The Faded Smile
Eddie Griffin made it to the NBA. Then his life began to unravel.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate Monohydrate.
Eddie Griffin made it to the NBA. Then his life began to unravel.
Jonathan Abrams Grantland Jun 2014 45min Permalink
A sociologist learns techniques for evading the authorities.
Alice Goffman Vice May 2014 15min Permalink
In the days following Martin Luther King, Jr.’s assassination, more than 100 cities experienced significant civil disturbance. In New York, everyone expected riots. What happened next.
Clay Risen The Morning News Jan 2009 10min Permalink
Their entire lives, Alex and Tim Foley thought their mom and dad were typical, boring American parents. Then the FBI showed up.
Shaun Walker The Guardian May 2016 25min Permalink
In the late ’80s, Lewis went to Japan to research a hypothetical: what would the economic fallout be if a major quake hit?
Michael Lewis Manhattan Inc. Jun 1989 30min Permalink
In January 2009, a U.S. platoon came under rocket attack in Iraq. Two years later, how the event changed the soldiers’ lives.
Daniel Zwerdling, T. Christian Miller ProPublica Mar 2011 40min Permalink
A good trip on psilocybin might be just the ticket to relieve anxiety and depression, particularly in the terminally ill. But are we ready to dive back in to psychedelic research?
Michael Pollan New Yorker Feb 2015 40min Permalink
The team’s grand, analytics-driven experiment led by a business school grad who won the GM job after giving a “PowerPoint presentation that Sixers executives now recall as an ‘investment thesis.’”
Pablo S. Torre ESPN Feb 2015 20min Permalink
After losing his sight at age 3, Michael May went on to become the first blind CIA agent, set a world record for downhill skiing, and start a successful Silicon Valley company. Then he got the chance to see again.
Robert Kurson Esquire Jun 2005 Permalink
On the trade school’s business model and its founder, a former movie producer named Jerry Sherlock.
Andrew Rice Capital New York Apr 2012 20min Permalink
On Easter Sunday, 2008, a boat called the Alaskan Ranger went down in the Bering Sea. Forty-seven people were left to fend for themselves in 32-degree water. Forty-two survived.
Sean Flynn GQ Nov 2008 55min Permalink
Sixty years ago, the U.S. upset England in the World Cup on a goal from Joe Gaetjens. In most countries he would have been idolized. Instead, he was ignored in America and marked for death in his native Haiti.
Alexander Wolff Sports Illustrated Mar 2010 20min Permalink
The Top Gun effect; how Hollywood became a factory for sequels, comic book and video game adaptations, and anything else easily marketed to under-25-year-old males.
Mark Harris GQ Feb 2011 20min 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
What does it take to navigate the dark web, buy some Ransomware, and extort your victims? The writer tries it for himself.
Drake Bennett Bloomberg Businessweek Feb 2020 20min Permalink
Richard Phillips survived the longest wrongful prison sentence in American history by writing poetry and painting with watercolors. But on a cold day in the prison yard, he carried a knife and thought about revenge.
Thomas Lake CNN Apr 2020 35min Permalink
Roberto Primero Luis set out across the U.S.-Mexico border last year as previous Guatemalan migrants had. But the crossing has changed.
James Verini New York Times Magazine Aug 2020 35min Permalink
Dumba has spent her life performing in circuses around Europe, but in recent years animal rights activists have been campaigning to rescue her. When it looked like they might succeed, Dumba and her owners disappeared.
Laura Spinney The Guardian Jun 2021 20min Permalink
A 21-year-old falls into a coma from which he’ll never emerge. His mother, desperate to grant his wish of becoming a father, has his sperm preserved. Two years later, after a fruitless search for other alternatives, she finds a willing doctor and tries one last option: carrying her son’s child herself.
Dan P. Lee GQ Jun 2011 25min Permalink
A couple, well-known New York artists, decamp to L.A., where she intends to direct a movie about a rock star trying to leave a cult. Beck, a friend, signs on, then (possibly under pressure) drops out. Their behavior grows strange, and they rant of constant harassment by Scientologists. They return to New York—to die.
Nancy Jo Sales Vanity Fair Jan 2008 35min Permalink
“As an American woman, I currently have less reproductive autonomy than I would have had the day I was born.”
Alex Morris Rolling Stone Apr 2016 25min Permalink
The Harvard Law School legend has defended everyone from O.J. Simpson to Claus von Bülow. Now he’s facing his toughest case yet: his own.
How Barack Obama decided to green-light the operation that killed Osama bin Laden.
Mark Bowden Vanity Fair Oct 2012 40min Permalink
Ten years ago, Jack Whittaker won the largest lotto jackpot in history. Then he lost everything.
David Samuels Businessweek Dec 2012 15min Permalink
On Hezbollah leader Imad Mughniyeh, “the world’s most wanted terrorist not named Osama bin Laden,” whose death five years ago remains a mystery.
Mark Perry Foreign Policy Apr 2013 15min Permalink