Out of Thin Air: The Mystery of the Man Who Fell From the Sky
In 2019, the body of a man fell from a passenger plane into a garden in south London. Who was he?
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which is the biggest magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules manufacturer.
In 2019, the body of a man fell from a passenger plane into a garden in south London. Who was he?
Sirin Kale Guardian Apr 2021 25min Permalink
On the early NBA days of the league’s newest champion.
Mirin Fader The Ringer Jul 2021 30min Permalink
Notes on humiliation.
Vivian Gornick Harper's Oct 2021 15min Permalink
Can suicide be predicted?
Will Stephenson Harper's Jul 2021 25min Permalink
It started with a candle in an abandoned warehouse. It ended with temperatures above 3,000 degrees and the men of the Worcester Fire Department in a fight for their lives.
Sean Flynn Esquire Jul 2000 1h Permalink
Pregnant and facing decades in prison, the mother of Tupac Shakur fought for her life—and triumphed—in the trial of the Panther 21.
Tashan Reed Jacobin Nov 2021 25min Permalink
The aftermath of a revolution:
Amid all the chaos of Libya’s transition from war to peace, one remarkable theme stood out: the relative absence of revenge. Despite the atrocities carried out by Qaddafi’s forces in the final months and even days, I heard very few reports of retaliatory killings. Once, as I watched a wounded Qaddafi soldier being brought into a hospital on a gurney, a rebel walked past and smacked him on the head. Instantly, the rebel standing next to me apologized. My Libyan fixer told me in late August that he had found the man who tortured him in prison a few weeks earlier. The torturer was now himself in a rebel prison. “I gave him a coffee and a cigarette,” he said. “We have all seen what happened in Iraq.” That restraint was easy to admire.
Robert F. Worth New York Times Sep 2011 1h15min Permalink
Munich, the Dream Team, and the search for Nadia Comaneci—a collection of articles on the highs and lows of Olympic history.
The first modern games were staged in 1850 by a surgeon named William Penny Brookes in a town called Much Wenlock.
Frank Deford Smithsonian Jul 2012
An American gold medalist in the hurdles describes his experience at the 1896 Olympics in Athens.
Thomas P. Curtis The Atlantic Dec 1932 10min
On the scene of the darkest games in Olympic history.
E.J. Kahn New Yorker Sep 1972 15min
Three years after her gold-medal performance—and amidst rumors of a fall from grace—the author travels to Transylvania to track down gymnast Nadia Comaneci. He also enjoys several drinks with her coach, Béla Károlyi.
Bob Ottum Sports Illustrated Nov 1979 25min
On the eve of the 1992 Summer Olympics, the Dream Team held a closed-door scrimmage in Monaco. Michael Jordan led one team, Magic Johnson the other. Two decades later, a game report.
Jack McCallum Sports Illustrated Jul 2012 25min
How the media and law enforcement fingered the wrong man for the 1996 Olympic Park bombing.
Marrie Brenner Vanity Fair Feb 1997 1h15min
Sex in the Olympic Village.
Sam Alipour ESPN Jul 2012 15min
How science is “helping athletes approach perfection.”
Mark McClusky Wired Jun 2012 15min
How the government cleared the streets in advance of the 1988 Olympics.
Kim Ton-Hyung, Foster Klug Associated Press Apr 2016 15min
Dec 1932 – Apr 2016 Permalink
The jury room was a gray-green, institutional rectangle: coat hooks on the wall, two small bathrooms off to one side, a long, scarred table surrounded by wooden armchairs, wastebaskets, and a floor superficially clean, deeply filthy. We entered this room on a Friday at noon, most of us expecting to be gone from it by four or five that same day. We did not see the last of it until a full twelve hours had elapsed, by which time the grimy oppressiveness of the place had become, for me at least, inextricably bound up with psychological defeat.
Vivian Gornick The Atlantic Jun 1979 25min Permalink
“My mother kept scrapbooks of everything any of her children did all their lives, and among my scrapbooks are newspapers that I wrote on the typewriter at the age of six, The Hersey Family News, with ads offering my older brothers for various kinds of hard labor at very low wages.”
John Hersey, Jonathan Dee The Paris Review Jun 1986 50min Permalink
Georgia and Patterson Inman, 15-year-old twins, are the only living heirs to the $1 billion Duke tobacco fortune. They are also emotional wrecks, tortured by a hellacious childhood in which they were raised by drug addicts and left to fend for themselves in mansions across the country.
Sabrina Rubin Erdely Rolling Stone Aug 2013 40min Permalink
How one billionaire owner outflanked two others and brought the NFL back to Los Angeles, doubling the value of his franchise.
