The Problem with Muzak
Spotify’s bid to remodel an industry.
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Spotify’s bid to remodel an industry.
Liz Pelly The Baffler Dec 2017 15min Permalink
Can hospitals learn to better treat Deaf patients?
Katie Booth Harper's Aug 2018 20min Permalink
How Washington left students to drown in debt.
Ryann Liebenthal Mother Jones Aug 2018 25min Permalink
The fight to save an innocent refugee from almost certain death.
Ben Taub The New Yorker Jan 2020 30min Permalink
John Ross, rebel reporter, became the sort of devoted gringo scribe who would give up drugs and drinking in order to better write about the native revolutionaries; the sort of man who used dolls to preach armed revolution to high schoolers in the weeks after September 11th.
Wes Enzinna n+1 Jun 2011 15min Permalink
“Some of the best lines — and I’ve been lucky to hear really nutso lines over the years — are not in response to any kind of question. It’s in response to, ‘I don’t know.’”
Alex Pappademas Grantland Mar 2015 20min Permalink
A minute-by-minute account of what it takes to run a restaurant.
Sharon Lopatka had found many identities on Usenet: VHS interior decoration pitch-woman, author of love spells, and pornographic film scammer. Her final posts concerned wanting to find someone to torture her to death.
Jeremy Lybarger The Kernel Jul 2016 15min Permalink
“I took my son to Paris fashion week, and all I got was a profound understanding of who he is, what he wants to do with his life, and how it feels to watch a grown man stride down a runway wearing shaggy yellow Muppet pants.”
Michael Chabon GQ Sep 2016 20min Permalink
Bomb makers—including ISIS—have been on a quest to obtain red mercury, a weapon reputed to be powerful enough to “create the city-flattening blast of a nuclear bomb.” They haven’t found it yet. That might be because it doesn’t exist.
C.J. Chivers New York Times Magazine Nov 2015 20min Permalink
“I came to Weeki Wachee to sound the mystery of the mermaid, to find danger and sex and darkness and maybe hear my own deeps echoed back.”
Lauren Groff Oxford American Jul 2014 20min Permalink
Swept out to sea by a riptide, a father and his 12-year-old autistic son struggle to stay alive. As night falls, the dad comes to a devastating realization: If they remain together, they’ll drown together.
Justin Heckert Men's Journal Nov 2009 25min Permalink
When a Qatari sheikh came to live in L.A., an entire economy sprouted to meet his wishes. “His highness doesn’t like to hear no,” one associate told a professor.
Harriet Ryan, Matt Hamilton Los Angeles Times Jul 2020 20min Permalink
“When I was covering the Ebola epidemic in West Africa, was there a real difference between my wanting to get to the village or hospital where people were dying terrible deaths, and my wanting people to be dying terrible deaths in whatever village or hospital I happened to be going to? Every assignment presents some variation of that question.”
Luke Mogelson Literary Hub Jun 2016 10min Permalink
One possible (if depressing) conclusion to take from this is that strategy is just an illusory abstraction that we have invented to give meaning to that which has none. We use it as a retrospective framing device to explain a complex series of events (of our own making but mostly of external provenance) that we do not understand. So maybe strategic theory is really just an gussied up form of conspiracy theory. We need to impose order on the world and believe that someone, somewhere, knows that the hell is going on.
Adam Elkus Ribbonfarm Feb 2017 25min Permalink
“Like they said in Step Brothers: Never lose your dinosaur. This is the ultimate example of a person never losing his dinosaur. Meaning that even as I grew in cultural awareness and respect and was put higher in the class system in some way for being this musician, I never lost my dinosaur.”
Zach Baron GQ Jul 2014 20min Permalink
In 2004, Cameron Todd Willingham was executed for starting a fire that killed his three daughters. The case hinged on the testimony of a jailhouse informant named Johnny E. Webb. Today, Webb says he lied.
Maurice Possley The Marshall Project Aug 2014 20min Permalink
A professional quarterback who lost a battle with his weight, a hermit who lived off the grid for nearly 30 years and a spy who went far too far — the week's top stories on Longform.
In 1984, Jacqui met Bob Lambert at an animal-rights protest. They fell in love, had a son. Then Bob disappeared. It would take 25 years for Jacqui to learn that he had been working undercover.
Lauren Collins New Yorker Aug 2014 35min
Meeting Christopher Thomas Knight, a.k.a. the North Pond Hermit, who lived alone in the Maine woods for nearly 30 years.
Michael Finkel GQ Aug 2014 30min
Jared Lorenzen was a star quarterback in college. He won a Super Bowl. And just like the author, he has spent his entire life fighting, and losing, a battle with his weight.
Tommy Tomlinson ESPN the Magazine Aug 2014 15min
In exchange for his surrender, the top Colombian drug lord was allowed to build his own jail, complete with a disco, jacuzzi, and waterfall. Now 23 years later, it’s a home for the elderly.
Jeff Campagna Daily Beast Jun 2014 15min
While war raged across Afghanistan, expats lived in a bubble of good times and easy money. But as the U.S. withdraws, life has taken a deadly turn.
Matthieu Aikins Rolling Stone Aug 2014 20min
Jun–Aug 2014 Permalink
A teenager murdered by her best friends, a notorious cold case suddenly heats up and Diana Athill, 96, faces the end — the most-read articles this week in the new Longform App, available free for iPhone and iPad.
The murder of a West Virginia teenager by her two best friends.
Under the cover of curing addicts, they beat and brainwashed their charges in basements across California. When a cult deprogrammer crossed them, he found a rattlesnake in his mailbox.
Nearly 70 years after Bugsy Siegel’s unsolved murder in Beverly Hills, a family finally comes forward: they know who did it.
Amy Wallace Los Angeles 15min
The author, age 96, on the end.
Diana Athill The Guardian 10min
Sixteen-year-old Kalief Browder was accused of taking a backpack. He spent the next three years on Rikers Island, without trial.
He set a world record in the 100-yard dash as a teenager. He was mentored by Muhammad Ali and a man who orchestrated the largest bank embezzlement in U.S. history. He was homeless for part of his adult life before making a comeback at age 34. Throughout it all, Houston McTear was really, really fast.
Michael McKnight Sports Illustrated Aug 2016 35min Permalink
At 9:14pm on November 22, 1987, sportscaster Dan Roan was doing the Bears highlights on Chicago’s WGN-TV when the station’s signal was hijacked. Someone wearning a rubber Max Headroom mask appeared, silently, on TV screens around the city. A few hours later, Headroom popped up again on another channel, this time for longer and with audio. Despite FBI and FCC investigations, the case remains unsolved.
Chris Knittel Motherboard Nov 2013 25min Permalink

Feature Writing, Reporting, Essays and Criticism, Public Interest — a full list of the articles nominated today.
Previously: Our picks for the best of 2013.
When I hear music as a fan, I see fields. I see landscapes. I close my eyes and see an entire universe that that music and the voice, or the narrative, create. A music video-and any other kind of visual reference-is created by someone else. For me, as a music fan, visuals kind of steal away the purity of the song.
Christopher Bollen, Michael Stipe Interview May 2011 25min Permalink
He created the template for contemporary hit-making, made Ace of Base the biggest group in the world, and mentored the most successful songwriter since the Beatles. Why have you never heard of Denniz Pop? Excerpted from The Song Machine: Inside the Hit Factory.
John Seabrook Slate Oct 2015 1h Permalink

The unbreakable Laura Hillenbrand, the search for Air Frace flight 447, the torment of Colin Powell and more — browse the complete archive of Wil S. Hylton, now available only on Longform.