A Struggle with the Police & the Law
A Supreme Court Justice revisits a rape trial from the 1950s.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Suppliers of Magnesium sulfate heptahydrate.
A Supreme Court Justice revisits a rape trial from the 1950s.
A profile of the singer as he returns to the stage for the first time in a dozen years.
Amy Wallace GQ May 2012 30min Permalink
The anatomy of a sex abuse scandal at a Christian school in Oklahoma.
Kiera Feldman This Land May 2012 55min Permalink
On the surprising radicalism of library music – “music that has been composed and recorded for commercial purposes.”
Lindsay Zoladz The Believer Jul 2012 20min Permalink
The murderous tale of Washington D.C. fabulist Albrecht Muth and his late wife Viola Drath.
Franklin Foer New York Times Magazine Jul 2012 15min Permalink
“Calça de veludo ou bunda de fora.” Why Neymar, one of the world’s best talents hasn’t taken the money and run.
Sam Borden New York Times Jul 2012 Permalink
A profile of Eugene Kaspersky, KGB-trained online security mogul.
Noah Shachtman Wired Jul 2012 25min Permalink
On the legal history of LSD in America and a researcher who never gave up on the drug’s promise.
Tim Doody The Morning News Jul 2012 30min Permalink
The story of Brownie Wise, the woman who made Tupperware a household name.
Jen Doll Mental Floss Nov 2014 15min Permalink
Ripping out the guts of an “utterly preposterous document”: the Starr Report on the Monica Lewinsky scandal.
Renata Adler Vanity Fair Dec 1998 Permalink
Key and Peele try to make comedic sense of America’s confusions about race. Their secret? “Really, there’s no actual strategy.”
Zadie Smith New Yorker Feb 2015 35min Permalink
A friendship born of mutual interest in birding stretches across the Berlin Wall.
Phil McKenna The Big Roundtable Feb 2015 35min Permalink
“When constant revisionism and re-invention is under way, what does it profit a biographer to drag the weary ‘facts’ before us?”
Hilary Mantel London Review of Books Dec 1991 10min Permalink
The story of a young man, a lake with some fish, a compound bow and a very bad idea.
Holly Anderson Grantland Feb 2015 20min Permalink
“I laugh off 90 percent of the stuff I’m sent,” Wu says. “But it’s the 10 percent.”
David Whitford Inc. Mar 2015 10min Permalink
He built it as a “portal into a world of quiet.”
Nicholas Köhler Maclean's Mar 2015 15min Permalink
The “zone of sacrifice” that is Oxnard, California, where low-income workers are paying the price for pesticide use and chemical dumping.
Natalie Cherot Latterly Apr 2015 Permalink
After years of sexual abuse by a neighbor, a teenager takes matters into his own hands.
Maria Cramer Boston Globe May 2015 20min Permalink
One man describes his family’s tradition of delivering rhyming couplets at celebrations.
Rosecrans Baldwin Buzzfeed May 2015 15min Permalink
On the day of the earthquake, two men went into Haiti’s Soccer Federation headquarters. Only one came out.
Wright Thompson ESPN May 2010 20min Permalink
April Savino, a teenage homeless runaway, lived in Grand Central Terminal from 1984 until 1987 when she committed suicide on the steps of a nearby church.
Dennis Hevesi New York Times Oct 1988 20min Permalink
Before embarking on dangerous rock climbs, Matt Samet would use whiskey to wash down powerful prescription tranquilizers. A first-person account of extreme addiction.
Matt Samet Outside Jun 2010 20min Permalink
For the members of UCLA’s undocumented immigrant club, going to school means fighting for an education most students take for granted.
Douglas McGray West Apr 2006 25min Permalink
An interview with Clay Shirky on “why no medium has ever survived the indifference of 25-year-olds.”
Decca Aitkenhead The Guardian Jul 2010 10min Permalink
An excerpt from a new biography explores the trio of tragedies that struck Dahl’s family just as his career was taking off.
Donald Sturrock The Telegraph Aug 2010 20min Permalink