That Which Does Not Kill Me...
Inside the twisted, half-conscious world of Jure Robic, the Slovene soldier who might be the world’s best ultra-endurance athlete.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Suppliers of Magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
Inside the twisted, half-conscious world of Jure Robic, the Slovene soldier who might be the world’s best ultra-endurance athlete.
Daniel Coyle New York Times Feb 2006 Permalink
Inside the minds of two people, one with the world’s best memory and one with the world’s worst.
Joshua Foer National Geographic Nov 2007 20min Permalink
How a French journalist recruited a posse of Brazilian parking lot attendants and pizza-delivery guys and created Hollywood’s most addictive entertainment product.
David Samuels The Atlantic Apr 2008 35min Permalink
A mission in Baghdad to let a photojournalist get a shot of an insurgent corpse ends up getting a Marine killed.
Dexter Filkins New York Times Magazine Aug 2008 25min Permalink
An interview with an ex-CIA agent who is a world expert on the history of car bombing.
Christopher Watt The Walrus Sep 2008 15min Permalink
John Friend, who founded a new school of yoga, says the practice should be about both exercise and spirituality. Oh, and making money.
Mimi Swartz New York Times Magazine Jul 2010 Permalink
The mother of a child born with a deformed brain responds, heartbreakingly, to an academic study claiming that people are happier without kids.
Jennifer Lawler Finding Your Voice Jul 2010 15min Permalink
Tony Judt on sex, the academy, and dating a graduate student while chairing NYU’s History Department.
Tony Judt New York Review of Books Mar 2010 Permalink
The shooting death of the last wild Passenger Pigeon, atomic energy, mastodon watering holes, and other footnotes in Ohio history.
Geoffrey Sea The American Scholar Jan 2004 55min Permalink
A profile of Rahm Emanuel, written during his first congressional campaign in Illinois. Emanuel was running to fill the seat vacated by Rod Blagojevich.
Ben Joravsky Chicago Reader Feb 2002 20min Permalink
The sordid, petty world of “gossip item” sources for the New York Post and The Daily News, and what happens when they go bad.
Vanessa Grigoriadis New York May 2005 20min Permalink
Ten years ago, Esquire did a piece about Harvard Law grads who had eschewed their degrees. One of them was the late comedian.
Robert Kurson Esquire Aug 2000 Permalink
On China’s modern-day Communist Party and why foundational myths can never be shed.
Slavoj Žižek London Review of Books Oct 2010 10min Permalink
The story that certified Gehry as a genius and the Guggenheim Bilbao as the building of the late 20th century.
Herbert Muschamp New York Times Magazine Sep 1997 20min Permalink
A veteran black Metro columnist, adrift in a rapidly shifting D.C., rankles an incoming generation of gentrificationists.
Rend Smith Washington City Paper Nov 2010 35min Permalink
Where the actual online money is centralized, and where Google will have to go to continue chasing it.
Charles Petersen New York Review of Books Dec 2010 20min Permalink
On boot camps designed to break kids of their web addiction.
Christopher S. Stewart Wired Jan 2010 15min Permalink
A young girl is reported missing. The detective assigned to her case quickly discovers she’s been gone for years. The story of his search for justice.
Lindsey B. Koehler 5280 Feb 2010 Permalink
On the utter brutality of life in the tent cities, one year after the earthquake.
Mac McClelland Mother Jones Jan 2011 25min Permalink
A quasi-oral history of the party that was JFK’s 1961 inauguration.
Todd S. Purdum Vanity Fair Feb 2011 25min Permalink
The diary of a Scranton, PA National Guardsmen tasked with guarding the highest profile prisoner in U.S history: a surprisingly amiable Saddam Hussein.
Lisa DePaulo GQ Jun 2005 25min Permalink
The story of Nate Fleming—walk-on point guard at Oklahoma State, fan favorite, golden child—and the 2001 plane crash that took his life.
Tom Friend ESPN Jan 2011 Permalink
From the Greeks to George Lucas, 2,200 years of failure.
Becky Ferreira The Awl Feb 2011 25min Permalink
Emmanuel “Toto” Constant, the founder of a barbaric Haitian paramilitary group, vanished from Port-au-Prince and resurfaced as a real estate agent in Queens.
David Grann The Atlantic Jun 2001 1h Permalink
On the man who has turned the grunt work of packing into a social media phenomenon.
Carolyn Kormann New Yorker Jun 2015 10min Permalink