Seeding the Ocean
Inside a Michelin-starred chef’s revolutionary quest to harvest rice from the sea.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which is the biggest magnesium sulfate manufacturer.
Inside a Michelin-starred chef’s revolutionary quest to harvest rice from the sea.
Matt Goulding Time Jan 2021 20min Permalink
Could the pandemic teach us why our sense of smell matters?
Brooke Jarvis New York Times Magazine Jan 2021 35min Permalink
The origin story of a now-ubiquitous celebration.
Jon Mooallem ESPN Jul 2011 15min Permalink
At age 17, Eustace Conway moved into the North Carolina woods. He hasn’t compromised since.
Elizabeth Gilbert GQ Feb 1998 25min Permalink
On the writer W.G. Sebald.
Ben Lerner New York Review of Books Oct 2021 Permalink
The preacher ran a prostitution ring out of his halfway house. The teenager posed as his nephew and later claimed he feared for his own life. Only one man they drove into the woods would survive.
Devin Friedman GQ Jul 2014 35min Permalink
For the first time, the giants of the tech industry are spending more on creating, buying, and fighting patents than they are on R&D.
Part of New York Times’ ongoing iEconomy series.
Charles Duhigg, Steve Lohr New York Times Jan 2012 20min Permalink
The bodies in the chalet were found in a secret chamber, arranged radiating out from a point like spokes in a wheel. Some had suffocated, some had been shot. They all were followers of a mysterious prophet, Luc Jouret.
The Servant Girl Murders were one America’s earliest serial killings, predating Jack the Ripper by three years.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Jul 2000 20min
In 1948, a corpse was found on a beach in Adelaide, Australia. His identity, and how he died, remains a mystery.
Mike Dash Smithsonian Aug 2011 15min
In 1964, a Ku Klux Klan “hit squad” rode into Ferriday, Louisiana and set Frank Morris on fire. Nearly a half-century later, one of the alleged participants is still a free man.
Stanley Nelson Concordia Sentinel Jan 2011
In 1982, seven people ingested Tylenol sprinkled with a fatal dose of cyanide. The case has never been solved.
Joy Bergmann Chicago Reader Nov 2000 40min
Jul 2000 – Aug 2011 Permalink
An oral history of Motown Records, its founder Berry Gordy, and 1960s Detroit.
Lisa Robinson Vanity Fair Dec 2008 30min
On wandering through the city’s “post-American” landscape.
Rebecca Solnit Harper's Jul 2007 10min
A response to the national media’s mourning.
Mitch Albom Sports Illustrated Jan 2009 15min
On Mayor Dave Bing’s plan to demolish 10,000 abandoned homes throughout the city.
Howie Kahn GQ May 2011 20min
Jul 2007 – May 2011 Permalink
How the case of a poisoned college student in China, cold for 18 years, has suddenly turned into “what may be the largest amateur online manhunt in history.”
Kevin Morris The Daily Dot May 2013 15min Permalink
An interview with T.J. Jackson Lears, historian of the “charlatans and hucksters of the Gilded Age, the cagey, conniving street peddlers of what we’d rather think was a premodern world.”
B. R. Cohen Public Books May 2013 15min Permalink
Cycles of boom and bust in the drilling town of Williston, N.D., as seen from the perspective of an itinerant dancer filling one of three slots at the only strip club in town, Whispers.
Susan Elizabeth Shepard Buzzfeed Jul 2013 30min Permalink
Al Seckel held legendary parties in the 1980s and 90s, with attendees ranging from Slash to Francis Crick. He later became a collector of optical illusions and gave a TED talk on the topic. He may have also misled and defrauded many of the people he came into contact with.
Mark Oppenheimer Tablet Jul 2015 25min Permalink
A profile of Judy Clarke, who takes on the most heinous, notorious defendants in America, trying to save them from the death penalty. Until Dzokhar Tsarnaev, she usually succeeded.
Patrick Radden Keefe New Yorker Sep 2015 45min Permalink
When rival gangs confronted each other in the parking lot of a Hooters-esque restaurant, bullets flew. But was the whole a police setup?
Nathaniel Penn GQ Oct 2015 20min Permalink
For almost 20 years, Greg Torti has lived the life of a convicted sex offender—carrying a blue ID card with him at all times, avoiding schools and parks, living on the outskirts of town. It’s a just punishment for the crime, he says. It’s just that he didn’t commit it.
Michael Hall Texas Monthly Oct 2015 30min Permalink
On his last day at the paper, memories from Kaplan’s 15 years at the helm.
Jesse Oxfeld New York May 2009 10min
A profile of Beatty as Bulworth hit theaters.
Peter W. Kaplan The Observer May 1998 15min
A profile of post-Observer Kaplan.
Nathan Heller The New Republic Sep 2012 25min
Kaplan on 9/11 and the city he loved.
Peter W. Kaplan New York Aug 2011
On the Wise and Cranky Kaplan Twitter feeds.
Nathan Heller Slate Jul 2010 10min
A profile of Gardner in her twilight.
Peter W. Kaplan New York Times Feb 1985
Feb 1985 – Sep 2012 Permalink
An annotated transcript:
MR. SEALE: [The marshals are carrying him through the door to the lockup.] I still want an immediate trial. You can’t call it a mistrial. I’m put in jail for four years for nothing? I want my coat.
Jason Epstein New York Review of Books Dec 1969 1h5min Permalink
A charismatic entrepreneur, an ex-con turned devout Christian, and the politicians who championed them.
The story of a $36 billion Ponzi scheme in Minnesota.
Mariah Blake The New Republic Oct 2011 35min Permalink
On the mid-sixties birth of America’s underground newspaper movement and the rise of The Realist, East Village Other, Berkeley Barb, and more.
Jacob Brackman Playboy Aug 1967 30min Permalink
You can have a PhD from Yale. You can be a rising star in the State Department. And you can still find yourself being investigated by the FBI for espionage.
Peter Maass The Intercept Feb 2015 45min Permalink
In trailers just minutes from the Vegas Strip, Air Force pilots control predators over Iraq and Afghanistan. A case study in the marvels—and limits—of modern military technology.
Robert Kaplan The Atlantic Sep 2006 10min Permalink
A review of Treme, the new HBO show about post-Katrina New Orleans from David Simon, creator of The Wire. “The series virtually prohibits you from loving it,” Franklin writes, “while asking you to value it.”
Nancy Franklin New Yorker Apr 2010 Permalink
A utopian German settlement in Chile had already turned darkly cultish by the time it became a secret torture site for enemies of the Pinochet regime.
Bruce Falconer The American Scholar Sep 2008 40min Permalink