Emperor du Fromage
Christian Audigier is the man behind Von Dutch and Ed Hardy. The massive succes of his garish and expensive creations may say more about the power of celebrity than about fashion.
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Christian Audigier is the man behind Von Dutch and Ed Hardy. The massive succes of his garish and expensive creations may say more about the power of celebrity than about fashion.
Devin Friedman GQ Oct 2009 20min Permalink
A profile of Kanye West written in the style of an all-access magazine piece - using only quotes and statements that Kanye West has made on Twitter and other web outlets.
Jonah Weiner Slate Aug 2010 10min Permalink
A profile of Jimmy Connors on the eve of the 1978 U.S. Open. His legendary confidence, honed by his mother since childhood, was in free-fall. (He would go on to win the final in straight sets.)
Frank Deford Sports Illustrated Aug 1978 30min Permalink
In 1906, Enrico Caruso was arrested for molesting a young woman inside the Monkey House of Central Park Zoo, paving the way for the first celebrity trial of the 20th century.
David Suisman The Believer Jun 2004 15min Permalink
An early attempt to explain the world-changing power of computer software—and the minds of young programmers like Bill Gates—to a mass audience. “Software,” the article begins, “is the magic carpet to the future.”
Michael Moritz, Peter Stoler Time Apr 1984 Permalink
From the 1940s through the early 70s, incoming freshman at Harvard, Yale, Vassar, Wellesley, and several other top schools were photographed nude in the name of science–bogus science, as it turned out. Most of the photos were destroyed, but not all.
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"One of the nice things about audio is that you can actually multitask quite well with it. In some ways, there are people listening who aren’t necessarily stopping doing some of the other things they were doing. They might be exercising, commuting, or even reading while they’re listening."
Madeleine Fullard is on a mission to locate the remains of apartheid’s murdered activists. She needs the help of Eugene de Kock, a former police squad leader known as “Prime Evil,” to do so.
Justine van der Leun The Guardian Jun 2015 30min Permalink
In bleak farmlands of East Anglia, the first wave of Eastern European migrants learned exploitation and extortion from their own experiences with day labor. Then they began to prey on fellow immigrants, luring in them into debt and then forcing them to commit crimes to pay it off.
Felicity Lawrence The Guardian May 2016 25min Permalink
An $140 million blockbuster written and funded by a billionaire, ‘Empires of the Deep’ was supposed to be China’s ‘Avatar,’ featuring mermaids, Greek warriors, pirates, sea monsters, and an even international stars.
Six years after being filmed, the movie has never seen the light of day.
Mitch Moxley The Atavist Magazine May 2016 Permalink
For those who suffer from environmental illnesses, the town of Snowflake is an escape from a modern world full of allergens: fragrances, gluten, wifi.
Kathleen Hale, Mae Ryan The Guardian Jul 2016 15min Permalink
Writing The Art of the Deal made Tony Schwartz rich. He still regrets it.
“I genuinely believe that if Trump wins and gets the nuclear codes there is an excellent possibility it will lead to the end of civilization.”
Jane Mayer New Yorker Jul 2016 25min Permalink
Zadie Smith New York Review of Books Jul 2016 20min Permalink
The archive of Mexican architect Luis Barragán has been hidden away for decades. Then an artist decided to make a performance of getting it back.
Alice Gregory New Yorker Jul 2016 25min Permalink
The home of The Americans, Fargo, and The People v. O.J. Simpson is run by John Landgraf, aka “the Mayor of Television.”
Alan Sepinwall Hitfix Sep 2016 20min Permalink
The intricate dance between highly organized ultras fan organizations, the teams they support, and the mafia for control of the center of curva and the lucrative ticket-touting opportunities that come with it.
Tobias Jones The Guardian Dec 2016 20min Permalink
At the height of the 2016 election, exaggerated reports of a juvenile sex crime brought a media maelstrom to Twin Falls — one the Idaho city still hasn’t recovered from.
T La Rock was one of the pioneers of hip-hop. But after an attack put him in a nursing home, he had to fight to recover his identity, starting with the fact that he’d ever been a rapper at all.
Joshuah Bearman GQ Oct 2017 40min Permalink
A bitter legal row over a mosque in an affluent New Jersey town shows the new face of Islamophobia in the age of Trump.
Andrew Rice The Guardian Feb 2018 30min Permalink
The life story of Travis the chimp and the family of tow truck operators who raised him like a human child before it all ended in tragedy.
Dan P. Lee New York Jan 2011 25min Permalink
Aleksander Doba has spent a great deal of time alone, naked and blistered, aboard a very small boat in the middle of the ocean. It is his favorite thing to do.
Elizabeth Weil New York Times Magazine Mar 2018 25min Permalink
North Carolina’s Alexander County is a Southern Baptist stronghold. It’s also home to Mitchell Gold, an outspoken gay rights activist and the CEO of one of the region’s largest employers.
Tiffany Stanley Washington Post Apr 2018 35min Permalink
How the children of African immigrants came to control the destiny of teams in France and Belgium and what it says about European identity.
Laurent Dubois Roads & Kingdoms Jan 2014 15min Permalink
As the country’s population ages and shrinks, there’s increasing demand for services that clean out and dispose of the property of the dead.
Adam Minter Bloomberg Businessweek Jul 2018 10min Permalink
When the Great Depression put Plennie Wingo’s bustling Abilene cafe out of business, he tried to find fame, fortune, and a sense of meaning the only way he knew how: by embarking on an audacious trip around the world on foot. In reverse.
Ben Montgomery Texas Monthly Aug 2018 30min Permalink