Wells Fargo, You Never Knew...
A just-barred Pakistani-American attorney attempts to save a young family’s home from foreclosure and glimpses the contradiction-rich bureaucracy that has emerged in response to the housing crisis.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Magnesium Sulfate trihydrate Factory in China.
A just-barred Pakistani-American attorney attempts to save a young family’s home from foreclosure and glimpses the contradiction-rich bureaucracy that has emerged in response to the housing crisis.
Wajahat Ali McSweeney's Mar 2010 40min 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
Best Article Arts Business Crime Music
A single-page version of Shalhoup’s reporting on the Black Mafia Family, one of the largest cocaine empires in American history.
The prosecutor in the case of hacker turned F.B.I. informant (but still hacker) Albert Gonzales and his organization Shadowcrew : “The sheer extent of the human victimization caused by Gonzalez and his organization is unparalleled.”
James Verini New York Times Magazine Nov 2010 Permalink
A survey on where the industry is headed. Says one agency veteran: “Marketing in the future is like sex. Only the losers will have to pay for it.”
Danielle Sacks Fast Company Nov 2010 Permalink
Nobody knows the full story of why legendary surfer Andy Irons died in a Dallas hotel room earlier this month. But some who knew him have come forward to discuss the demons he’d battled for years.
Brad Melekian Outside Nov 2010 15min Permalink
“Why are you putting all that muddle in your brain that’s not needed to be there?”
An interview about why giving interviews is totally worthless.
John H. Richardson Esquire Dec 2010 Permalink
Anatomy of an international incident; how three idealistic young American hikers wandered across the Kurdistan-Iran border and ended up in Iranian prison charged with spying.
Joshua Hammer Outside May 2010 20min Permalink
Nobody loved chimpanzees more than St. James Davis and his wife LaDonna; the couple spent more than 30 years—and gained a modicum of fame—raising one as their son. Then they almost died in a brutal chimp attack.
Rich Schapiro Esquire Apr 2009 Permalink
How a nation went bankrupt. “Ireland’s regress is especially unsettling because of the questions it raises about Ireland’s former progress: even now no one is quite sure why the Irish suddenly did so well for themselves in the first place.”
Michael Lewis Vanity Fair Mar 2011 Permalink
The father: an Oscar-winning songwriter. The son, a college dropout and partier around downtown New York. Their alleged crimes; serial casting-couch rape (the senior) and a drowning murder in a Soho House bathtub (the junior).
James Verini New York Feb 2011 20min Permalink
In 1998, a reporter called up Thompson to discuss the Clinton scandal and film adaptations, among other topics. The complete, previously unpublished transcript of their conversation.
Hunter S. Thompson, Ian Johnston The Quietus Feb 2011 20min Permalink
A suitcase was smuggled from Spain to Mexico during the Spanish Civil War containing negatives from three photographers would later become legends and all die in war zones. The suitcase disappeared.
Dan Kaufman The Nation Jan 2011 Permalink
A young, shackled black man is shot to death — and the police say he killed himself. The resulting investigation has pitted the victim’s father against the most powerful man in New Iberia, La.
Nathaniel Rich New York Times Magazine Feb 2017 30min Permalink
He was the most powerful fish broker in New Bedford, America’s most valuable seafood port. The Russians who arrived looking to buy his operation were undercover agents and he told them everything.
Ben Goldfarb Mother Jones Mar 2017 15min Permalink
An essay on clothing in uncertain times.
Zach Baron GQ Mar 2017 15min Permalink
“My stories, my family’s stories, were not stories in India. They were just life.”
Sujatha Gidla Literary Hub Jul 2017 15min Permalink
When Isis rounded up Yazidi women and girls in Iraq to use as slaves, the captives drew on their collective memory of past oppressions – and a powerful will to survive.
Cathy Otten The Guardian Jul 2017 20min Permalink
By the time Noura Jackson’s conviction was overturned, she had spent nine years in prison. This type of prosecutorial error is almost never punished.
Emily Bazelon New York Times Magazine Aug 2017 30min Permalink
On Amaka Osakwe and life as a woman in Lagos.
Alexis Okeowo New Yorker Sep 2017 25min Permalink
When she died in 1952, author Margaret Wise Brown left the rights to Goodnight Moon to a nine-year-old neighbor named Albert Clarke. The book became a classic. Clarke, living entirely off the royalties, became a deadbeat.
Joshua Prager The Wall Street Journal Sep 2000 15min Permalink
Boko Haram, climate change, predatory armies, and extreme hunger are converging on a marginalized population in Central Africa.
Ben Taub New Yorker Nov 2017 35min Permalink
In February 1637, the Dutch tulip market had grown to the point that a single bulb sold for more than 10 times the annual income of a skilled craftsworker. Then, almost overnight, the market crashed completely.
Ida Wood, who lived for decades as a recluse in a New York City hotel, would have taken her secrets to the grave—if her sister hadn’t gotten there first.
Karen Abbott Smithsonian Jan 2013 10min Permalink
A profile of Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, who “may be the only reliable voice of caution left in an administration inching closer to the brink.”
Robert F. Worth New York Times Magazine Mar 2018 30min Permalink