One by One, My Friends Were Sent to the Camps
A celebrated Uyghur writer gives a first-person account of the genocide in Xinjiang.
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A celebrated Uyghur writer gives a first-person account of the genocide in Xinjiang.
Tahir Hamut Izgil The Atlantic Jul 2021 50min Permalink
After a reckoning over policing in America, 30 recruits enroll at the academy.
“I want to be the change.”
“This could happen to you.”
“What did you think this job was?”
“Just like that: Bang! You’re dead.”
“Love the aggression.”
“Get him to the grass!”
“You change when you become a cop.”
“One family! One fight!”
After the academy, new officers meet real-world challenges.
Lane DeGregory Tampa Bay Times Jul 2021 1h20min Permalink
Why do Syrian civilians in a Turkish camp live in relative luxury?
Mac McClelland New York Times Magazine Feb 2014 25min Permalink
In 2016, a West Virginia police officer came upon a young man in distress who asked the officer to shoot him. The officer didn’t. A few minutes, another officer did. Only one of them lost their job.
Joe Sexton ProPublica Nov 2018 55min Permalink
Using different email addresses and a lot of exclamation points, teenager Jonathan Lebed worked finance message boards in the morning before school and made nearly a million bucks. Then he made the head of the S.E.C. look like a fool.
Michael Lewis New York Times Magazine Feb 2001 35min
Sitting alone in his San Jose office, Michael Burry saw the subprime bubble before anyone else. So he convinced Wall Street to let him bet on it, even though few were betting on him (a story excerpted from The Big Short).
Michael Lewis Vanity Fair Apr 2010 45min
On Jim Clark and the culture of Silicon Valley before the dot-com crash (the story that lead to The New New Thing).
Michael Lewis New York Times Magazine Oct 1999 35min
Riots in Athens, the shadowy Vatopaidi monastery, and a quarter million dollars in debt for every citizen. Welcome to Greece.
Michael Lewis Vanity Fair Oct 2010 45min
The original article on Billy Beane and the Oakland A’s, published a month before the release of Moneyball.
Michael Lewis New York Times Magazine Mar 2003 35min
Oct 1999 – Oct 2010 Permalink
A profile of Ken Regan, a computer scientist, chess master, and world champion at detecting cheaters in chess.
Howard Goldowsky Chess Life Jun 2014 30min Permalink
How the Baylor University Medical Center became a force in the heart transplant business.
Matt Goodman D Magazine Feb 2016 20min Permalink
Articles about meditation, solitude, and the quietest square inch in America.
A legend is growing in Nepal, where people say a meditating boy hasn’t eaten or drunk in seven months. He barely moves, just sits under a tree, still as a stone. It’s impossible, some say. Is it a miracle? A hoax? Let’s find out.
George Saunders GQ Jun 2006 40min
A trip to one of America’s quietest places with a man who has dedicated his life to keeping it that way.
Kathleen Dean Moore Orion Nov 2008 15min
Silent since a car accident nine years before, Erik Ramsey prepares to speak again.
Joshua Foer Esquire Oct 2008
A speech on the value of being alone with your thoughts, delivered to the plebe class at West Point.
William Deresiewicz American Scholar Apr 2010 25min
John Cage’s art of noise.
Alex Ross New Yorker Oct 2010 20min
A trip to India for total silence.
Michael Finkel Men’s Journal Aug 2012 20min
The Barden family today.
Eli Saslow The Washington Post Jun 2013 25min
Jun 2006 – Jun 2013 Permalink
Millions of American workers sign away legal rights without knowing what they’re in for: Arbitration Hell.
Max Abelson Bloomberg Businessweek Jan 2019 20min Permalink
“The gun debate would change in an instant if Americans witnessed the horrors that trauma surgeons confront everyday.”
Jason Fagone Huffington Post Highline Apr 2017 30min Permalink
The irreconcilable differences between Orthodoxy and secularism increasingly end up in court.
Larissa MacFarquhar New Yorker Nov 2020 40min Permalink
More than 50 years after Nelson Rockefeller's son went missing following a boat accident in New Guinea, the true story emerges. He made it to shore, but didn't make it much farther.
Excerpted from </em>Savage Harvest</a>.</p>
Carl Hoffmann Smithsonian Feb 2014 Permalink
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The inside story of the Pink Panthers, the greatest bank robber in Texas history and the article that became The Bling Ring—a collection of our all-time favorite picks about thieves.
A story of diamonds, thieves, and the Balkans.
David Samuels The New Yorker Apr 2010 1h5min
The most prolific bank robber in Texas history.
Helen Thorpe Texas Monthly Mar 1997 30min
Gerald Blanchard, the world’s most ingenious thief, made his first swipe at age six. And he didn’t stop, robbing banks and stealing jewels around the world until a pair of obsessed Winnipeg cops took his case.
