The Secret Court
In 1920, Harvard University officials suspected that some students were gay. So they kicked them all out.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate Monohydrate.
In 1920, Harvard University officials suspected that some students were gay. So they kicked them all out.
Benoit Denizet-Lewis The Good Men Project Jun 2010 10min Permalink
How virtual worlds like Ultima Online form economies and the sellers who make a living in digital goods.
Julian Dibbell Wired Nov 2001 20min Permalink
How the Weinstein Brothers barked their way into an empire and then lost it.
Peter Biskind Vanity Fair Feb 2004 50min Permalink
Fifty years ago, rodeo man Bob Gimlin was a Bigfoot skeptic. Then he and a friend caught the creature on tape.
Leah Sottile Outside Magazine Jul 2016 15min Permalink
“In my view, Trump wouldn’t be president if not for Bob.”
Jane Mayer New Yorker Mar 2017 40min Permalink
A conversation with 97-year-old Ben Ferencz.
Lesley Stahl 60 Minutes May 2017 10min Permalink
How the federal government abused its power to seize property for a border fence.
T. Christian Miller, Kiah Collier, Julián Aguilar ProPublica, Texas Tribune Dec 2017 40min Permalink
More than a year ago, Nevada death row prisoner Scott Dozier gave up his legal appeals and asked to be executed. He’s still waiting.
Maurice Chammah The Marshall Project Jan 2018 20min Permalink
What we know (and don’t), more than a year after American diplomats began to suffer strange, concussion-like symptoms in Cuba.
Tim Golden, Sebastian Rotella ProPublica Feb 2018 Permalink
Three days in Wyoming as the hip-hop firebrand tends to his scars.
Jon Caramanica New York Times Jun 2018 20min Permalink
Dick Cavett, the “last great intellectual talk-show host,” at 81.
Alex Williams New York Times Aug 2018 10min Permalink
How a Sacramento Kings executive stole more than $13 million from the team—and almost got away with it.
Kevin Arnovitz ESPN Nov 2019 25min Permalink
An interview with Alan Stillman, who in 1965 founded T.G.I. Friday’s, the first singles bar in America.
Krista Ninivaggi, Nicola Twilley Edible Geography Nov 2010 15min Permalink
It was a fraught, utterly uncharted presidential transition—four years ago, from Obama to Trump. It was a prelude for so much that followed.
Mattathias Schwartz New York Times Magazine Jan 2021 30min Permalink
Stories from our archive about how marijuana is grown, bought, sold, smuggled, and smoked.
Brought to you by Stoner, a new podcast from Longform co-founder Aaron Lammer featuring conversations with creative people about their experiences with marijuana. Subscribe here or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Writing in his mid-30s—and, it’s worth noting, in 1969—the scientist breaks down the many pleasures he’s found in getting high.
Carl Sagan Marijuana Reconsidered Jan 1969 10min
A journey inside California’s medical marijuana industry, with a guide named Captain Blue.
David Samuels New Yorker Jul 2008 50min
A trip to the Cannabis Cup serves as a backdrop for an explanation of how the War on Drugs revolutionized the way marijuana is grown in America.
Michael Pollan New York Times Magazine Feb 1995 30min
The story of how a 19-year-old kid in Idaho went from delivering pizza to leading a operation responsible for smuggling at least seven tons of marijuana across the Canadian border.
Mike Binelli Rolling Stone Oct 2009 20min
On marijuana’s impact on national politics, the economy, and the prison system.
Eric Schlosser The Atlantic Aug 1994 40min
Looking for a glimpse of America’s possibly legalized future, a reporter spends a week working at an Amsterdam coffee shop (and confronts his fear of weed, kind of).
Wells Tower GQ Aug 2010 25min
A journey to Disney World with kids and weed.
John Jeremiah Sullivan New York Times Magazine Jun 2011 25min
How a group of hippie surfers and a former Spanish teacher built the largest weed-smuggling empire on the West Coast.
Joshuah Bearman The Atavist Magazine Sep 2013
Jan 1969 – Sep 2013 Permalink
How the world’s most notorious drug lord was captured.
Previously: Patrick Radden Keefe on the Longform Podcast.
Patrick Radden Keefe New Yorker May 2014 40min Permalink
In the ’90s, a gynecologist named Gao Yaojie exposed an AIDS epidemic in rural China and the ensuing government cover-up. Forced to leave, she’s now 85 and living alone in New York.
Kathleen McLaughlin Buzzfeed Dec 2013 20min Permalink
In the 1970s, Kelbessa Negewo was a midlevel administrator in Ethiopia’s brutal Red Terror regime. In the 1990s, he was a bellhop in an Atlanta hotel. Then someone he had tortured back home recognized him.
Andrew Rice New York Times Magazine Jun 2006 30min Permalink
For more than a century, boys were sent to the Florida School for Boys reformatory. Many were beaten brutally and bear the physical and psychological scars to this day. Many others, though, never came home.
A search for lost boys and the reasons why they died.
A neglected cemetery yields more bodies than expected, but names are harder to find.
Ben Montgomery Tampa Bay Times Dec 2014 50min Permalink
What’s the reason for Mike Tyson’s continuing appeal?
Brin-Jonathan Butler SB Nation Feb 2015 35min Permalink
Many experts believe it’s inevitable that in the coming decades, humans will figure out how to live considerably longer lives. It might not be a good thing.
Charles C. Mann The Atlantic May 2005 20min Permalink
Bryce Masters was 17 years old when a police officer tased him for 23 seconds. His heart stopped for almost eight minutes. His life will never be the same.
Nick Berardini, Matt Stroud The Intercept Jun 2016 35min Permalink
Inside the grand jury proceedings.
Sean Flynn GQ Jul 2016 30min Permalink
Behind the scenes with Ice Cube, Cuba Gooding Jr., Angela Bassett, Laurence Fishburne, and a 22-year-old film student named John Singleton.
Sam Kashner Vanity Fair Aug 2016 25min Permalink
The doctor who worked on both Kennedy and Oswald tells his story.
Michael J. Mooney D Magazine Nov 2008 15min Permalink