The Longform Guide to Write-Arounds
A collection of profiles whose subjects—Frank Sinatra, Axl Rose, Matt Drudge, and more—wouldn’t cooperate with the writer. New at Slate.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
A collection of profiles whose subjects—Frank Sinatra, Axl Rose, Matt Drudge, and more—wouldn’t cooperate with the writer. New at Slate.
Iverson, Canseco, TO, and DiMaggio — a collection of picks on post-career woe.
The complicated post-baseball days of Joe DiMaggio.
Gay Talese Esquire Jul 1966 35min
Basketball’s iconoclast is now a broke recluse at 37.
Kent Babb Washington Post Apr 2013 10min
Five years after they leave the league, 60 percent of NBA players have nothing left. In the NFL, it’s closer to 80 percent after just two years. A breakdown of the economics of retirement.
Pablo S. Torre Sports Illustrated Mar 2009 25min
Terrell Owens at 38: unemployed, nearly bankrupt after losing his shirt in a electronic-bingo entertainment complex development plan gone bust, father of four children (one of which he has never met), frequent bowler.
Nancy Hass GQ Jan 2012 15min
Before he was a Twitter savant, Jose Canseco was a juiced-up terror.
Pat Jordan Deadspin Mar 2008 15min
Former Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling needed funding for his ambitious video-game startup. Rhode Island politicians needed jobs and a vision for how to transform the state’s beleaguered economy. The story of a $75 million bet gone bust.
Matt Bai New York Times Apr 2013 20min
The crumbling of an American icon.
Jay Caspian Kang Grantland Apr 2013 25min
On Stephon Marbury’s (not totally sad!) NBA exile in China.
Wells Tower GQ May 2011 25min
Baseball legend Lenny Dykstra’s on-field brilliance and private-life disasters, from drunk driving to failed investment and publishing ventures.
Jim Baumbach Newsday Dec 2012 15min
A profile of Jordan at 50.
Wright Thompson ESPN Feb 2013
Jul 1966 – Apr 2013 Permalink
In 1967, a 56-year-old lawyer met a young inmate with a brilliant mind and horrifying stories about life inside. Their complicated alliance—and even more complicated romance—would shed light on a nationwide scandal, disrupt a system of abuse and virtual slavery across the state, and change incarceration in Texas forever.
Ethan Watters Texas Monthly Oct 2018 1h10min Permalink
A Stockholm prostitute is found hacked apart in a dumpster, her head is never found. Two accomplished doctors, confirmed creeps, are arrested. Uncertainty endures.
Julie Bindel The Telegraph Nov 2010 10min Permalink
Ever since childhood, Brian Regan had been made to feel stupid because of his severe dyslexia. So he thought no one would suspect him of stealing secrets.
Yudhijit Bhattacharjee The Guardian Oct 2016 20min Permalink
Timothy Brown was diagnosed with HIV in the ’90s. In 2006, he found that a new, unrelated disease threatened his life: leukemia. After chemo failed, doctors resorted to a bone marrow transplant. That transplant erased any trace of HIV from his body, and may hold the secret of curing AIDS.
Tina Rosenberg New York May 2011 15min Permalink
"Of course, sexuality has never only been about reproduction, obviously, with human beings, anyway. But at the moment it's almost cut free to kind of float wherever it will float. And sexuality has been mixed with many things that I think the ancients would have been surprised to find it mixed with."
David Cronenberg, Jenni Miller GQ Nov 2011 10min Permalink
Three years after her gold-medal performance – and amidst rumors of a fall from grace – the author travels to Transylvania to track down gymnast Nadia Comaneci. He also enjoys several drinks with her coach, Bela Karolyi.
Part of our Olympics primer, on the Longform blog.
Bob Ottum Sports Illustrated Nov 1979 25min Permalink
A profile of Martin Short.
David Kamp Vanity Fair Dec 2012 25min Permalink
A profile of Harold Hamm, oil baron.
Bryan Gruley Businessweek Jan 2012 10min Permalink
“Robert Victor Sullivan, whom you’ve surely never heard of, was the toughest coach of them all. He was so tough he had to have two tough nicknames, Bull and Cyclone, and his name was usually recorded this way: coach Bob “Bull” “Cyclone” Sullivan or coach Bob (Bull) (Cyclone) Sullivan. Also, at times he was known as Big Bob or Shotgun. He was the most unique of men, and yet he remains utterly representative of a time that has vanished, from the gridiron and from these United States.”
Frank Deford Sports Illustrated Apr 1984 1h Permalink
At tourism’s wildest frontier; guided tours of Afghanistan.
Damon Tabor Outside Dec 2010 25min Permalink
Why was Christopher Priest nearly written out of comics history?
Abraham Riesman Vulture Jan 2018 15min Permalink
A restless history of Washington Heights.
Carina del Valle Schorske Virginia Quarterly Review Dec 2019 25min Permalink
A profile of Brooks Koepka.
Daniel Riley GQ Feb 2020 25min Permalink
Fears of witchcraft leave a trail of dismembered bodies in Buenaventura, Colombia.
Juan Camilo Maldonado Vice News Dec 2014 15min Permalink
A critique of Facebook.
John Lanchester London Review of Books Aug 2017 35min Permalink
When she was a 15-year-old runaway, the writer was nearly killed by a truck driver. Twenty-seven years later, she investigates whether her attacker was truck stop serial killer Robert Ben Rhoades, who often kept his victims chained in the back of his truck for weeks before killing and dumping them.
Vanessa Veselka GQ Oct 2012 30min Permalink
Central Park wasn’t always so bucolic.
Gangs of toughs—teenagers and the macho middle-aged, usually drunk, occasionally including a couple of off-duty cops—roam the Ramble at night, engaging in an old American pastime: fag bashing. You don't have to be gay. You don't have to be exposing yourself. You don't have to be doing anything except walking through the tangled darkness to be abused, shoved, threatened at knifepoint, kicked, and beaten.
Doug Ireland New York Jul 1978 20min Permalink
The case against Boeing.
Alec MacGillis New Yorker Nov 2019 25min 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
Memoir of a Latter-day campaign correspondent.
McKay Coppins Buzzfeed Nov 2012 15min Permalink
Has a remote Amazonian tribe upended our understanding of language?
John Colapinto New Yorker Apr 2007 50min Permalink
A profile of photographer Robert Frank in his 90th year.
Nicholas Dawidoff New York Times Magazine Jul 2015 25min Permalink