Death in the Desert
In early 2012, the bones of a woman and young boy were found near the Arizona-Mexico border. The author investigates who they were and how they died.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate Monohydrate.
In early 2012, the bones of a woman and young boy were found near the Arizona-Mexico border. The author investigates who they were and how they died.
Terry Greene Sterling Newsweek Jul 2013 30min Permalink
How Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder, with a little help from the Bush Administration, got 140 trees chopped down in a national park to improve his view and ruined the life of a park ranger in the process.
Tim Murphy Washington Monthly Jan 2014 25min Permalink
Walter Pitts, who helped develop the “first mechanistic theory of the mind,” was so brilliant he was once been invited to study with Bertrand Russell. He was also homeless.
Amanda Gefter Nautilus Feb 2015 20min Permalink
On Brent White, the joke whisperer who edits the largely improvisational comedies of Paul Feig, Judd Apatow and Adam McKay.
Jonah Weiner New York Times Magazine Apr 2015 20min Permalink
In nine hours, Guinea-Bissau’s President and military leader were assassinated in separate incidents. Their dealings had turned the country into the runway of choice for drug smugglers and Hezbollah.
Marco Vernaschi The Virginia Quarterly Review Jan 2010 20min Permalink
The holdings of the Seattle Art Museum are historically male-dominated. When Matthew Offenbacher won a prize for his own art, he decided to use it to beef up their queer and female holdings.
Jen Graves The Stranger May 2015 15min Permalink
The writer returns to his remote North Dakota hometown’s high school, then isolated with a graduating class of only 28, now even smaller but connected by the internet.
Rex Sorgatz Backchannel Apr 2016 20min Permalink
Thinking about the right thing to do, now and in the imaginable future.
Masha Gessen New York Review of Books Nov 2016 10min Permalink
A U.S. Marine’s journey from the Afghan war to an Illinois prison.
C.J. Chivers The New York Times Magazine Dec 2016 1h10min Permalink
By choice, for less than $2 an hour, the female inmate firefighters of California work their bodies to the breaking point. Sometimes they even risk their lives.
Jaime Lowe New York Times Magazine Aug 2017 20min Permalink
In 1865, a failed stockbroker tries to pull off one of the boldest financial schemes in American history: the original big short.
David K. Thomson The Boston Globe, Truly*Adventurous Apr 2020 30min Permalink
Perpetual outsiders, Mormons spent 200 years assimilating to a certain national ideal—only to find their country in an identity crisis. What will the third century of the faith look like?
McKay Coppins The Atlantic Dec 2020 35min Permalink
Companies are figuring out how to balance what appears to be a lasting shift toward remote work with the value of the physical workplace.
John Seabrook New Yorker Jan 2021 30min 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
“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
An oral history of Wikipedia.
Tom Roston OneZero Jan 2021 20min 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.
On Edward Tufte, the great data visualization (read: charts and graphs) theorist and author of 1983’s The Visual Display of Quantitative Information, one of the most successful self-published books ever produced.
Joshua Yaffa Washington Monthly May 2011 40min Permalink
A profile of Rebekah Brooks, who started as a secretary at News of the World and became CEO of News International by 41, developing an incredibly close relationship with Rupert Murdoch along the way.
Suzanna Andrews Vanity Fair Jan 2012 30min 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
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 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.
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
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
How a lonely, self-taught hacker found his way into the private emails of movie stars – and into the underworld of the celebrity-skin business.
David Kushner GQ May 2012 15min Permalink