Porn Takes On a Personal Touch in the Pandemic
How the the rush to direct-selling platforms like OnlyFans could change the adult industry forever.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate Monohydrate.
How the the rush to direct-selling platforms like OnlyFans could change the adult industry forever.
Justin Sayles The Ringer May 2020 Permalink
Fuzzy memories of a house overlooking the Sunset Strip that played host to a generation of comics—including Sam Kinison, Andrew Dice Clay, and Robin Williams—launching dozens of careers and about as many drug problems.
David Peisner Buzzfeed Oct 2015 35min Permalink
The backstory on Julian Assange’s relationship with the Guardian and the New York Times.
Sarah Ellison Vanity Fair Feb 2011 30min Permalink
Is it homage? An art project? Whatever it is, it is very Brooklyn 2015.
Tracy O'Neill Rolling Stone Apr 2015 10min Permalink
Chris McCandless, Sly Stone, and Ida Wood — a collection of stories going inside the lives of outsiders.
At age 17, Eustace Conway moved into the North Carolina woods. He hasn’t compromised since.
Elizabeth Gilbert GQ Feb 1998 25min
Ida Wood, who lived for decades as a recluse in a New York City hotel, would have taken her secrets to the grave—if her sister hadn’t gotten there first.
Karen Abbott Smithsonian Jan 2013
Matthew Weigman was blind, overweight, 14 and alone. He could also do anything he wanted with a phone. Sometimes that meant calling Lindsay Lohan. Other times it meant sending a SWAT team to an enemy’s door.
David Kushner Rolling Stone Sep 2009 25min
How could a one-time rising golf star be gifted with top 10 talent yet struggle to break even on the LPGA tour, possess Madison Avenue magnetism yet be such a loner? But the most difficult thing to understand is this: Why did she take her own life?
Alan Shipnuck Sports Illustrated Dec 2010 30min
The tale of itinerant wanderer Chris McCandless. The magazine story that preceded Into the Wild.
Jon Krakauer Outside Apr 1993 30min
A profile of the reclusive musician.
David Kamp Vanity Fair Aug 2007 35min
If Charles Brogden pilfered a kitchen, he washed the dishes and mopped the floor before he left. And the law just couldn’t seem to run him down.
Jan Reid, Alan King Texas Monthly Aug 1973 10min
Meeting Christopher Thomas Knight, a.k.a. the North Pond Hermit, who lived alone in the Maine woods for nearly 30 years.
Michael Finkel GQ Aug 2014 30min
On the mysterious life of an the isolated heiress.
Margalit Fox New York Times May 2011
Aug 1973 – Aug 2014 Permalink
“Twenty-five years ago, I used to live in fear of Trevor Latham kicking my ass nearly every day. I grew up to be a writer. He grew up to run one of the toughest biker gangs in America. And then I tracked him down.”
Alex Abramovich GQ Mar 2007 25min Permalink
Aside from the wealthiest players, nine out of 10 NFL athletes are likely to be insolvent within 10 years of retirement. A new executive MBA program aims to change that.
Ben Austen GQ Apr 2013 20min Permalink
Struggling with depression and thoughts of suicide, Army officer Lawrence Franks went AWOL. Five years later, he reappeared as Christopher Flaherty, a member of the French Foreign Legion who served three tours in Africa. Then he was court-martialed.
Janet Reitman Rolling Stone Sep 2015 35min Permalink
On an artist who’s spent nearly 50 years bending the rules of space and light, and his life’s work, an extinct volcano in Arizona where he has been developing a network of tunnels and underground rooms since 1974.
Wil S. Hylton New York Times Magazine Jun 2013 25min Permalink
“For people who pay close attention to the state of American fiction, he has become a kind of superhero.”
Joel Lovell New York Times Magazine Jan 2013 25min Permalink
Eichmann’s escape to Buenos Aires and his surprisingly visible life upon arrival:
"I was no ordinary recipient of orders. If I had been one, I would have been a fool. Instead, I was part of the thought process. I was an idealist."
Spiegel Staff Der Spiegel Apr 2011 35min Permalink
What overcrowded and swelling Bangladesh can tell us about how the planet’s population, more than 1/3 of which live within 62 miles of a shoreline, will react to rising sea levels.
Don Belt National Geographic May 2011 15min Permalink
She surveyed her former possessions, the stuff of a world now lost. "I'd be happy with just walking away from all of this," she concluded. "Dump it all and just start over. Happy birthday — I'm alive."
David Von Drehle Time May 2011 10min Permalink
The world’s largest jewelry retailer was a cesspool of harassment and unfair treatment of women who worked there.
