Alex Goldman is the co-host of Reply All.
“I am not the authority on the internet. I’m not an expert on particularly anything, except stuff that I like.”
Thanks to MailChimp, Squarespace, and Blinkist for sponsoring this week's episode.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
Alex Goldman is the co-host of Reply All.
“I am not the authority on the internet. I’m not an expert on particularly anything, except stuff that I like.”
Thanks to MailChimp, Squarespace, and Blinkist for sponsoring this week's episode.
Sep 2017 Permalink
Hollywood is aggressively adapting material that doesn’t have a narrative or even any characters. But not all intellectual property is created equal.
Alex French New York Times Magazine Jul 2017 20min Permalink
Atul Gawande’s recent commencement address at Stanford’s School of Medicine graduation. “Each of you is now an expert. Congratulations. So why—in your heart of hearts—do you not quite feel that way?”
Atul Gawande New Yorker Jun 2010 10min Permalink
How Google used artificial intelligence to transform Google Translate, one of its more popular services — and how machine learning is poised to reinvent computing itself.
Gideon Lewis-Kraus New York Times Magazine Dec 2016 1h Permalink
Irving Kahn is about to celebrate his 106th birthday. He still goes to work every day. Scientists are studying him and several hundred other Ashkenazim to find out what keeps them going. And going. And going.
Jesse Green New York Nov 2011 25min Permalink
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One morning in mid-December, a group of soldiers banged on the door of a house in eastern Aleppo. A male voice responded from inside: “Who are you?” A soldier answered: “We’re the Syrian Arab Army. It’s O.K., you can come out. They’re all gone.” The door opened. A middle-aged man appeared. He had a gaunt, distinguished face, but his clothes were threadbare and his teeth looked brown and rotted. At the soldiers’ encouragement, he stepped hesitantly forward into the street. He explained to them, a little apologetically, that he had not crossed his threshold in four and a half years.
Robert F. Worth New York Times Magazine May 2017 35min Permalink
Paris Hilton, Princeton phonies, and the prince who blew through billions—a collection of articles on young money.
Last fall, a team of American Special Forces arrived in Nerkh, a district just west of Kabul. Six months later, amid allegations of torturing and murdering locals, the team was gone. Shortly after they left, the remains of 10 missing villagers were found outside their vacated base. An investigation into a possible war crime.
Matthieu Aikins Rolling Stone Nov 2013 25min Permalink
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A moving story of exploitation, bravery, and survival—in comics form.
In “Stowaway,” the new enhanced e-comic from The Atavist, award-winning cartoonist Josh Neufeld and investigative journalist Tori Marlan bring a human trafficking victim’s story to the comics medium.
From a Tokyo smash-and-grab to driving a car through the window of a Dubai jewelry shop, how a ragtag band of Balkan thieves set a new bar for audacious heists.
A member of the Pink Panthers, Milan Poparic, escaped from prison yesterday.
David Samuels New Yorker Apr 2010 1h5min Permalink
The son of a Red Sox legend, his trail of violent attacks runs back to his teen years. So does the line of judges who somehow saw fit, time and again, to give him one more chance. Now he’s on trial for murder.
Eric Moskowitz Boston Globe Mar 2014 30min Permalink
“Ikea, it seems, is a genius at selling Ikea.”
Beth Kowitt Fortune Mar 2015 15min Permalink
George Trow’s Within the Context of No Context was a brilliant, scary vision of a cultural end-time. Then, having described it, he lived it, spiraling into madness.
Ariel Levy New York Oct 2007 25min Permalink
Chris McCandless, Ida Wood, Sly Stone and more—a collection of stories that go inside the lives of outsiders.</p>
Tomi Masters was a 23-year-old from Indiana who moved to California with dreams of making it big in the cannabis business. Then she met a hacker who introduced her to a dark new world of digital manipulation, suspicion, paranoia, and fear — one that swallowed her alive and left her floating in a river in the Philippines.
Davey Alba, Joseph Bernstein Buzzfeed Feb 2019 30min Permalink
A profile of Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, prime minister of Turkey.
Dexter Filkins New Yorker Mar 2012 40min Permalink
A profile of then-Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz.
Wil S. Hylton GQ Dec 2003 25min Permalink
W.H. Auden’s quiet, personal pursuit of kindness and honor.
Edward Mendelson New York Review of Books Mar 2014 15min Permalink
A secret hope of mine, which I now find hilarious: I imagined that once I had a child, I would become a faster writer. Faster, and also better. It’s hard for me to reconstruct the optimistic logic that led me to this hypothesis. I think I honestly believed that if I did not have the option to write badly, I would simply evolve, like that Lamarckian giraffe, into a more efficient creature.
Karen Russell Wealthsimple Magazine Mar 2020 20min Permalink
A sketch artist and a grieving mother set out to solve a cold case. The more they dug, the more terrifying the truth became.
Nile Cappello The Atavist Aug 2021 Permalink
Legendary birthday clowns, tragically neglectful parents, and a dogged search for the armpit of America — Weingarten on Longform.
Morcellation was supposed to make gynecological surgeries easier on women. Instead, is it killing them.
Alison Motluk Maisonneuve Nov 2015 30min Permalink
Ben Shapiro’s fans apparently think he is very smart. It’s not clear why.
Nathan J. Robinson Current Affairs Dec 2017 15min Permalink
Few men have acquired so scandalous a reputation as did Basil Zaharoff, alias Count Zacharoff, alias Prince Zacharias Basileus Zacharoff, known to his intimates as “Zedzed.” Born in Anatolia, then part of the Ottoman Empire, perhaps in 1849, Zaharoff was a brothel tout, bigamist and arsonist, a benefactor of great universities and an intimate of royalty who reached his peak of infamy as an international arms dealer -- a “merchant of death,” as his many enemies preferred it.
Mike Dash Smithsonian Feb 2012 Permalink