The Trash Heap Has Spoken
On women who take up space.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate Monohydrate.
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
A profile.
Tom Piazza Oxford American Oct 2018 30min Permalink
How UFO culture took over America.
Stephen Rodrick Rolling Stone Aug 2020 40min Permalink
How COVID-19 ravaged Minnesota.
Reid Forgrave Star Tribune Oct 2020 50min Permalink
What happens when we talk to animals?
Lauren Markham Harper's Mar 2021 20min Permalink
How to lose weight while barely moving.
Aishwarya Kumar ESPN Sep 2019 25min Permalink
Twenty years ago, ‘Grand Theft Auto III’ set a new standard for open-world video games. The titles it inspired have grown bigger and busier, but it takes more than massive maps to give gamers the freedom they felt on their first trip to 3-D Liberty City.
Jeremy Gordon The Ringer Oct 2021 25min Permalink
Behind the nation’s closed doors, with YouTube.
“We, the writers—a word I am using in its most primitive sense—arrived in Chicago about 10 days before the baffling, bruising, an unbelievable two minutes and six seconds at Comiskey Park. We will get to all that later.”
James Baldwin Nugget Feb 1963 20min Permalink
How the pop psychedelic author helped jumpstart the modern apocalypse movement after an alleged visit from “Quetzal-coatl, a mystical bird-serpent in Mayan myths.”
Vanessa Grigoriadis Rolling Stone Sep 2006 20min Permalink
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