Josh Macciello Convinced L.A. He Was in Line to Buy the Dodgers. But He Was Really a Fraud
How a con-man convinced Los Angeles that he was prepared to purchase the Dodgers from the now-bankrupt Frank McCourt.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate.
How a con-man convinced Los Angeles that he was prepared to purchase the Dodgers from the now-bankrupt Frank McCourt.
Gene Maddaus LA Weekly Mar 2012 Permalink
Creating a new, clean police force in the Ukraine.
Masha Gessen Foreign Policy Sep 2015 25min Permalink
She was a Canadian student whose travels brought her to the cheap hotel on Skid Row. The only clue in her disappearance was a strange elevator video in which she peeks and then gestures with her hands down an unseen hallway.
“The Jihad route leads from Tunisia via Tripoli into Turkey and on to Syria. Thousands have followed the path into Syria, and only a few have returned.”
Mirco Keilberth, Juliane von Mittelstaedt, Christoph Reuter Der Spiegel English Nov 2014 15min Permalink
When an accountant decided to call foul on Halliburton’s financial record-keeping, he thought he was doing the right thing. He spent 10 years fighting for the courts to agree.
Jesse Eisinger ProPublica Apr 2015 20min Permalink
An artist takes on “the umbrella problem,” which runs so deep the U.S. Patent Office has four full-time examiners dedicated solely to assessing ideas for umbrella improvement.
Susan Orlean New Yorker Feb 2008 20min Permalink
In January 1966–the same month In Cold Blood was first published–Truman Capote sat down with George Plimpton to discuss the new art form he liked to call “creative journalism.”
George Plimpton, Truman Capote New York Times Jan 1966 35min Permalink
Unruly teens from around the world are kidnapped by parental order and sent to ‘behaviour-modification centers’ like Tranquility Bay, a $40,000/year prison-like compound in Jamaica.
Decca Aitkenhead The Guardian Jan 2003 25min Permalink
They were the first black boys to integrate the South’s elite prep schools. They drove themselves to excel in an unfamiliar environment. But at what cost?
Mosi Secret New York Times Magazine Sep 2017 30min Permalink
On medical acting and real pain.
Leslie Jamison The Believer Feb 2014 35min Permalink
“Until we reckon with our compounding moral debts, America will never be whole.”
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic May 2014 1h Permalink
Other companies tried to align themselves with the Black Lives Matter protests and failed. The Vermont creamery kept doing what it’s always done.
Jordyn Holman, Thomas Buckley Bloomberg Businessweek Jul 2020 15min Permalink
Trawick was alone in his apartment when an officer pushed open the door. He was holding a bread knife and a stick. “Why are you in my home?” he asked. He never got an answer.
Eric Umansky ProPublica Dec 2020 25min Permalink
A teenager murdered by her best friends, a notorious cold case suddenly heats up and Diana Athill, 96, faces the end — the most-read articles this week in the new Longform App, available free for iPhone and iPad.
The murder of a West Virginia teenager by her two best friends.
Under the cover of curing addicts, they beat and brainwashed their charges in basements across California. When a cult deprogrammer crossed them, he found a rattlesnake in his mailbox.
Nearly 70 years after Bugsy Siegel’s unsolved murder in Beverly Hills, a family finally comes forward: they know who did it.
Amy Wallace Los Angeles 15min
The author, age 96, on the end.
Diana Athill The Guardian 10min
Sixteen-year-old Kalief Browder was accused of taking a backpack. He spent the next three years on Rikers Island, without trial.
On the shared life of Tatiana and Krista Hogan, four years old and joined at the head.
Susan Dominus New York Times Magazine May 2011 30min
A comprehensive history of the case against the Menendez brothers.
Dominick Dunne Vanity Fair Oct 1990 55min
In the late 60s and early 70s, Austin Wiggins forced his three teenage daughters to play their strange music at New Hampshire ballrooms, firm in the belief that they would become stars. They did not.
Susan Orlean New Yorker Sep 1999 20min
On the perspective-bending art of identical twins Trevor and Ryan Oakes.
