The Path of the Righteous Man
A profile of Rick Santorum published early in his final campaign for the U.S. Senate, a race widely considered a stepping stone to the White House before he lost.
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A profile of Rick Santorum published early in his final campaign for the U.S. Senate, a race widely considered a stepping stone to the White House before he lost.
Mike Newall Philadelphia City Paper Sep 2005 25min Permalink
A group of misfit boys from the fringes of Las Vegas form a clique. Then, with murky motives, they decide to murder one of their own and bury him in a desert pit.
Vanessa Grigoriadis Salon Mar 2007 25min Permalink
How one of the most maligned cast members in SNL history ended up a talking head on Fox News.
Gus Garcia-Roberts The Miami New Times Jan 2012 20min Permalink
Every year, more than $6 billion is raised by breast cancer charities. A look at how much of that money ends up in the hands of scammers.
Lea Goldman Marie Claire Sep 2011 Permalink
In the early ’90s, American Airlines began selling lifetime passes for unlimited first-class travel. It hasn’t worked out well for the airline.
Ken Bensinger The Los Angeles Times May 2012 Permalink
Carlos De Luna, convicted of murdering gas station clerk Wanda Lopez, was executed in 1989. But was another man named Carlos actually guilty of the crime?
Maurice Possley, Steve Mills The Chicago Tribune Jun 2006 35min Permalink
John Dirr’s son Eli didn’t really have cancer. In fact, neither Eli nor John Dirr ever existed.
A decade-long Internet hoax unravels.
Adrian Chen Gawker Jun 2012 Permalink
On Jack Idema, a con-man who once ran a pet hotel before reinventing himself as a black-ops secret agent in Afghanistan, and the history of counterinsurgency theory.
Adam Curtis BBC Jun 2012 25min Permalink
On the scene of the darkest games in Olympics history.
Part of our Olympics primer, on the Longform blog.
E.J. Kahn New Yorker Sep 1972 15min Permalink
Matthieu Aikins, on the eve of a move to Kabul. Aikins is a correspondent for GQ, Harper's and Wired.
"There's no real objective framework for deciding what the value of your life is, versus the value of a story ... Especially when you go to places where people are getting killed for the silliest reasons, and a life is worth so little, you realize you don't necessarily have to value yourself as this, like, precious commodity that can't be risked in any way. And that's just a personal choice, and it's actually a very selfish one, because obviously, if you have loved ones, you're affecting them by making that choice. In any case, it's just a different headspace that you inhabit."
Aug 2012 Permalink
How a bid to unseat Senator Thad Cochran led to an illegal photo in a nursing home, a flurry of arrests, and the death of the man who brought the Tea Party to Mississippi.
Marin Cogan New York Jun 2015 20min Permalink
In 1952, Abe Feller, the U.N.’s first General Counsel, jumped to his death. More than 50 years later, his great nephew tries to figure out why.
Peter Birkenhead The Big Roundtable Jun 2015 35min Permalink
A business opportunity stemming from “a moment in time when the debate over how colleges should address sexual assault has reached a fever pitch.”
Katie J.M. Baker Buzzfeed Jul 2015 15min Permalink
“What it means — for the reporting we do, for the brands we represent, and for our own mental health — that we don’t stop being black people when we’re working as black reporters. That we quite literally have skin in the game.”
Gene Demby NPR Aug 2015 15min Permalink
Creating a new, clean police force in the Ukraine.
Masha Gessen Foreign Policy Sep 2015 25min Permalink
Ed Houben, a self described “ugly man,” has sex with multiple women each week, sometimes two in one day. The women, often accompanied by their husbands, are trying to get pregnant.
Michael Paterniti GQ Oct 2015 25min Permalink
She told the family of a severely disabled man that she could help him to communicate with the outside world. Then she said they were in love.
Daniel Engber New York Times Magazine Oct 2015 20min Permalink
They were the New York crew that once pulled off the Lufthansa heist, one of the biggest thefts in American history and the basis for Goodfellas. Nearly 40 years later, most are dead. The survivors are old, broke, and snitching.
Stephanie Clifford New York Times Nov 2015 Permalink
What America owes those it takes in.
Rachel Aviv New Yorker Nov 2015 35min Permalink
Angie Nwandu has no journalism experience. No publishing experience. She’s 25. And in less than two years she has created an entirely new way to cover — and profit from — celebrity gossip.
Doree Shafrir Buzzfeed Dec 2015 20min Permalink
He was arrested for pushing his three grandsons so hard on a Grand Canyon hike that rangers feared for their lives. Their account of the summer they spent with their youthful grandpa would include an uncanny understanding of marijuana strains and a stopover in Jamaica.
Michael Rubino Indianapolis Monthly Aug 2012 25min Permalink
Last February, John Jonchuck Jr. dropped his 5-year-old daughter off a bridge to her death. This is the story of what happened, and what didn’t, in the years before the murder made headlines.
Lane DeGregory Tampa Bay Times Jan 2016 25min Permalink
“She is a tech bro — except she’s a woman, trying to sell underwear. Or, as she sees it, innovating in the ‘period space.’” A profile of Miki Agrawal, founder of Thinx.
Noreen Malone New York Jan 2016 20min Permalink
What two years in Gracie Mansion have meant for a woman who aspired to be the “voice for the forgotten voices.”
Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah New York Times Magazine Feb 2016 35min Permalink
On systemic corrpution in the upper house of British Parliament, where lawmakers have the freedom to work for any business—banks, oil companies, Facebook—willing to pay for their “expertise.”
Justin Scheck, Charles Forelle Wall Street Journal Nov 2014 10min Permalink