In the Face of Death
There was no doubt: Jeremy Gross had brutally murdered a convenience store clerk. All that was left to decide was his punishment. Death or life without parole? The story of a capital murder trial, as seen from the jury box.
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There was no doubt: Jeremy Gross had brutally murdered a convenience store clerk. All that was left to decide was his punishment. Death or life without parole? The story of a capital murder trial, as seen from the jury box.
Alex Kotlowitz New York Times Magazine Jul 2003 35min Permalink
On the grueling nature of Chinese restaurant work and the hopes and dreams of the cooks and delivery men who have migrated to the U.S.
Katie Salisbury The Ringer Dec 2018 15min Permalink
These Boston high school valedictorians set off to change the world. But good grades only got them so far. Is Boston failing its brightest students? A five-part series about the students left behind.
Malcolm Gay, Meghan E. Irons, Eric Moskowitz The Boston Globe Jan 2019 1h20min Permalink
You learn to believe in your child’s existence. What happens when she’s killed by a piece of your daily environment?
Jayson Greene Vulture Apr 2019 25min Permalink
The retired senator Mike Gravel gave two young fans his Twitter password and permission to campaign in his name. It might be a stunt—or the future of politics.
Jamie Lauren Keiles New York Times Magazine Jun 2019 20min Permalink
With state legislatures passing new abortion restrictions, the Mississippi Reproductive Freedom Fund follows its own compass on how to best help clients.
Zoë Beery New York Times Magazine Jun 2019 20min Permalink
In just the past few years, one union has organized close to 10,000 Florida adjuncts, in what is one of the most remarkable and little-noticed large scale labor campaigns in the country.
Hamilton Nolan Splinter Jun 2019 20min Permalink
Best Article Reprints Arts Movies & TV
How the CIA used a fake science fiction film to sneak six Americans out of revolutionary Iran. The declassified story that became Ben Affleck’s Argo.
Joshuah Bearman Wired Apr 2007 20min Permalink
In experiments on pig organs, scientists at Yale made a discovery that could someday challenge our understanding of what it means to die.
Matthew Shaer New York Times Magazine Jul 2019 35min Permalink
A giant earthquake is coming to the Northwest. Unfortunately, no one knows when.
Kathryn Schulz New Yorker Jul 2015 25min Permalink
A Montana rancher found two skeletons in combat—the Dueling Dinosaurs. But who do they belong to, and will the public ever see them?
Phillip Pantuso The Guardian Jul 2019 10min Permalink
Arts Politics Media Movies & TV
From the proto-bleep to meta-bleep: how the US government protects us from the profane.
Maria Bustillos The Verge Aug 2013 15min Permalink
Fentanyl is quickly becoming America’s deadliest drug. But law enforcement couldn’t trace it to its source—until one teenager overdosed in North Dakota.
Alex W. Palmer New York Times Magazine Oct 2019 50min Permalink
Florida lawmakers agreed the state’s old drug sentencing laws went too far. But that means nothing to people serving time.
Emily L. Mahoney Tampa Bay Times Nov 2019 15min Permalink
Kross cuts through the moans and shouts from off-camera: “Someone go wide!” She’s telling the cameramen to make sure they are adequately capturing the reverse gang bang of Ferrara—the love of her life.
Tracy Clark-Flory Jezebel Oct 2019 30min Permalink
It was one of the most arresting viral photos of the year: a horde of climbers clogged atop Mount Everest. But it only begins to capture the deadly realities of what transpired that day at 29,000 feet.
Joshua Hammer GQ Dec 2019 25min Permalink
An interview with Cleve Backster, a former interrogation specialist with the CIA who used a polygraph machine in the 1960s to develop his theory of “primary perception,” which contends that plants have feelings.
Derrick Jensen The Sun Magazine Jul 1997 20min Permalink
An interview with Allee Willis, the late songwriter behind Earth Wind & Fire’s “September” and the Friends theme song, on creating the world you want to live and work in and throwing virtual parties.
Allee Willis, Mark McNeill The Creative Independent Jan 2020 10min Permalink
People used to think the crowdsourced encyclopedia represented all that was wrong with the web. Now it’s a beacon of so much that’s right.
Richard Cooke Wired Feb 2020 20min Permalink
More migrants than ever are crossing the Colombia-Panama border to reach the U.S. Five days inside the Darién Gap, one of the most dangerous journeys in the world.
Nadja Drost California Sunday Apr 2020 30min Permalink
Federal agencies have hired contractors with no experience to find respirators and masks, fueling a black market filled with price gouging and multiple layers of profiteering brokers. One contractor called them “buccaneers and pirates.”
J. David McSwane ProPublica Mar 2020 20min Permalink
My mother’s eyes traced what was happening with happiness of a child. When she asked my father how it was possible, he thought she was asking about the flowers, but she wasn’t. She was asking how it was possible to see this much beauty at once.
Danuta Hinc Popula Jun 2020 10min Permalink
Over the past 14 years, Martin Guth has built a monopoly on some of the world’s rarest birds. Will his secretive organization ultimately help put more parrots in the wild, as he says or—push them closer to extinction?
Brendan Borrell Audubon Jul 2020 20min Permalink
The problems go much deeper than food safety and point to an industry that systematically rewards and enables star chefs while asking few critical questions about the workers who often power their success.
LEXIS-OLIVIER RAY, Samanta Helou Hernandez the LAnd magazine Jul 2020 30min Permalink
When Jennifer Farber disappeared in 2019, suspicion immediately centered on her husband and press coverage almost exclusively painted her as a missing suburban mom. But reducing the 50-year-old’s life to a familiar tabloid trope missed so much of her story.
Vanessa Grigoriadis Vanity Fair Oct 2020 30min Permalink