How to Rig an Election
The perils of voting in the modern age.
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The perils of voting in the modern age.
Victoria Collier Harper's Nov 2012 15min Permalink
On the death of a major league pitcher and its aftermath.
Mirin Fader Bleacher Report Sep 2020 20min Permalink
Expropriated Indigenous land is the foundation of the land-grant university system.
Robert Lee, Tristan Ahtone High Country News Apr 2020 25min Permalink
Ryan Mac and Craig Silverman are reporters at BuzzFeed News. Together they won this year's George Polk Award for Business Reporting for their coverage of Facebook's handling of disinformation on its platform.
This is the second in a week-long series of conversations with winners of this year's George Polk Awards in Journalism.
Apr 2021 Permalink
New research is intensifying the debate — with profound implications for the future of the planet.
Ferris Jabr New York Times Magazine Apr 2021 20min Permalink
Pakistani fishing communities struggle inside the nets of bonded labor.
Alizeh Kohari The Baffler May 2021 25min Permalink
Trying to make sense of a fragmented, disparate musical tradition.
A trip to the “Olympics of hairdressing” with Team USA.
Julia Rubin Racked May 2016 35min Permalink
Daniel Hale exposed the machinery of America’s clandestine warfare. Why did no one seem to care?
Kerry Howley New York Jul 2021 30min Permalink
Can a cowboy become the greatest polo player of all time?
Alvin Townley Truly*Adventurous Sep 2021 10min Permalink
Daisy Coleman, new to town and a cheerleader, was 14. Matthew Barnett, a 17-year-old football player and the grandson of a longtime politician, was 17. The evidence pointed overwhelmingly toward rape. There was even a video. Yet the charges were dropped. Then the people of Maryville, Missouri, set about running the Colemans out of town.
Dugan Arnett Kansas City Star Oct 2013 20min Permalink
When Randy Lanier sped to Rookie of the Year honors at the 1986 Indianapolis 500, few knew his racing credentials, let alone his status as one of the nation’s most prolific drug runners, smuggling in tons of marijuana when he wasn’t on the track. Now, after 27 years in prison, Lanier is looking to the road ahead.
L. Jon Wertheim Sports Illustrated Jan 2017 20min Permalink
“For hours, days, I fixated on the patch of sunlight cast against my wall through those barred and grated windows. When, after five weeks, my knees buckled and I fell to the ground utterly broken, sobbing and rocking to the beat of my heart, it was the patch of sunlight that brought me back.”
Shane Bauer Mother Jones Oct 2012 10min Permalink
“Places like the New York Times, Le Monde and the Washington Post are not given to elevating editors—of any gender—who would accept anything other than the highest of standards. As in tough, demanding, challenging. But there’s no doubt that many find this off-putting and threatening from a certain kind of woman. Like me.”
Susan Glasser Politico Magazine May 2014 10min Permalink
On George Plimpton and the founders of The Paris Review.
Early in the fifties another young generation of American expatriates in Paris became twenty-six years old, but they were not Sad Young Men, nor were they Lost; they were the witty, irreverent sons of a conquering nation.
Gay Talese Esquire Jul 1963 20min Permalink
Tom Wicker was without a notebook on November 22, 1963. Instead, reported Gay Talese, he “scribbled his observations and facts across the back of a mimeographed itinerary of Kennedy’s two-day tour of Texas.”
Here’s the 3,700-word masterpiece he filed.
Tom Wicker New York Times Nov 1963 15min Permalink
Undercover as a student at Phoenix University, the largest for-profit higher education company in the country and the second-largest enroller of students (behind the SUNY system), where only 12 percent of first-time students graduate and the ad budget accounts for 30 percent of overall spending.
Christopher R. Beha Harper's Oct 2011 Permalink
“The specific dissonance of Trumpism—advocacy for discriminatory, even cruel, policies combined with vehement denials that such policies are racially motivated—provides the emotional core of its appeal. It is the most recent manifestation of a contradiction as old as the United States, a society founded by slaveholders on the principle that all men are created equal.”
Adam Serwer The Atlantic Nov 2017 50min Permalink
A few miles north of San Francisco, off the coast of Sausalito, is Richardson Bay, a saltwater estuary where roughly one hundred people live out of sight from the world. Known as anchor-outs, they make their homes a quarter mile from the shore, on abandoned and unseaworthy vessels, doing their best, with little or no money, to survive.
This presentation was shown to potential recruits for the new Maven SI venture, and it details exactly how the people now in charge of Sports Illustrated plan on turning it into the sort of volume-driven content farm that ruled the web a dozen or so tweaks of the Google algorithm ago.
Laura Wagner, Kelsey McKinney, David Roth Deadspin Oct 2019 30min Permalink
A eulogy of sorts for the King.
Lester Bangs Village Voice Aug 1977 10min Permalink
On the hanging of James Murphy, murderer.
Lafcadio Hearn The Cincinnati Commercial Aug 1876 20min Permalink
Adventures with a group of young Hasidic men looking for God in psychedelic drugs.
Hamilton Morris Vice Sep 2008 15min Permalink
How Norman Mailer and other writers wanted to go out.
George Plimpton New York Review of Books Aug 1977 20min Permalink
An inside account of the Nairobi mall attack.
James Verini New Yorker Sep 2013 10min Permalink