The Man Who Knew Too Much
The story of a tobacco industry whistleblower.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which are the china suppliers of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate for agriculture.
The story of a tobacco industry whistleblower.
Marie Brenner Vanity Fair May 1996 1h15min Permalink
Inside the growth of intelligence contracting.
Drake Bennett, Michael Riley Businessweek Jun 2013 15min Permalink
Script doctor Damon Lindelof explains the new rules of blockbuster screenwriting.
Scott Brown New York Aug 2013 15min Permalink
On the fast food workers of St. Louis.
Sarah Kendzior Medium Apr 2014 20min Permalink
What the gospel of innovation gets wrong.
Jill Lepore New Yorker Jun 2014 25min Permalink
The bungled theft of a $6 million violin.
Buzz Bissinger Vanity Fair Nov 2014 20min Permalink
The aftermath of a sudden death.
Linda Vaccariello Cincinnati Magazine Oct 2014 20min Permalink
The story, so far, of First Look Media.
Andrew Rice New York Nov 2014 25min Permalink
Talking about hope and the environment with a photographer who takes pictures of birds killed by plastic.
Brooke Jarvis Pacific Standard Sep 2015 10min Permalink
How the prolific crime novelist did his work.
Joan Acocella New York Review of Books Sep 2015 15min Permalink
On the gender gap in diagnosis and treatment of autism.
Apoorva Mandavilli Spectrum Oct 2015 Permalink
On the unexpected longevity of a very strange theory.
Veronique Greenwood Nautilus May 2015 15min Permalink
The inside story of how scientists finally proved that gravitational waves exist.
Nicola Twilley New Yorker Feb 2016 20min Permalink
A bank robber tells the story of a successful heist.
Dane Batty Crime Magazine May 2011 Permalink
On the reverberations of a 1974 peasant massacre in El Salvador.
Inside Rupert Murdoch’s News of the World phone-hacking scandal.
Sarah Ellison Vanity Fair Jun 2011 30min Permalink
An investigation of human trafficking and the international sex trade.
Sean Flynn GQ Mar 2007 1h20min Permalink
Best Article Arts Sex Movies & TV
An early profile of Sasha Grey.
Dave Gardetta Los Angeles Nov 2006 25min Permalink
A cultural history of the travel-writing.
Iain Manley Old World Wandering Oct 2011 20min Permalink
How the Border Patrol became America’s most out-of-control law enforcement agency.
Garrett M. Graff Politico Oct 2014 45min Permalink
Can the insights of neuroscience help us get over our prejudices?
Jeneen Interlandi New York Times Magazine Mar 2015 25min Permalink
The death of Bobby Phills, an NBA player who made one terrible mistake.
Jonathan Abrams Grantland Mar 2015 25min Permalink
An investigation into why the West is running out of water.
The labyrinth of policies that reward Arizona farmers for growing cotton, which uses six times as much water as lettuce and 60 percent more than wheat.
The woman who found the water to keep Las Vegas growing, for better or worse.
How a century-old water deal is encouraging waste and worsening the drought.
How the achievement of moving water comes at an enormous cost to the environment.
Ground water and surface water stores are interconnected. But we count them twice.
Abrahm Lustgarten, Naveena Sadasivam ProPublica May–Jul 2015 1h55min Permalink
The autonomous car of the future is here:
I was briefly nervous when Urmson first took his hands off the wheel and a synthy woman’s voice announced coolly, “Autodrive.” But after a few minutes, the idea of a computer-driven car seemed much less terrifying than the panorama of indecision, BlackBerry-fumbling, rule-flouting, and other vagaries of the humans around us—including the weaving driver who struggles to film us as he passes.
Tom Vanderbilt Wired Feb 2012 30min Permalink
An oral history of WFAN.
Alex French, Howie Kahn Grantland Jul 2012 1h5min Permalink