Showing 25 articles matching physics of music.

Pvt. Danny Chen, 1992–2011

A glimpse into the life and death of a soldier who committed suicide while on duty in Afghanistan:

The Army recently announced that it was charging eight soldiers — an officer and seven enlisted men — in connection with Danny Chen’s death. Five of the eight have been charged with involuntary manslaughter and negligent homicide, and the coming court-martial promises a fuller picture of the harrowing abuse Chen endured. But even the basic details are enough to terrify: What could be worse than being stuck at a remote outpost, in the middle of a combat zone, tormented by your superiors, the very same people who are supposed to be looking out for you? And why did a nice, smart kid from Chinatown, who’d always shied from conflict and confrontation, seek out an environment ruled by the laws of aggression?

Pandemic Time: A Distributed Doomsday Clock

Even within a single apartment building, neighbors experience different temporalities. In one unit, we have a single extrovert experiencing the acute trauma of being forced to work alone from home. Next door, we have parents suddenly juggling childcare and work. At the end of the hall is an immigrant using WhatsApp to track the fate of family members on the other side of the globe who are suddenly physically unreachable due to travel bans. Even members of a single household experience pandemic time differently.

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Rao on the Longform Podcast

Azmat Khan is an investigative reporter for the New York Times Magazine. She won the George Polk Award for uncovering intelligence failures and civilian deaths associated with U.S. air strikes.

“I think what was really damning for me is that, when I obtained these 1,300 records, in not one of them was there a single instance in which they describe any disciplinary action for anyone involved, or any findings of wrongdoing. … When I was looking at this in totality, suddenly it’s really hard to say you have a system of accountability.”

This is the last in a week-long series of conversations with winners of this year's George Polk Awards in Journalism.

The BBC Report

A 9-part series on the past, present and future of the BBC.

  1. What Can the Origins of the BBC Tell Us About Its Future?

  2. The BBC: There to Inform, Educate, Provoke and Enrage?

  3. From David Kelly to Jimmy Savile, How Does the BBC Deal with a Crisis?

  4. The Big Beasts Who Shaped the BBC

  5. The BBC Informs, Educates and Entertains – But in What Order?

  6. The BBC: How the Voice of an Empire Became Part of an Evolving World

  7. BBC’s Long Struggle to Present the Facts Without Fear or Favour

  8. BBC Looks Beyond the Walled Garden in a Changing Media World

  9. The Future of the BBC: You Either Believe in It or You Don't