Lawrence Weschler VQR Apr 2009 25min
How three brothers from Chicago found tremendous success in their respective fields—Rahm in politics, Ari in Hollywood and Zeke in medicine—by their mid-30s.
Elisabeth Bumiller New York Times Jun 1997 15min
Oct 1990 – May 2011 Permalink
Three years after skipping town, Bulger was frustrating investigators and endearing himself to neighbors all over the country. He made a particularly good impression with Gautreaux family in Grand Isle, Louisiana, where he spent the winter in 1995 and 1996 with the girlfriend who led to his eventual capture in 2011.
Shelley Murphy Boston Globe Jan 1998 15min
A view of the Barefoot Bandit from his hometown.
Can a writer disappear in America for a month with a $5,000 bounty on his head? Ratliff tried to find out, and found himself with an unnerving amount of free time.
Evan Ratliff Wired Nov 2009 35min
The story of how Benjamin Holmes, wanted by the FBI for arson, spent two decades hiding in plain sight. (Also the story of how, when Holmes finally came back to see his wife, she shot him.)
Melanie Thernstrom New York Times Magzine Dec 2000 20min
On the run in Canada with Randy Quaid and his wife Evi as the try to evade “the Hollywood Star Whackers.”
Nancy Jo Sales Vanity Fair Jan 2011 25min
A visit to the French hideaway of Ira Einhorn, co-founder of Earth Day, who had avoided arrest on murder charges for nearly 20 years. Einhorn was extradited to the United States in 2001 and is now serving a life sentence.
Russ Baker Esquire Dec 1999 35min
Jan 1998 – Jan 2011 Permalink
He’s the first kid to be featured on the side of a milk carton—and his father thinks he knows who abducted him from a New York City street in 1979.
Lisa R. Cohen New York May 2009 15min
From “comely heiress” to “armed terrorist,” an overview of the Patty Hearst kidnapping published weeks after her debut as a bank robber.
Time Apr 1974
Meet Rick Strawn, the man who’ll abduct your problem child for a fee.
Nadya Labi Legal Affairs Jul 2004 30min
Rohde was kidnapped while reporting in Afghanistan. His story—in five parts—in his own words.
David Rohde New York Times Oct 2009 20min
Elizabeth Smart, age 14, was kidnapped from her bedroom in a Salt Lake City suburb. She was found nine months later with an itinerant preacher and his wife. Theories on why it took so long.
Scott Carrier Mother Jones Dec 2010 25min
Several American men working in the oil industry are kidnapped on the job in Ecuador.
Did Bruno Hauptmann really kidnap the Lindbergh baby? An overview of the case amidst a bunch of arguing scholars.
Francis Russell New York Review of Books Nov 1987 25min
Apr 1974 – Dec 2010 Permalink
In 1916, a down-on-its-luck traveling circus hung its star elephant. The crime? Murder.
Joan Vannorsdall Schroeder Blue Ridge Country May 1997 10min
The similarities between the reactions of elephants and humans to childhood trauma.
Charles Siebert New York Times Oct 2006
On imperialism, doubt and a day in colonial Burma.
George Orwell New Writing May 1936 15min
Is it ever OK for zoos to display elephants? And if not, what should keepers do with them?
Amy Dempsey The Toronto Star Jan 2013 15min
Nearly everything you could want to know about elephants, plus the metaphysical questions the animals raise about our own consciousness.
Caitrin Nicol The New Atlantis Jan 2013 1h35min
Riding rescued elephants through a wildlife park.
Paul Theroux Smithsonian Apr 2013 2h45min
May 1936 – Apr 2013 Permalink
On Elizabeth Warren’s shadow candidacy.
Ryan Lizza New Yorker May 2015 35min Permalink
A survivor’s frightening account.
Paige Williams Atlanta Magazine Jan 2000 20min Permalink
A Kenyan runner loses himself in Alaska.
Seth Wickersham ESPN May 2012 20min Permalink
Experiments in making others feel good.
Tom Chiarella Esquire Sep 2009 10min Permalink
On women who take up space.
Carmen Maria Machado Guernica Feb 2017 15min Permalink
An obituary.
Adam Platt New York Jun 2017 15min Permalink
How animals see.
Ed Yong National Geographic Feb 2016 20min Permalink