North Carolina’s Teacher Revolt Was Decades in the Making
On the front lines of the labor movement.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Good Quality Magnesium Sulfate in China.
On the front lines of the labor movement.
Paul Blest, Nick Martin Splinter May 2018 10min Permalink
The event evolves.
Molly Langmuir Elle Aug 2018 15min Permalink
He was on a flight bound for the English Premier League. Then he was gone.
Sam Borden ESPN Jan 2019 15min Permalink
On excess, wealth, and teenage love.
Nancy Jo Sales Vanity Fair Sep 2001 30min Permalink
A profile of Joss Sackler.
Norman Vanamee Town & Country May 2019 15min Permalink
On pregnancy at 45, childbirth, postpartum depression, and #MeToo.
Nicole Cliffe Self Jun 2019 15min Permalink
A life lived at 7’7”.
Sandy Allen Buzzfeed Jul 2014 20min Permalink
There’s only ever so much you can control at any job.
David Roth Hazlitt Dec 2019 15min Permalink
What the Democratic Party could learn from first-term Congresswoman Katie Porter.
Rebecca Nelson California Sunday Mar 2020 20min Permalink
Inside the Trump 2020 campaign.
Olivia Nuzzi New York Aug 2020 30min Permalink
The attorney general exemplifies the growing influence of right-wing Catholicism under Trump.
Fintan O'Toole NY Review of Books Oct 2020 20min Permalink
An obituary for the baseball legend.
Howard Bryant ESPN Jan 2021 10min Permalink
On losing a brother and trying to get him home.
A murderous grandma, a master counterfeiter, and a notorious teenage drug dealer in Detroit — the most read articles this week in the new Longform App, available free for iPhone and iPad.
The the incredible story of Rick Wershe, an infamous teenage drug dealer in 1980s Detroit who flew in kilos of cocaine and was arrested at 17. Still incarcerated, Wershe now claims he was working with the FBI all along. Was one of Detroit’s most notorious criminals also one of the feds’ most valuable informants?
Available free, only in the Longform App.
Evan Hughes The Atavist 1h15min
What do you do when you think a family member is a murderer? Step one: stop letting her make you dinner.
The story of Frank Bourassa, the world’s most prolific counterfeiter.
He has a staff of 300. His website gets more traffic than Gawker and has 300,000 paying subscribers. He has a clothing line, a string of bestselling books, a movie studio and a radio show syndicated on 400 stations. A profile of Glenn Beck, mogul.
Michael J. Mooney D Magazine 20min
Scrutinizing the gluten-free craze.
Michael Specter New Yorker 25min
“Over the years, it’s been hard to get male movie stars to be in a movie if a woman’s the lead, where a great, great movie star, a woman, will be in a movie where the man’s the lead. So there’s just not parity there, we’re not on equal footing.”
Amy Larocca New York Sep 2015 25min 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
Life on the other side of the laptop.
Jack Davies Vice Dec 2013 15min Permalink
Decades later, U.S.-backed dictator Hissène Habré faces justice.
Michael Bronner Foreign Policy Jan 2014 20min Permalink
On the campaign trail with Richard Nixon.
Gloria Steinem New York Oct 1968 45min Permalink
On Hillary Clinton’s policy team.
Jonathan Cohn Huffington Post Sep 2016 20min Permalink
Freedom, the GOP, and a rhesus macaque on the loose.
Jon Mooallem New York Times Magazine Aug 2012 20min Permalink
How a team of 40 engineers helped reelect Barack Obama.
Alexis Madrigal The Atlantic Nov 2012 30min Permalink
Inside the DIY world of synthetic drugs.
Vanessa Grigoriadis New York Apr 2013 25min Permalink
An overachiever on what he did and didn’t learn at Princeton.
Walter Kirn The Atlantic Jan 2005 35min Permalink
The story of the manhunt.
Globe Staff The Boston Globe Apr 2013 55min Permalink