The Jody Grind
The unexpected history of a name.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate.
The unexpected history of a name.
Jody Rosen Slate Mar 2016 15min Permalink
The genetics of schizophrenia.
Siddhartha Mukherjee New Yorker Mar 2016 25min Permalink
On the neurobiology of flora.
Michael Pollan New Yorker Dec 2013 40min Permalink
On the fleeting magic of volleyball.
Richard Kelly Kemick Maisonnueve Feb 2017 20min Permalink
The diaspora of Hurricane Katrina.
Katherine Boo New Yorker Nov 2005 20min Permalink
A profile of the professional wrestler.
Molly Langmuir Elle Apr 2021 25min 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
Black men and women are still dying across the country. The power that is American policing has conceded nothing.
Wesley Lowery The Atlantic Jun 2020 20min Permalink
The expansion of private-security contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan is well known. But armed security personnel account for only about sixteen per cent of the over-all contracting force. The vast majority—more than sixty per cent of the total in Iraq—aren’t hired guns but hired hands. These workers, primarily from South Asia and Africa, often live in barbed-wire compounds on U.S. bases, eat at meagre chow halls, and host dance parties featuring Nepalese romance ballads and Ugandan church songs. A large number are employed by fly-by-night subcontractors who are financed by the American taxpayer but who often operate outside the law.
Sarah Stillman New Yorker Jun 2011 30min Permalink
On the closing of New York’s Fulton Fish Market.
It smells of truck exhaust and fish guts. Of glistening skipjacks and smoldering cigarettes; fluke, salmon and Joe Tuna's cigar. Of Canada, Florida, and the squid-ink East River. Of funny fish-talk riffs that end with profanities spat onto the mucky pavement, there to mix with coffee spills, beer blessings, and the flowing melt of sea-scented ice. This fragrance of fish and man pinpoints one place in the New York vastness: a small stretch of South Street where peddlers have sung the song of the catch since at least 1831, while all around them, change. They were hawking fish here when an ale house called McSorley's opened up; when a presidential aspirant named Lincoln spoke at Cooper Union; when the building of a bridge to Brooklyn ruined their upriver view.
Dan Barry New York Times Jul 2005 Permalink
“The Anonymous mystique had allowed a group of incompetents to hijack, then discredit, an important grassroots movement in the eyes of national media.”
Adrian Chen The Nation Nov 2014 Permalink
How Sinclair Broadcast Group bent the rules, bought politicians, and faked the news to become one of the largest independent owners of television stations in America.
Wil S. Hylton GQ Dec 2005 15min Permalink
The 34-year-old virgin father-of-15 at the forefront of the controversial DIY sperm donation movement.
Benjamin Wallace New York Feb 2012 20min Permalink
When ‘Ceca’, the Madonna of the Balkans, met Arkan, bank robber turned paramilitary leader and war criminal, and how it all came to a tragic end in the lobby of the Belgrade Intercontinental.
Adam Higginbotham The Observer Jan 2004 25min Permalink
The rise and (potential) fall of the electronics superstore.
Bryan Gruley, Jeffrey McCracken Businessweek Oct 2012 15min Permalink
How the United States came to spend more on defense than all the other nations of the world combined.
Jill Lepore New Yorker Jan 2013 20min Permalink
The “insane playfulness, deliberate infantilism, nutty haikus, naked stripteases, free-form chants and literary war dances of the beats” and their leader.
Seymour Krim Shake It For the World, Smartass Jun 1970 35min Permalink
The story of the Caughnawagas, “the most footloose Indians in North America,” and their gradual assimilation.
Joseph Mitchell New Yorker Sep 1949 35min Permalink
The original article on Billy Beane and the Oakland A’s, published a month before the release of Moneyball.
Michael Lewis New York Times Magazine Mar 2003 35min Permalink
The controversial owner of the Dallas World Aquarium once nearly caused a riot over pygmy sloths.
Ben Crair The New Republic Mar 2015 30min Permalink
Al-Jazeera English dominated the international coverage of the 2008-2009 Gaza war. And now it’s poised to invade North America.
Deborah Campbell The Walrus Apr 2009 20min Permalink
The Livingston Awards, announced Tuesday, honor the year’s best work by journalists under the age of 35.
On a mysterious migrant in a San Diego hospital bed, and the thousands of families who hope that he’s theirs.
Brooke Jarvis California Sunday Dec 2016
How war-crimes investigators captured top-secret documents tying the Syrian regime to mass murder.
Ben Taub New Yorker Apr 2016
A 3-part series on life in a small West Virginia city.
Claire Galofaro Associated Press Jul 2016
Apr–Dec 2016 Permalink
Life as a New York Times reporter in the shadow of the war on terror.
James Risen The Intercept Jan 2018 1h5min Permalink
Beatrice White, the Toronto girl who won the city’s turn-of-the-century fly-swatting contest.
Katie Daubs The Toronto Star Aug 2015 10min Permalink
For the past 70 years, the Circle L 5 Riding Club in Fort Worth has been honoring the legacy of its forefathers.
Aislyn Greene Afar Feb 2021 20min Permalink