The Hardest Lesson on Tier 2C
Can a violent adult jail teach kids to love school? A rare look inside one of the only high schools at an adult jail
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate Monohydrate.
Can a violent adult jail teach kids to love school? A rare look inside one of the only high schools at an adult jail
Eli Hager The Marshall Project Jun 2018 10min Permalink
Known abroad primarily for its stunning Pacific Coast setting and athletic lifestyle, the city [Vancouver] has since become one of the world’s largest sluices for questionable funds moving from Asia into Western economies.
Matthew Campbell, Natalie Obiko Pearson Bloomberg Businessweek Oct 2018 20min Permalink
In a small Minnesota town, an IT technician found his way to the darkest corner of the web. Then he made a deadly plan.
Mara Hvistendahl Wired Apr 2019 25min Permalink
At Lucky Peach and the Los Angeles Times, Peter Meehan reshaped food media. Now his former employees are coming forward to describe the cost of his leadership.
Meghan McCarron Eater Aug 2020 30min Permalink
A recent raid in Italy involving rare Chilean species highlights the growing scale of a black market in the thorny plants.
Rachel Nuwer New York Times May 2021 10min Permalink
In 1912, 300 miles deep on a trek into the uncharted Antarctic wilderness, Douglas Mawson lost most of his crew and supplies. The story of how he got back.
David Roberts National Geographic Jan 2013 10min Permalink
A profile of personal finance guru Dave Ramsey, who built his biblically inspired get-out-of-debt empire on the premise “it’s within your power to not take part in recessions and the economic troubles facing American families.”
Helaine Olen Pacific Standard Oct 2013 20min Permalink
NYT journalist David Rohde’s alternately terrifying and absurd first person account of his kidnapping en route to an interview in Southern Afghanistan and the subsequent seven months he, along with his translator and driver, spent in captivity in the tribal areas of Pakistan.
David Rohde New York Times Oct 2009 1h 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
Helg Sgarbi had perfected the art of seducing, swindling, and blackmailing ultra-rich women across Europe. Fleecing a billionaire BMW heiress should have been the crowning achievement of his career.
Kevin Gray Details Sep 2009 Permalink
Mexico City has one of the most ambitious and sophisticated video surveillance systems in the world. But it hasn’t stopped crime.
Madeleine Wattenbarger Rest of World Jan 2021 25min Permalink
The llamas, the dress, and the day the internet broke.
Charlie Warzel Buzzfeed Feb 2016 25min Permalink
How Bert Schneider, a well-heeled Hollywood producer with a coke problem and a soft spot for radical politics, smuggled Huey Newton, the leader of the Black Panthers who was awaiting trial on a murder charge, into Cuba in 1974.
Joshuah Bearman Playboy Dec 2012 30min Permalink
A collection of articles about the creative geniuses behind the most important video games ever made, from Donkey Kong to Grand Theft Auto to Pong.
A profile of Shigeru Miyamoto, the man who invented Donkey Kong, Mario, and the Wii.
Nick Paumgarten New Yorker Dec 2010 35min
How a group of roommates in Minneapolis created the most enduring educational game ever.
Jessica Lussenhop City Pages Jan 2011 15min
Chronicling the viral spread of the early video game Spacewar through computer science departments around the country, with students hacking in their own variations on the game and passing it on, until it eventually arrived in coffee shops at 25 cents per play.
Stewart Brand Rolling Stone Dec 1972 35min
Duke Nukem 3D made its creators filthy rich. Trying to complete its sequel nearly destroyed them.
Clive Thompson Wired Dec 2009 20min
A profile of Dave Jones, the designer of Lemmings and Grand Theft Auto.
David Kushner GamePro Jul 2010
A “crude table-tennis arcade game” called Pong and the birth of the video game industry.
Chris Stokel-Walker Buzzfeed Nov 2012 20min
Dec 1972 – Nov 2012 Permalink
On Erzsébet Báthory, the first—and still most prolific—female serial killer.
Tori Telfer The Hairpin May 2014 20min Permalink
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.
Matt Novak Gizmodo Sep 2014 Permalink
Lauren spent six years of her childhood locked in a closet, starved and tortured by her birth mother and stepfather. Miraculously, she survived; that’s when her long road to recovery began.
After nearly a year in Afghanistan—during which almost half of their unit was killed or injured—paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne have one more mission before they go home.
Brian Mockenhaupt The Atlantic Nov 2010 35min Permalink
Alan Young has been running the same scam for years: posing as a member of The Temptations and smooth-talking his way into luxury hotel rooms and prostitutes. Despite his clear charm, he admits he has “no skills other than being a con man.”
Kara Platoni East Bay Express Mar 2002 30min Permalink
Behind the scenes of Conan vs. Leno. An excerpt from The War for Late Night.
Bill Carter Vanity Fair Nov 2010 30min Permalink
Dandenis Muñoz Mosquera, a.k.a. “La Quica,” was one of Pablo Escobar’s top killers. Now he’s in a maximum security prison in Colorado. Here’s the thing: for all his crimes, La Quica may not have committed the one that put him away.
Alan Prendergast Westword May 2001 20min Permalink
Bill Ackman’s hedge fund planned to make a fortune while doing good by exposing Herbalife as a scheme that preyed upon and lied to the poor. How one of the highest profile stock shorts in market history went awry.
Sheelah Kolhatkar New Yorker Feb 2017 35min Permalink
How junk arson science convicted a mother of killing her own daughters.
Liliana Segura theintercept.com Mar 2017 55min Permalink
Paul Le Roux could have been Mark Zuckerberg. Instead he became a 21st century John Gotti, running a massive criminal empire from his computer until he became an asset of the United States government.
A 7-part serialized story, written by Longform Podcast co-host Evan Ratliff.
On living with the internet.
Patricia Lockwood London Review of Books Feb 2019 30min Permalink