortable life in Baltimore to reinvent himself as the head of a S&L bank in Los Angeles.
Eric Puchner GQ Mar 2011 20min Permalink
It started as simple teenage rebellion but ended up tearing Syria apart, setting in motion events that continue to rock the Middle East — and the world. The boys behind the graffiti would become unlikely revolutionaries and reluctant refugees. Not all of them would survive the upheaval they helped unleash.
Mark MacKinnon The Globe and Mail Dec 2016 55min Permalink
A young, shackled black man is shot to death — and the police say he killed himself. The resulting investigation has pitted the victim’s father against the most powerful man in New Iberia, La.
Nathaniel Rich New York Times Magazine Feb 2017 30min Permalink
Over at Readability, our editors highlight the best classic stories that resurfaced on Longform this year. See their picks.
In 1963, William Zantzinger was convicted of manslaughter in the death of Hattie Carroll and then immortalized – and somewhat defamed – by Bob Dylan. What’s he been up to since then?
Ian Frazier Mother Jones Nov 2004 15min Permalink