‘I’m the Last Thing Standing Between You and the Apocalypse’
Inside the final weeks of Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
Inside the final weeks of Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign.
Mark Leibovich New York Times Magazine Oct 2016 15min Permalink
How the GOP took control of state politics in Alabama, leaving black lawmakers—and their constituents—powerless.
Jason Zengerle The New Republic Aug 2014 30min Permalink
A profile of John McCain during the 2000 presidential race.
David Foster Wallace Rolling Stone Apr 2000 1h30min Permalink
When a spring breaker goes missing, a seasoned investigator uncovers devil worship and a sinister cult at the heart of the drug trade.
Corey Mead Truly*Adventurous Jun 2020 Permalink
Brutality and resistance on the front lines of Hong Kong’s battle for democracy.
Lauren Hilgers The Atavist Magazine Jul 2020 35min Permalink
The dark secret life of The Great Zucchini, Washington D.C.’s most sought after children’s birthday party entertainer.
Gene Weingarten Washington Post Jan 2006 25min Permalink
In the north Bronx, a small group of elite Ethiopian runners struggle to survive. The persecution they fled was far more harrowing.
To deal with climate change and power the cars of tomorrow, we’ll have to solve the cobalt problem.
Drake Bennett Bloomberg Businessweek Sep 2021 Permalink
The city’s drop in crime has been nothing short of miraculous. A year-long investigation into the numbers.
David Bernstein, Noah Isackson Chicago Magazine Apr–May 2014 55min Permalink
The case of Brett Kimberlin.
David Weigel The Daily Beast Aug 2014 10min Permalink
The story of twelve men trapped in a West Virginia mine, as remembered by the lone survivor.
Dennis Michael Burke Men's Journal Dec 2008 35min Permalink
How General Keith Alexander, director of the NSA, became the most powerful intelligence officer in U.S. history.
James Bamford Wired Jun 2013 20min Permalink
The murky legacy of the former Attorney General.
Matt Taibbi Rolling Stone Jul 2015 10min Permalink
On the unlikely survival (for the second time) of Kamaishi, Japan.
Charles Graeber Businessweek Apr 2011 Permalink
On a failed attack in Spokane and the fragments of homegrown terrorism in the United States.
Charles P. Pierce Esquire Aug 2011 25min Permalink
A prescient take on what the US invasion of Iraq would mean for both countries.
James Fallows The Atlantic Nov 2002 40min Permalink
A Supreme Court Justice revisits a rape trial from the 1950s.
A friendship born of mutual interest in birding stretches across the Berlin Wall.
Phil McKenna The Big Roundtable Feb 2015 35min Permalink
“I laugh off 90 percent of the stuff I’m sent,” Wu says. “But it’s the 10 percent.”
David Whitford Inc. Mar 2015 10min Permalink
On the day of the earthquake, two men went into Haiti’s Soccer Federation headquarters. Only one came out.
Wright Thompson ESPN May 2010 20min Permalink
In the throes of an epidemic, researchers investigate how to inoculate against the disease.
Siddhartha Mukherjee New Yorker Aug 2016 20min Permalink
A collection of stories about how malls revolutionized the way Americans shop, snack, and flirt.
On the visionary architects who, along with an extremely helpful tax break, gave birth to the American mall.
Malcolm Gladwell New Yorker Mar 2004 25min
A writer tries to make sense of a national landmark.
Ian Frazier The Atlantic Jul 2002 20min
Over the last five years, so-called “sweepstakes cafes,” known in Las Vegas and elsewhere as “casinos,” have opened in malls from Florida to Massachusetts. On the law-bending rise of a $10 billion industry.
Felix Gillette Businessweek Apr 2011 25min
The soap opera of an off-brand mall in West Houston.
Katy Vine Texas Monthly Sep 2002 15min
How Hollister employs the dark art of “immersive retail” to bring the allure of the mall to its flagship store in New York.
Molly Young The Believer Sep 2010 10min
Spending time with the Tonya Harding Fan Club in the wake of the assault on Nancy Kerrigan.
Susan Orlean New Yorker Feb 1995 20min
Feb 1995 – Apr 2011 Permalink
Thousands of internal documents help explain how, through brutality and bureaucracy, the Islamic State stayed in power for so long.
Rukmini Callimachi The New York Times Apr 2018 30min Permalink
At Inhotim, Bernardo Paz commissioned the Jurassic Park of contemporary art. Then the Brazilian government started investigating him.
Alex Cuadros Bloomberg Jun 2018 20min Permalink
At the height of the Cold War, America’s most secretive counterespionage effort set out to crack unbreakable ciphers.
Liza Mundy Smithsonian Sep 2018 20min Permalink