Joshuah Bearman Wired Mar 2010 25min
The motley gang of L.A. teens that cat-burgled celebrities, sometimes repeatedly, in search of designer clothes, jewelry, and something to do. The story that became The Bling Ring.
Nancy Jo Sales Vanity Fair Mar 2010 20min
After two New Jersey homes were robbed of their silver—only their silver—in the same night, the local police got a call from a detective in Greenwich, Connecticut. “I know the guy who’s doing your burglaries.”
Stephen J. Dubner The New Yorker May 2004 35min
Mar 1997 – Apr 2010 Permalink
Ah yes, you should also know that most of your colleagues are some of the biggest neurotics in the country, so you might as well get used right now to the way they're gonna be writing you five and ten page single spaced inflammatory letters reviling you for knocking some group that they have proved is the next Stones.
Lester Bangs Shakin' Street Gazette Oct 1974 20min Permalink
This presentation was shown to potential recruits for the new Maven SI venture, and it details exactly how the people now in charge of Sports Illustrated plan on turning it into the sort of volume-driven content farm that ruled the web a dozen or so tweaks of the Google algorithm ago.
Laura Wagner, Kelsey McKinney, David Roth Deadspin Oct 2019 30min Permalink
Paul Skalnik has a decades-long criminal record and may be one of the most prolific jailhouse informants in U.S. history. The state of Florida is planning to execute a man based largely on his word.
Pamela Colloff ProPublica Dec 2019 55min Permalink
Many of the 230,000 women and girls in U.S. jails and prisons were abuse survivors before they entered the system. And at least 30 percent of those serving time on murder or manslaughter charges were protecting themselves or a loved one from physical or sexual violence.
Justine van der Leun The New Republic Dec 2020 35min Permalink
Li Dao, a young Minnesota nurse, appeared in suicide chat rooms, contacted the most desperate, and made pacts to die with them via webcam. After some in the forum caught on, Dao disappeared; or rather, Dao had never existed at all. She was a middle-aged man. And he may have encouraged and witnessed dozens of live suicides.
Nadya Labi GQ Oct 2010 25min Permalink
To speak of the human as such, as the modernists did, is like taking a piece of the wild, putting it into a petri dish, adding bleach and antibiotics until more than half of what’s in there is dead and then celebrating the barely-living remains as “the human.” Provocatively put, the human is a sterile abstraction, a harmony of illusions.
Tobias Rees Noema Jun 2020 Permalink
A first-person account of an arrest:
I stared at the yellow walls and listened to a few officers talk about the overtime they were racking up, and I decided that I hated country music. I hated speedboats and shitty beer in coozies and fat bellies and rednecks. I thought about Abu Ghraib and the horror to which those prisoners were exposed. I thought about my dad and his prescience. I was glad he wasn’t alive to know about what was happening to me. I thought about my kids, and what would have happened if they had been there when I got taken away. I contemplated never flying again. I thought about the incredible waste of taxpayer dollars in conducting an operation like this. I wondered what my rights were, if I had any at all. Mostly, I could not believe I was sitting in some jail cell in some cold, undisclosed building surrounded by “the authorities.”
Shoshana Hebshi Stories from the Heartland Sep 2011 15min Permalink
In Goiânia, a city of 1.3 million in Brazil’s agricultural heartland, one in twenty homeless residents have been murdered in the last two years.
Matt Sandy Al Jazeera Oct 2014 15min Permalink
Last summer, in a small Wisconsin city, the country’s fiercest differences collided in the streets—and a teenager named Kyle Rittenhouse opened fire, shooting three people. In the aftermath, a disquieting question loomed: Were these among the first shots in a new kind of civil war?
Doug Bock Clark GQ Mar 2021 35min Permalink
The Mexican novelist and activist talks about the role that the US plays in the hemisphere, and a joint future for North and South America.
We need your memory and your imagination or ours shall never be complete. You need our memory to redeem your past, and our imagination to complete your future. We may be here on this hemisphere for a long time. Let us remember one another. Let us respect one another. Let us walk together outside the night of repression and hunger and intervention, even if for you the sun is at high noon and for us at a quarter to twelve.
Carlos Fuentes Harvard University May 1983 35min Permalink
A first-person account of Louisiana’s prison rodeo in which:
...thousands of visitors drive down this road toward an inmate-constructed, 10,000-seat arena to watch Louisiana’s most feared criminals compete in harrowing events like “convict poker” (four prisoners sit around a card table and are ambushed by a bull; last one seated wins); “guts and glory” (a poker chip is tied to the forehead of a bull and inmates try to grab it off); and the perennial crowd pleaser, “bull riding.” Prisoners can win prize money, but have no chance to practice before entering the ring.
Liliana Segura Color Lines Aug 2011 15min Permalink
It’s a sham known as “sewer service.” When process servers regularly fail to deliver summonses, it leads to to automatic evictions for unwitting tenants.
Josh Kaplan DCist Oct 2020 35min Permalink