Confessions of a Black Mr. Mom
An essay on African-American fatherhood.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which are the china suppliers of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate for agriculture.
An essay on African-American fatherhood.
Ta-Nehisi Coates Washington Monthly Mar 2002 15min Permalink
How business incentives impact local economies.
Louise Story New York Times Dec 2012 50min Permalink
An obituary.
Robert D. McFadden New York Times Feb 2013 25min Permalink
How ESPN anchor Stuart Scott battled cancer.
Richard Sandomir New York Times Mar 2014 Permalink
Tracy and Kathryn plan their wedding.
Monica Hesse Washington Post Jan 2015 15min Permalink
Ted Williams grows old.
Richard Ben Cramer Esquire Jun 1986 1h Permalink
When New Yorkers lived knee-deep in trash.
Hunter Oatman-Stanford Collectors Weekly Jun 2013 20min Permalink
How a pandemic unfolds when you’re a Wall Street billionaire.
Max Abelson Bloomberg Businessweek Jul 2020 15min Permalink
A rider’s self-improvement project becomes a whole lot more.
“‘I’m going to devote myself full time to securing and then winning a referendum on leaving the EU,’ Daniel Hannan replied. The aide laughed down the line. ‘Good luck with that.’”
Sam Knight The Guardian Sep 2016 30min Permalink
When Clark Rockefeller snatched his daughter during a custody dispute, what the D.A. called “the longest con I’ve seen in my professional career” came unraveled, and the trail led to bones buried in a California backyard.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Jan 2009 50min Permalink
When it’s finished, architect Adrian Smith’s Jeddah Tower will be the tallest building in the world, over a kilometer high. He’s already thinking about pushing past a mile in the air.
Tom Chiarella Chicago Magazine Jun 2016 Permalink
Taurus sold almost a million handguns that can potentially fire without anyone pulling the trigger. The government won’t fix the problem. The NRA is silent.
Michael Smith, Polly Mosendz Businessweek Feb 2018 15min Permalink
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A collection of picks about people in impossible situations — lost at sea, trapped under boulders, infected with incurable diseases — who somehow survived.
Inspired by Flight 232: A Story of Disaster and Survival, Laurence Gonzales's unforgettable account of a United flight that went down 25 years ago and the 184 souls who lived to tell the story.
The scene inside Flight 232 as it hit the ground, as remembered by passengers who believed their lives were ending.
Laurence Gonzales Flight 232 Jul 2014 15min
John Aldridge fell overboard in the middle of the night, 40 miles from shore, and the Coast Guard was looking in the wrong place. How did he make it?
Paul Tough New York Times Magazine Jan 2014 30min
In 1974, a pair of four-year-old cousins wandered into the jungle near India’s border with Myanmar. The boy was found five days later, temporarily incapable of speech. The girl was gone. For decades, stories echoed through villages of a “wild-looking woman,” sometimes striding beside a tiger. Thirty-eight years later, she returned.
Lhendup G Bhutia Open Aug 2012 10min
When a boulder shifts and pins his hand, a climber on a solo trip is forced to do the unthinkable: amputate his own arm.
Aron Ralston Outside Sep 2004 25min
Two days after the Japanese tsunami, after the waves had left their destruction, as rescue workers searched the ruins, news came of an almost surreal survival: Miles out at sea, a man was found, alone, riding on nothing but the roof of his house.
Michael Paterniti GQ Oct 2011 30min
A day after swimming in an Arkansas water park, Kali Harding was diagnosed with a brain-eating amoeba that kills 99% of the people infects. Kali was the 1%.
Peter Andrey Smith Buzzfeed Jul 2014 25min
How the Chilean miners made it out.
Héctor Tobar New Yorker Jun 2014 55min
In 1912, 300 miles deep on a trek into the uncharted Antarctic wilderness, Douglas Mawson lost most of his crew and supplies. This is the tale of how he got back.
David Roberts National Geographic Jan 2013 10min
A first skydive goes wrong.
Chris Ballard Sports Illustrated Jul 2014 25min
Sep 2004 – Jul 2014 Permalink
A profile of a serial sex offender:
This is a story about how hard it is to be good—or, rather, how hard it is to be good once you’ve been bad; how hard it is to be fixed once you’ve been broken; how hard it is to be straight once you’ve been bent. It is about a scary man who is trying very hard not to be scary anymore and yet who still manages to scare not only the people who have good reason to be afraid of him but even occasionally himself. It is about sex, and how little we know about its mysteries; about the human heart, and how futilely we have responded—with silence, with therapy, with the law and even with the sacred Constitution—to its dark challenge. It is about what happens when we, as a society, no longer trust our futile responses and admit that we have no idea what to do with a guy like Mitchell Gaff.
The battle to make The Godfather pitted director Francis Ford Coppola against producers including Robert Evans, and the production itself against the real life mob.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Mar 2009 Permalink
Inside the court battle over trans employment discrimination.
Earlier this week, the Supreme Court ruled that the 1964 Civil Rights Act protects gay and transgender workers from workplace discrimination.
Melissa Gira Grant The New Republic Jan 2020 25min Permalink
JPMorgan Chase’s $6 billion mistake and the woman who took the fall.
Susan Dominus New York Times Magazine Oct 2012 20min Permalink
Why almost everything we think we know about the iconic photo from Robinson’s first game is wrong.
Keith Olbermann MLB.com Apr 2013 10min Permalink
“The FBI man knocked on Kerri Rawson’s door 10 years ago Feb. 25.”
Roy Wenzl The Wichita Eagle Feb 2015 20min
On Juliana Buhring, a former cult member who became the first woman to bike around the world.
Grayson Schaffer Outside Apr 2015 15min Permalink
In Utah, an unlikely leader is looking to end the state’s land-use wars.
Christopher Solomon Outside Feb 2016 30min Permalink
There’s a growing gap between the gun lobby’s leadership and its rank-and-file.
Sarah Ellison Vanity Fair Jul 2016 30min Permalink
The Obama administration was supposed to fight corporate concentration. In the airline industry, at least, it didn’t work out that way.
Justin Elliott ProPublica Oct 2016 20min Permalink
William Regnery II spent almost 20 years funding the racist right. It finally paid off.
Aram Roston, Joel Anderson Buzzfeed Jul 2017 20min Permalink