The Man Who Got America High
Alfred Dellentash Jr. chartered the Rolling Stones in private jets while smuggling planeloads of Pablo Escobar’s drugs on the side.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Suppliers of Magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
Alfred Dellentash Jr. chartered the Rolling Stones in private jets while smuggling planeloads of Pablo Escobar’s drugs on the side.
Jeff Maysh Narratively Nov 2014 30min Permalink
The paper reports on a battle of its own.
Nicole Perlroth New York Times Jan 2013 10min Permalink
On CEO Reed Hastings and the future of Netflix.
Nancy Hass GQ Feb 2013 15min Permalink
How Curtis Duffy overcame his parents’ murder-suicide to become one of the nation’s great chefs.
Kevin Pang The Chicago Tribune Feb 2013 Permalink
A 16-year-old runner, her coach and the lasting memory of an improbable race.
Steve Friedman Runner's World Dec 2012 30min Permalink
Mementos left at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial and the man in charge of cataloging them.
Rachel Manteuffel Washingtonian Oct 2012 25min Permalink
As the paper closes, a collection of its greatest hits.
On heading home for Thanksgiving.
Chris Radant Nov 1990 15min
A comatose Worcester girl is the catalyst for a string of miracles and becomes a tourist attraction.
Ellen Barry Dec 1997 10min
What really happened at the World Trade Organization protests.
Jason Gay Dec 1999 25min
Cardinal Bernard Law knew as early as 1984 John Geoghan was molesting children. The priest would not be defrocked for 14 years.
Kristin Lombardi Mar 2001 10min
The jury made a mistake when it convicted Abdul Raheem.
David S. Bernstein Apr 2005
What’s a suburban soccer mom who was once fervently anti-drug doing running a business growing and selling pot?
Valerie Vande Panne Dec 2009 20min
Naffe, a young Republican, entered the belly of the political beast—and was nearly eaten.
Chris Faraone Feb 2013 1h30min
Nov 1990 – Feb 2013 Permalink
The story of Miami’s Sun Gym gang and the basis for the new film directed by Michael Bay.
They were local bodybuilders with a penchant for steroids, strippers, and quick cash. And they became expert in the use of a peculiar motivational tool: Torture.
Miami’s Sun Gym gang developed a taste for blood and money. The police could have stopped them before they killed somebody. But they didn’t.
A wealthy couple disappears, the slumbering Metro-Dade Police Department awakens, and the ghastly deeds of Miami’s Sun Gym gang at last come to an end.
Pete Collins The Miami New Times Dec 1999 1h25min Permalink
Kosovo’s leaders have been accused of grotesque war crimes. But can anyone prove it?
Nicholas Schmidle New Yorker May 2013 35min Permalink
Caterpillar’s CEO made $22 million last year. Some of his employees are on food stamps.
Mina Kimes Businessweek May 2013 10min Permalink
A week in the life of Naomi and Spencer Haskell.
Stephanie McCrummen Washington Post May 2013 15min Permalink
“A curious thing about the United States is that anticommunism has always been far louder and more potent than communism.”
Adam Hochschild New York Review of Books May 2013 15min Permalink
Most of what you know about women’s fertility rates is wrong.
Jean Twenge The Atlantic Jun 2013 15min Permalink
The story of a St. Louis handball court.
Jessica Lussenhop Riverfront Times Jun 2013 Permalink
The murder of an Olympic champion and the autopsy that shook a city.
Matt Tullis SB Nation Jun 2013 30min Permalink
How a bioethicist’s field of study—suicide, euthanasia, a dignified death—”turned unbearably personal.”
Robin Marantz Henig New York Times Magazine Jul 2013 20min Permalink
The mysterious life and death of Dow B. Hover, the man who ran New York’s electric chair.
Jennifer Gonnerman Village Voice Jan 2005 15min Permalink
Newton Murray got his first job in 1926. He’s seldom missed a day of work since.
Lane DeGregory Tampa Bay Times Jul 2013 10min Permalink
Memories of living with the writer Andrew Lytle late in his life.
John Jeremiah Sullivan The Paris Review Sep 2010 30min Permalink
A profile of Salvatore Strazzullo, who represents celebrities, whether major or minor, who get themselves in trouble in Manhattan after dark.
Alan Feuer New York Times Aug 2012 10min Permalink
The story of a device that delivers electric shocks to students at a school for special needs.
Paul Kix Boston Magazine Jul 2008 Permalink
A conversation on the “bedeviling sorts of indeterminacies one encounters the deeper one drills.”
Errol Morris, Lawrence Weschler Public Books Jun 2012 25min Permalink
Grizzly Bear and the surprisingly crappy economics of indie rock stardom.
Nitsuh Abebe New York Oct 2012 25min Permalink
How a small group academics revealed an ancient order of opthamologists.
Noah Shachtman Wired Nov 2012 20min Permalink
A father’s life, one year after the death of his three daughters in a fire.
Dan P. Lee New York Dec 2012 30min Permalink