Don Van Natta Jr., Seth Wickersham ESPN the Magazine Feb 2016 10min Permalink

The mystery of the itch, the case for focusing on our neediest patients, an investigation of solitary confinement and more—Gawande’s pieces on Longform.
“I was in the visiting clubhouse waiting to interview one of the Oakland A’s this year when one of the players called, ‘Here, pussy’—as though he were calling a cat. But of course, he hadn’t lost Fluffy; he’d found a woman in his locker room.”
Jennifer Briggs Dallas Observer Jun 1992 35min Permalink
The king of clickbait, a hiker who disappeared on the Appalachian Trail and an interview with Jay from Serial — the most read articles this week in the Longform App, available free for iPhone and iPad.
The United States fights wars it can’t win using soldiers it doesn’t know.
James Fallows The Atlantic 40min
On July 22, 2013, 66-year-old Gerry Largay began hiking a 32-mile section of the Appalachian Trail. She hasn’t been heard from since.
Kathryn Miles Boston Globe 15min
The scientists at Beyond Meat have concocted a plant-protein-based performance burger that delivers the juicy flavor and texture of beef with none of the dietary and environmental downsides.
Rowan Jacobsen Outside 15min
How a young entrepreneur built a media empire by repackaging memes.
Andrew Marantz New Yorker 20min
A 3-part interview with the man who says he helped bury the body of Hae Min Lee.
A report from the NYC race riots of 1964, the perilous existence of confidential informants, and the militarization of American law enforcement — a collection of articles on police brutality.</p>
On police brutality in New York and the race riots of 1964.
James Baldwin The Nation Jul 1966
Albuquerque has one of the highest rates in the country of fatal shootings by police, and no officer has been indicted.
Rachel Aviv New Yorker 35min
On the militarization of America’s police forces.
Radley Balko Salon Jul 2013 30min
Brutality persists at the famous prison.
Tom Robbins The Marshall Project Feb 2015 30min
The perilous existence of confidential informants.
Sarah Stillman New Yorker Aug 2012 30min
How California law has shielded police violence in Oakland.
Ali Winston Color Lines Aug 2011 20min
The brutalization of Abner Louima and the tragic fate of a handful of flawed Brooklyn cops.
Craig Horowitz New York Oct 1999 25min
Jul 1966 – Feb 2015 Permalink
He’d sold his company, chartered a yacht, and set off with his model girlfriend to see the world. Finally, it seemed, Chris Smith was living the life he’d always wanted. But back home there was trouble: missing money, unraveling secrets, and a sudden question. Where the hell was Chris Smith, really?
James Vlahos GQ Apr 2018 20min Permalink
A primer on competitive eating’s premier event, the Hot Dog Eating Contest, which airs today at noon EST:
1: During the allotted period of time, contestants eat as many hot dogs and buns (called "HDBs") as they can. 2: They're allowed to use a beverage of their choice to wash things down. 3: They must stay in full view of their own, personal "Bunnette" scorekeeper. 4: Condiments may be used, but are not required. 5: HDBs that are still in the mouth at the end of the contest only count if they are eventually swallowed. 6: Puking up the hot dogs before the end of the contest (called "a reversal") will result in a disqualification, unless you do something horrific to make up for it (more on this later.)
Mickey Duzyj The Mickey Duzyj Catalogue Jul 2011 10min Permalink
An oral history of the 2002 Western Conference finals between the Los Angeles Lakers and Sacramento Kings.
Previously: Jonathan Abrams on the Longform Podcast.
Jonathan Abrams Grantland May 2014 1h5min Permalink
On the origin of the essay.
John Jeremiah Sullivan New Yorker Oct 2014 15min Permalink
Chasing the embers of hedonism in Morocco and Tunisia, as Salafi mobs and new regimes wash over the brothels, beaches, and nightclubs of what used to be the Arab world’s most liberal cities.
Nicolas Pelham Playboy Feb 2013 Permalink
“Let me say that again: Hedy Lamarr, arguably the most glamorous star of the pre-war period, also helped invent your cell phone and WiFi connection.”
Anne Helen Petersen The Hairpin Aug 2013 25min Permalink
“I am talking here about a time when I began to doubt the premises of all the stories I had ever told myself, a common condition but one I found troubling.”
Joan Didion The White Album Jan 1979 40min Permalink
How conspiracy theory links the internet’s first spam (a series of randomly generated words with the subject line Markovian Parallax Denigrate) with a woman who posed as a CIA agent and was convicted of receiving funds from Saddam Hussein’s government.
Kevin Morris Daily Dot Nov 2012 15min Permalink
An inmate’s protest.
Ann Neumann Guernica Jan 2013 20min Permalink