Taffy Brodesser-Akner New York Times Magazine Apr 2019 30min Permalink
On a November morning, Olympic rower and financial advisor Harold Backer left for a bike ride and never returned. His disappearance remained a mystery – until letters began arriving at the homes of his investors.
Kip McDaniel Chief Investment Officer Feb 2016 25min Permalink
How a Guatemalan cook ended up the master of okonomiyaki.
Matt Goulding Roads & Kingdoms Oct 2015 10min Permalink
A profile of Tyler Perry.
Rembert Browne New York Jan 2016 15min Permalink
</a>A collection of picks on the real-estate scion and accused killer.
Susan Berman's life was colorful. Her death was shrouded in mystery.
"I have information that's going to blow the top off things," Susan told her.
"What do you mean?" Kim asked. "What information?"
"Well, I don't have it myself," said Susan. "But I know how to get it."
Lisa DePaulo New York Mar 2001 25min
Kathie Durst’s friends spent almost twenty years hoping someone or something would catch up to Durst. They just didn’t think it would happen in the form of the murder of Morris Black.
Bobby was odd in other ways. He was a pothead—he smoked like a chimney. He had facial tics. But his strangest tendency—the thing that no one could ever fathom—was that Bobby belched. Belched and farted, actually. All the time. Anywhere. In front of anyone. Serial gas expulsion was his statement to the world, went the theory. It was his way of saying, “I’m Bobby Durst, and fuck you if you don’t like it.” That was the theory, anyway.
Ned Zeman Vanity Fair Feb 2002 30min
In Galveston, Durst made unusual friends in the seedy bars he frequented.
As the bus driver had guessed, the young black cross-dresser who rode the No. 6 and disembarked at 53rd and P 1/2 with Durst had indeed departed Galveston a few days after Morris Black's headless trunk and dismembered limbs were discovered in the bay. When I tracked down Frankie in an apartment in another Texas city this past January and asked about the timing of her departure, her bulbous eyes narrowed and she shook her head emphatically. "I'm not even gonna comment," she said quietly. "I didn't have nothing to do with it; I ain't gonna be nobody's damn witness; I'm not gonna be subpoenaed to come to no court—mm-mm! He cut that man up! First the head, then..."
Robert Draper GQ Apr 2002 20min
On living with Durst’s abandoned furniture in Galveston.
“Are you sure he won’t mind,” I asked Klaus, suddenly hesitant. Durst’s murder trial was underway in the county courthouse a few blocks away from where we were standing. He had been charged with first-degree murder, but was claiming self-defense. I imagined Durst on the witness stand and it seemed wrong, suddenly, to take his belongings without his permission. Later, people who learned about my furniture would tell me that taking Durst’s things was wrong for other reasons. How could you? they would ask, mouths agape. He was a murderer! But I’ve never been sentimental or superstitious. More than disgusted or scared by the furniture, I was curious. But at the same time, I didn’t want to feel like I was stealing from someone—murderer or not.
Sarah Viren Pinch Journal Dec 2014 20min
Mar 2001 – Dec 2014 Permalink
Profile of the flip-flop wearing 61-year-old ‘dude’ who turned around a dying company by selling all-American sex to teens – and isn’t apologizing.
Benoit Denizet-Lewis Salon Jan 2006 Permalink
Ty Cobb, who would go on to be the greatest baseball player of his time, was a 17-year-old minor league prospect when his mother shot and killed his father at home in Georgia.
K. Rheinheimer Blue Ridge Country Jun 2010 Permalink
In Mexico’s remote Copper Canyon, the Tarahumara Indians party hard, get by on a diet of carbs and beer, and can still run 100 mile races, even in their 60s.
C. McDougall Men's Health Apr 2008 Permalink
On the thriving small town of Orange City, Iowa and what it can teach us about what it means when Americans decide to leave home or stay put.
Larissa MacFarquhar New Yorker Nov 2017 35min Permalink
“Most of us should be in jail for the things we do. We just haven’t been caught. No one’s gone after us.”
Kevin Robillard Politico Magazine Mar 2018 15min Permalink
How a Northern Californian rapper ended up facing life after being hired to produce a CD titled Generations of United Norteños – Till Eternity that may have served as a recruiting tool for the prison gang Nuestra Familia.
Justin Berton East Bay Express Oct 2003 Permalink
Próspera was supposed to be a privatized, Silicon Valley-funded paradise—but it’s a hard sell for the neighbors.
Ian MacDougall, Isabelle Simpson Rest of World Oct 2021 30min Permalink