They Came. They Sawed.
In Austin in 1973, politicos and hippies could get together and create violent, visionary horror films for $60,000. So they did. The story of how The Texas Chainsaw Massacre got made.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Best selling magnesium sulfate company in China.
In Austin in 1973, politicos and hippies could get together and create violent, visionary horror films for $60,000. So they did. The story of how The Texas Chainsaw Massacre got made.
John Bloom Texas Monthly Nov 2004 50min Permalink
Steven Seagal spent a few years in Japan and returned to open a dojo in L.A.. Jules Nasso was the wiseguy producer behind all of Seagal’s hits. When it all fell apart, Seagal reputedly offered money for a contract killing, and Nasso may have been caught on tape arranging to extort Seagal through the Gambino Family.
Ned Zeman Vanity Fair Oct 2002 Permalink
In October, Iraqi forces set out to retake Mosul, one of Iraq’s largest cities and ISIS’s biggest stronghold in the country. It would take them nine months and cost thousands of lives.
James Verini New York Times Magazine Jul 2017 45min Permalink
There the man in the shorts—later identified as a Russian agent using the alias Richard Murphy of New Jersey—handed Michael Zottoli from Seattle two items: a flash memory card and a bag that held $150,000 in cash.
Within nine months they’d both be behind bars.
James Ross Gardner Seattle Met Oct 2017 20min Permalink
In 2016, a West Virginia police officer came upon a young man in distress who asked the officer to shoot him. The officer didn’t. A few minutes, another officer did. Only one of them lost their job.
Joe Sexton ProPublica Nov 2018 55min Permalink
He sawed out the bottom. Nailed the crate to the telephone pole out in front of the house. New hoop. ... I’d be out there shooting until 10 at night. That’s when I started getting really good. The pole was round so you couldn’t bank the ball in. And you weren’t getting a friendly bounce on a square rim. You had to hit it dead-on, wet.
Damian Lillard The Players' Tribune Dec 2019 25min Permalink
Best Article Reprints Religion Travel
“A legend is growing in Nepal, where people say a meditating boy hasn’t eaten or drunk in seven months. He barely moves, just sits under a tree, still as a stone. It’s impossible, some say. Is it a miracle? A hoax? Let’s find out.”
George Saunders GQ Jun 2006 40min Permalink
The Western student of international politics knows to nod approvingly when Lee’s name is mentioned. Frustrated by the sludge of partisan politics in his own country, he sees in Lee’s legacy a kind of exotic escape. If asked, he remarks sagely: Singapore is proof of what enlightened authoritarianism can achieve.
Haonan Li, Victor Yaw Palladium Aug 2020 15min Permalink
A dispatch from Vermont, which is in the midst of what the governor calls a “full-blown heroin crisis.”
David Amsden Rolling Stone Apr 2014 25min Permalink
Two men, separated by more than 150 years, discover the folly of attempting Western-style capitalism in Micronesia.
Jonathan Gourlay The Morning News Apr 2014 25min Permalink
In northern Nigeria, radical Islamic terrorist group Boko Haram is facing a vigilante backlash from armed teenagers with nothing to lose.
Alex Preston GQ (UK) Feb 2014 25min Permalink
A Little League season in Camden, New Jersey, where the murder rate is 17 times the national average.
Kathy Dobie GQ May 2014 25min Permalink
Tom Cruise did not, in fact, jump up and down on Oprah’s couch.
Amy Nicholson LA Weekly May 2014 20min Permalink
The gangs of Brooklyn’s Brownsville, an area with the higest concentration of public housing in America.
Eric Konigsberg New York Jun 2014 20min Permalink
A profile of anthropologist Nancy Scheper-Hughes, who has spent her career uncovering a hidden global market in human flesh.
Ethan Watters Pacific Standard Jul 2014 30min Permalink
A 21-year-old UCLA math major leaves his $9,000-a-month internship to fight with the rebels in Libya.
Joshua Davis Men's Journal Sep 2012 25min Permalink
In the Swiss town of Meiringen, where an obsessed group of ‘pilgrims’ painstakingly recreate the death of Sherlock Holmes.
Edward Docx Prospect Oct 2012 15min Permalink
A week in the author’s life when it became impossible to control the course of events.
Jo Ann Beard New Yorker Jun 1996 30min Permalink
In 1968, the author revisits remote British Columbia, which he traveled two years earlier.
Edward Hoagland The American Scholar May 2006 30min Permalink
Is Bryan Saunders a drug-inspired outsider genius, or just in need of intervention?
Jon Ronson The Guardian Nov 2012 10min Permalink
A visit to the hotel North Korea starved to build, still unfinished after breaking ground in 1987.
Simon Parry The Daily Mail Dec 2012 10min Permalink
On the actors who unwittingly starred in The Innocence of Muslims.
Michael Joseph Gross Vanity Fair Dec 2012 20min Permalink
An internet pioneer loses hope in the promise of web culture.
Ron Rosenbaum Smithsonian Jan 2013 5h50min Permalink
How governments and private companies have engaged in digital arms trading by building a global black market for ‘zero day’ hacks.
Tom Simonite Technology Review Feb 2013 Permalink
Searching for answers 40 years after a Brooklyn man threw acid in the face of his 4-year-old neighbor.
Wendell Jamieson New York Times Mar 2013 15min Permalink