The Incredibly Happy Life of Larry David, TV's Favorite Grouch
A profile of Larry David.
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A profile of Larry David.
Brett Martin GQ Jan 2020 25min Permalink
On Rudolph Giuliani and the enduring power of shamelessness.
Jonathan Mahler New York Times Magazine Jan 2020 35min Permalink
The making of Caddyshack.
Kate Meyers Golf Digest May 2004 20min Permalink
Tech oracle Jaron Lanier warned us all about the evils of social media.
Zach Baron GQ Aug 2020 20min Permalink
What’s the future of NYC real estate?
Andrew Rice Curbed Oct 2020 30min Permalink
The writer, deaf since birth, on the intricacies of reading lips.
Rachel Kolb Stanford Magazine Mar 2013 25min Permalink
A writer considers America as he dies.
On waiting tables.
A personal history of “America’s most misunderstood religion.”
Walter Kirn The New Republic 25min
Guns, race, and childhood in Mississippi.
Kiese Laymon Cold Drank 20min
On the shifting nature of time.
An interview with Maurice Sendak.
Emma Brockes The Believer 20min
An interview with Pavement’s Bob Nastanovich.
Alex Pappademas Grantland 30min
An interview with a john.
Antonia Crane The Rumpus 20min
An interview with Kate Boo.
Emily Brennan Guernica 10min
An interview with Spike Lee.
Will Leitch New York 25min
On the film The Act of Killing, in which the actual perpetrators of a 1966-1966 Indonesian genocide recreate their own actions for the camera, and what it can tell us about our memories of the Vietnam War.
Errol Morris Slate Jul 2013 25min Permalink
Each soldier in Iraq and Afghanistan generated around 10 pounds of garbage per day. Most of that trash—along with used equipment and medical supplies and other wastes of war—was burned in open-air pits, emitting a toxic smoke that many soliders blame for their poor health today.
Katie Drummond The Verge Oct 2013 Permalink
In spite of the boiling-hot anticipation of its release, no one had much fun making this movie.
Vanessa Grigoriadis Vanity Fair Feb 2015 25min Permalink
A grandmother from Chicago, she’s one of those people who knows everybody. And those people who know everybody, the connectors, make the world work. A study of the power of (offline) social networking.
Malcolm Gladwell New Yorker Jan 1999 35min Permalink
Evidence of the failure to love is everywhere around us. To contemplate what it is to love today brings us up against reefs of darkness and walls of despair.
Barry Lopez Orion Aug 2020 15min Permalink
John McAfee created one of the first anti-virus programs. Then he traveled to Belize, where he lived with a harem of young women and a lot of guns. His neighbor was murdered under mysterious circumstances.
Stephen Rodrick Men's Journal Sep 2015 20min Permalink
Animal nature, human racism, and the future of zoos.
David Samuels Harper's 45min
Vegetables are "blue" in Japanese and other observations on the uneasy relationship between color and language.
Aatish Bhatia Empirical Zeal 10min
Kelley Benham Orion 20min
Ashlyn Blocker, 13, has a “congenital insensitivity to pain.”
A profile of Taylor Wilson, who achieved nuclear fusion at age 14.
Tom Clynes Popular Science 20min
The rise and fall of the “most far-flung, most organized, and most brazen example of homosexual extortion in the nation’s history.”
William McGowan Slate 30min
The story of William Morgan: American, wanderer, Cuban revolutionary.
David Grann New Yorker 1h25min
In 1810, a freed slave named Tom Molineaux fought one of the most important bouts in boxing history.
Brian Phillips Grantland 20min
The legacy of a secret Cold War program that tested chemical weapons on thousands of American soldiers.
The evolution of currency as “a complete abstraction.”
Dorothy Stratten was the focus of the dreams and ambitions of three men. One killed her.
The winner of the 1981 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Writing, available online for the first time.
Teresa Carpenter Village Voice Nov 1980 35min Permalink
Three interviews with John Gardner, author of Grendel and The Art of Fiction, conducted over the last decade of his life.
Frank McConnell, John Gardner, John R. Maier, Paul F. Ferguson, Sara Matthiessen The Paris Review Apr 1979 50min Permalink
His rise to the top of the Billboard charts coincides with a list of criminal charges, including domestic battery by strangulation, false imprisonment, and aggravated battery of a pregnant woman.
Tarpley Hitt Miami New Times Jun 2018 25min Permalink
In the mid-20th century, Great Britain maintained a network of 1,500 underground, volunteer-staffed bunkers in case of nuclear war. Now, one man is restoring two of these abandoned shelters to period-perfect condition.
Kate Ravilious Atlas Obscura Sep 2018 15min Permalink
The story of a lynching in rural CO in 1900, while hundreds watched, done with the complicity of press and cops, and why it still resonates today.
Alan Prendergast Westword Nov 2018 25min Permalink
For a century, Anglos from cold corners of the country have been lured here by the promise that this was a place where they could live among their own, in communities with nary a brown person in sight.
Fernanda Santos Guernica Feb 2019 20min Permalink
Last fall, when the deadliest blaze in America in a century blew through Northern California, thousands of people—including those in the tiny community of Helltown—were forced to flee. This is the story of four friends who stayed to fight.
Robert P. Baird GQ Apr 2019 30min Permalink
On the coast of Abu Dhabi, gilded outposts of the Louvre, the Guggenheim and New York University are being built by foreign workers who cannot leave and are paid half of what they were promised.
Molly Crabapple Vice Aug 2014 20min Permalink
On a pair of Israeli psychologists who between 1971 and 1984 “published a series of quirky papers exploring the ways human judgment may be distorted when we are making decisions in conditions of uncertainty.”
Michael Lewis Vanity Fair Dec 2011 Permalink