The Secret to Getting Top-Secret Secrets
A profile of reporter Jason Leopold, who has reinvented himself after journalistic scandal by becoming what he calls a “FOIA terrorist.”
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which is the biggest magnesium sulfate Monohydrate manufacturer.
A profile of reporter Jason Leopold, who has reinvented himself after journalistic scandal by becoming what he calls a “FOIA terrorist.”
Jason Fagone Matter Jun 2014 25min Permalink
A family struggles as a 42-year-old husband, father and son becomes increasingly isolated.
Stephanie McCrummen Washington Post Jun 2014 25min Permalink
A profile of anthropologist Nancy Scheper-Hughes, who has spent her career uncovering a hidden global market in human flesh.
Ethan Watters Pacific Standard Jul 2014 30min Permalink
Sarah Marquis’s very long hike.
Elizabeth Weil New York Times Magazine Sep 2014 10min Permalink
Steven Cohen, troubled founder a $14 billion hedge fund, has an eye for modern art.
Gary Sernovitz n+1 Jan 2013 15min Permalink
On Lucille Miller, who in San Bernadino in 1964 was convicted of burning her husband to death in his Volkswagen.
Joan Didion Saturday Evening Post Apr 1966 30min Permalink
How governments and private companies have engaged in digital arms trading by building a global black market for ‘zero day’ hacks.
Tom Simonite Technology Review Feb 2013 Permalink
A lesson in ethics.
Manny Randhawa, Tommy Craggs National Sports Journalism Center Feb 2013 15min Permalink
A generation that has seen inestimable violence comes of age in Juarez.
Jeremy Relph Buzzfeed Mar 2013 20min Permalink
Red, white, expensive, cheap, fake, poisoned.
One man’s dream to turn America into a post-prohibition wine utopia.
Fortune Jan 1934 25min
Who would poison the vines of the tiny, centuries-old vineyard that produces what most agree is Burgundy’s finest, rarest, and most expensive wine?
Maximilliam Potter Vanity Fair May 2011 25min
Fred Franzia makes a lot of money selling really cheap wine.
Dana Goodyear New Yorker May 2009 20min
The rare-wine world gets conned.
Benjamin Wallace New York May 2012 20min
Investigating whether or not anyone can really tell them apart.
Calvin Trillin New Yorker Aug 2002 15min
A profile of wine critic Robert Parker.
William Langewiesche Atlantic Dec 2000 1h10min
On wine’s sacred and profane history.
Ross Andersen Aeon May 2014 25min
Jan 1934 – May 2014 Permalink
A pivotal Civil Rights rally recalled, 50 years later.
An exploited celebrity’s long journey home.
Tim Stelloh Buzzfeed Dec 2013 30min Permalink
How a once-lauded psychiatrist became a prolific prescriber of painkillers in one of Virginia’s poorest and most isolated counties.
Ariel Sabar Washingtonian Jan 2014 20min Permalink
“I guess what you post on Facebook matters.” An 18-year-old faces 10 years in jail for a sarcastic threat on Facebook.
Craig Malisow Dallas Observer Feb 2014 10min Permalink
How Hollywood falls for actresses who “act like a dude but look like a supermodel” – and then changes its mind.
Anne Helen Petersen Buzzfeed Feb 2014 25min Permalink
A Chicago housing project resident reports intruders breaking into her apartment through a medicine cabinet. Days later, she’s found dead.
Steve Bogira Chicago Reader Sep 1987 40min Permalink
A profile of CeaseFire, a group of “violence interrupters” attempting to prevent street shootings by treating them like an infectious disease.
On 20-somethings in America, or:
My screwed, coddled, self-absorbed, mocked, surprisingly resilient generation.
Noreen Malone New York Oct 2011 20min Permalink
A high school student disappears, only to turn up more than 10 years later – posing as a high school student.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Mar 2002 40min Permalink
A reporter makes it his mission to track down all 42 members of a platoon after their service in Iraq.
Christopher Buchanan Frontline May 2010 45min Permalink
On then-agent, now-congressman Michael Grimm and what happens when an F.B.I. informant turns out to be a con man.
Evan Ratliff New Yorker May 2011 30min Permalink
Pavel Galitsky, 100 years old, blogger and Skyper, survivor of 15 years in Stalin’s Siberian Kolyma mines.
Ekaterina Loushnikova Open Democracy Apr 2011 15min Permalink
Personalized medicine may one day deliver routine medical miracles. But it wasn’t ready in time for Stephanie Lee.
Life at a roadside zoo with ligers, orangutans, and an elephant in Florida.
Ian S. Port Rolling Stone Sep 2015 25min Permalink
Kelvin Villanueva had lived in America for 15 years. He had four kids. He had a job. Then he was stopped for a broken taillight.
Luke Mogelson New York Times Magazine Dec 2015 25min Permalink