Gaétan Dugas and the 'AIDS Mary' Myth
The Canadian scapegoat of the AIDS epidemic.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which are the china suppliers of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate for agriculture.
The Canadian scapegoat of the AIDS epidemic.
Guy Babineau Xtra West Nov 2007 20min Permalink
Part 1 of “The Mastermind,” a serialized investigation of Paul Le Roux, who went from brilliant programmer to vicious cartel boss to highly protected U.S. government asset.
Evan Ratliff The Atavist Magazine Mar 2016 Permalink
On a thin sliver of land called Rojava where “rules of the neighboring ISIS caliphate ha[ve] been inverted,” a Kurdish Syrian college trains its future autonomous leaders.
Wes Enzinna New York Times Magazine Nov 2015 30min Permalink
The editors of N+1 recap the revolution that is/was the internet with pit-stops to survey the Bolshevik Revolution, the NYT’s messy relationship with tech, and the value of an ad.
Editors of N+1 n+1 Apr 2010 35min Permalink
“I had inherited a Rolodex full of useful phone numbers (the College Board, a helpful counselor in the UCLA admissions office), but the number I kept handing out was that of a family therapist.”
Caitlin Flanagan The Atlantic Sep 2001 25min Permalink
The fight for South Africa’s future.
Eve Fairbanks The New Republic Mar 2013 20min Permalink
On an affliction for the digital age, “Munchausen by internet.”
Cienna Madrid The Stranger Nov 2012 35min Permalink
How the English graphic designer set the course for contemporary visual culture.
Midtown Manhattan. The highest concentration of showbiz havens and hangouts in the whole entire world. The Chorus Girls. The Drunk Newsmen. The Jazz Hepsters. The Mob. They converge with the force of a fly against a windshield. This is where American popular culture is born. Its influence permeates the nation. Walk the streets and weave through the hustlers, the gangsters, the bookies, the rummies... and somewhere among that crowd - you'll walk past a nondescript artistic genius or twelve, indiscernible from the dregs, biding time until they transform the American landscape. And high-above the loud, syncopated beat of Midtown you can hear... The Comedians.
Kliph Nesteroff WFMU Oct 2011 35min Permalink
The urban legend about the guy who hooked a rocket up to the back of his car and drove/flew it into a mountain? The anonymous author claims the story is about him and some of his small town high school buddies.
The story of mediatakeout.com, a gossip site with a monthly audience of 16 million and a loose relationship with the truth.
Zach Baron GQ Sep 2013 15min Permalink
400,000 Wiki-leaked reports that confirm the minute-by-minute misadventures of a “military at war with its own inner demons” in the unforgiving terrain of Iraq.
Spiegel Staff Der Spiegel Oct 2010 35min Permalink
A profile of Andrej Pejic, a model who walks the runway in both men and women’s clothing.
For even a moderately vain female, spending time with Pejic is like losing a race to someone who’s not even running: If he were not a man, he would be the most beautiful woman I have ever seen in the flesh—which, in his case, is flawless and poreless and has an English-rose luster.
Alex Morris New York Aug 2011 15min Permalink
Another look at a popular myth.
For the longest time blues fans didn’t even know what their hero looked like—in 1971, a music magazine even hired a forensic artist to make a composite sketch based on various first-hand accounts—until two photos of Robert Johnson finally came to light. The dapper young man pictured in the most famous photo, dressed in a stylish suit and smiling affably at the camera, hardly looks like a man who has sold his soul to Lucifer.
Ted Gioia Alibi Magazine Aug 2011 Permalink
Known abroad primarily for its stunning Pacific Coast setting and athletic lifestyle, the city [Vancouver] has since become one of the world’s largest sluices for questionable funds moving from Asia into Western economies.
Matthew Campbell, Natalie Obiko Pearson Bloomberg Businessweek Oct 2018 20min Permalink
A technical, thrilling account of how Pinboard, a tiny bookmarking service, dealt with the fire hose of new users after news leaked that Yahoo would discontinue Pinboard’s massive rival, Delicious.
Maciej Ceglowski Pinboard Blog Mar 2011 Permalink
The story of one man’s descent into lies and illegal activity – and why it could so easily happen to any of us.
Alix Spiegel, Chana Joffe-Walt NPR May 2012 15min Permalink
Bangalore was once the icon of a globalized, high tech, utopian future. Now it’s a sign of global catastrophe.
Samanth Subramanian Wired May 2017 15min Permalink
The night the doctor behind the Scarsdale Diet was shot by his mistress, the impeccable headmistress of the elite all-girls boarding school Madeira.
Anthony Haden-Guest New York Mar 1980 20min Permalink
On affirmative action at the University of Texas, the essence of privilege, and getting what you deserve.
This job—writing college essays for Abigail Fishers—was the only job I have ever been truly ashamed of, and I am so ashamed of it now that it hurts.
Jia Tolentino Jezebel Jun 2016 15min Permalink
A history.
The explosion of publishing created a much more democratic and permanent network of public communication than had ever existed before. The mass proliferation of newspapers and magazines, and a new-found fascination with the boundaries of the private and the public, combined to produce the first age of sexual celebrity.
Faramerz Dabhoiwala The Guardian Jan 2012 Permalink
In 2019, President Trump pardoned Army Lieutenant Clint Lorance, who was serving a 20-year sentence for ordering the murder of two Afghan civilians.
To Lorance’s defenders, the act was long overdue. To members of his platoon, it was a gross miscarriage of justice.
Nathaniel Penn California Sunday Sep 2020 1h20min Permalink
The importance of the sports metaphor in the American consciousness and why Lewis Lapham didn’t join the C.I.A.
Lewis Lapham Lapham's Quarterly Jun 2010 15min Permalink
The little-understood history of the whales and how barnacles may be the key to understanding how giant mammals evolved underwater.
Peter Brannen The Atlantic Dec 2016 15min Permalink
In the face of death threats, a forensic anthropologist has spent two decades exhuming the victims of a “dirty” civil war. Now his work might help bring justice for their murders.
Maggie Jones New York Times Magazine Jun 2016 10min Permalink