The Cambridge Analytica Files: Meet the Data War Whistleblower
“I created Steve Bannon’s psychological warfare tool.”
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate Anhydrous.
“I created Steve Bannon’s psychological warfare tool.”
Carole Cadwalladr The Guardian Mar 2018 25min Permalink
How Black America talks to the White House.
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic Jan 2014 10min Permalink
The neck-and-neck race that electrified the 1982 Boston Marathon.
John Brant Runner's World Apr 2004 30min Permalink
How the English graphic designer set the course for contemporary visual culture.
The family history behind college football’s most talked-about player.
Timothy Burke Deadspin Aug 2013 15min Permalink
He wants to save classics from whiteness. Can the field survive?
Rachel Poser New York Times Magazine Feb 2021 30min Permalink
On the murder at Lake Adelle.
Ryan Krull Riverfront Times Aug 2021 25min Permalink
A small town in Upstate New York, and one family in particular, endures a five-year string of car accidents, suicides, and murders.
E. Jean Carroll Spin Jun 2001 30min Permalink
A profile of reporter Jason Leopold, who has reinvented himself after journalistic scandal by becoming what he calls a “FOIA terrorist.”
Jason Fagone Matter Jun 2014 25min Permalink
A profile of anthropologist Nancy Scheper-Hughes, who has spent her career uncovering a hidden global market in human flesh.
Ethan Watters Pacific Standard Jul 2014 30min Permalink
A generation that has seen inestimable violence comes of age in Juarez.
Jeremy Relph Buzzfeed Mar 2013 20min Permalink
A reporter makes it his mission to track down all 42 members of a platoon after their service in Iraq.
Christopher Buchanan Frontline May 2010 45min Permalink
Pavel Galitsky, 100 years old, blogger and Skyper, survivor of 15 years in Stalin’s Siberian Kolyma mines.
Ekaterina Loushnikova Open Democracy Apr 2011 15min Permalink
On boot camps designed to break kids of their web addiction.
Christopher S. Stewart Wired Jan 2010 15min Permalink
More and more Americans are trying to survive on less than $2 a day.
Christopher Jencks New York Review of Books May 2016 15min Permalink
He holds incredible power over women’s rights. New evidence shows he lied repeatedly about his history of harassment to get there.
Jill Abramson New York Feb 2018 15min Permalink
Brock Turner’s twisted legacy—and a Stanford professor’s relentless pursuit of justice.
Julia Ioffe Huffington Post Highline Jun 2018 15min Permalink
Texans receiver DeAndre Hopkins says he owes his career to his mom. When you hear her remarkable story of survival, you’ll understand his devotion.
Mina Kimes ESPN Oct 2019 15min Permalink
What kinds of space are we willing to live and work in now?
Kyle Chayka New Yorker Jun 2020 20min Permalink
After taking on gentrification in Denver, did a successful anti-gang activist become a target of law enforcement?
Julian Rubinstein Guernica May 2021 20min Permalink
Pedestrianism was a sport of epic rivalries, eyewatering salaries, feverish nationalism, eccentric personalities and six-day, 450-mile walks.
Zaria Gorvett BBC Jul 2021 Permalink
How a baby-faced CEO turned a Farmville clone into a massive Ponzi scheme.
Paul Benjamin Osterlund Rest of World Jul 2021 15min Permalink
“Oh, I think I do overshare, and I sometime marvel that I do it. But it's sort of - in a way, it's my way of trying to understand myself. I don't know. I get it out of my head. It creates community when you talk about private things and you can find other people that have the same things. Otherwise, I don't know - I felt very lonely with some of the issues that I had or history that I had. And when I shared about it, I found that others had it, too.”
Terry Gross NPR Dec 2016 25min Permalink
“Look out at Twitter, at YouTube, at cable news. Behold a whole precarious world of media hopefuls swarming every bitter inch of the culture war, filming angry Americans, filming each other, filming themselves, grimly determined to find or frame a few seconds of a reality to sell.”
Joseph Bernstein Buzzfeed Jul 2019 30min Permalink
But despite all that has been promised, almost nothing has been built back in Haiti, better or otherwise. Within Port-au-Prince, some 3 million people languish in permanent misery, subject to myriad experiments at "fixing" a nation that, to those who are attempting it, stubbornly refuses to be fixed. Mountains of rubble remain in the streets, hundreds of thousands of people continue to live in weather-beaten tents, and cholera, a disease that hadn't been seen in Haiti for 60 years, has swept over the land, infecting more than a quarter million people.
Janet Reitman Rolling Stone Aug 2011 50min Permalink