Will Trump Burn the Evidence?
How the President could endanger the official records of one of the most consequential periods in American history.
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How the President could endanger the official records of one of the most consequential periods in American history.
Jill Lepore New Yorker Nov 2020 25min Permalink
Many people dream of building their own home in the country, but one family finds more of a struggle than they bargained for.
Ariana Kelly The Awl Feb 2015 10min Permalink
Apex predators, feeding on pests and pets, teem in suburban Dallas and other American cities.
Clinton Crockett Peters Terrain Feb 2021 15min Permalink
A story of gambling addiction, in seven parts.
Jay Caspian Kang The Morning News Oct 2010 Permalink
A cohort of journalists is drowning in burnout, trauma, and moral injury.
Olivia Messer Study Hall May 2021 Permalink
After taking on gentrification in Denver, did a successful anti-gang activist become a target of law enforcement?
Julian Rubinstein Guernica May 2021 20min Permalink
Although many Americans see the former police officer’s conviction as just closure, many in Minneapolis view it as the beginning of a larger battle.
Jelani Cobb New Yorker Jul 2021 25min Permalink
How the writer Jesse Armstrong keeps the billionaire Roy family trapped in its gilded cage.
Rebecca Mead New Yorker Aug 2021 25min Permalink
On the Camino de Santiago, a female pilgrim walks in solitude—utterly vulnerable, utterly free.
Aube Rey Lescure Guernica Jul 2021 20min Permalink
27 courses that will live on in nightmares.
Geraldine DeRuiter Everywhereist Dec 2021 Permalink
Stephen Glass, the most notorious fraud in journalism, decided he would live by one simple rule: Always tell the truth. Then he broke that rule.
Bill Adair Air Mail Dec 2021 Permalink
A trip to Turkey for a soccer game between bitter rivals and its accompanying madness.
Spencer Hall SB Nation Apr 2014 30min Permalink
The story of Soylent, a Silicon Valley concoction designed to replace your meals.
Lizzie Widdicombe New Yorker May 2014 25min Permalink
“Someone has sliced open soccer’s hourglass, and the sand has come pouring out on to the streets.”
Supriya Nair Roads & Kingdoms May 2014 Permalink
Privacy, memory, data and advertising—how the modern web has become a Ponzi scheme and how we might be able to fix it.
Maciej Cegłowski Idle Words May 2014 Permalink
How the Ebola virus works.
Leigh Cowart Hazlitt Jul 2014 15min Permalink
A trip to The Villages, a booming retiremement community outside Orlando, where the golf is free, casual sex is everywhere, and there is no cemetery.
Alex French Buzzfeed Aug 2014 35min Permalink
A profile of the novelist, who is surprised to be alive.
John Jeremiah Sullivan New York Times Magazine Sep 2014 15min Permalink
The story of one of the 74,000 children who come to this country each year alone and undocumented.
Alexandra Starr New York Sep 2014 10min Permalink
Sam Simon made a fortune from The Simpsons. Now, diagnosed with terminal cancer, he is racing to spend it.
Merrill Markoe Vanity Fair Sep 2014 25min Permalink
On Nigeria’s citizen vigilantes who’ve banded together to fight Islamist terrorists.
A profile of Christine Quinn, odds-on favorite to be the next mayor of New York City.
Jonathan Van Meter New York Jan 2013 30min Permalink
How Curtis Duffy overcame his parents’ murder-suicide to become one of the nation’s great chefs.
Kevin Pang The Chicago Tribune Feb 2013 Permalink
Applying big data analysis to Internet Adult Film Database, the IMDB of porn.
Jon Millward jonmillward.com Feb 2013 15min Permalink
Longform’s guide to murder, corruption, extortion, and incompetence - committed by police officers around the country.
A murder case in Los Angeles, cold since the late ’80s, heats up thanks to breakthroughs in forensic science and leads detectives to one of their own.
Matthew McGough Atlantic Jun 2011 35min
The rise and fall of the Seven-Seven—stationed in the war zone of 1980’s Crown Heights, Brooklyn—and how an idealistic young recruit became part of cash-snatching, drug-reselling, renegade clique of cops.
Michael Daly New York Dec 1986 30min
Rogue cops in the LAPD Rampart division’s anti-gang CRASH unit (Community Resources Against Street Hoodlums) were involved in everything from drug smuggling and bank robberies to, allegedly, the murder of Notorious BIG.
A cop kills a fellow officer during a drug bust and claims it was an accident. Others suspect that it wasn’t.
Sean Flynn GQ Aug 2008 35min
How the New Orleans Police Department failed during Hurricane Katrina.
Dan Baum New Yorker Jan 2006 45min
In 2008, a Brooklyn cop grew gravely concerned about how the public was being served. So he began carrying a digital sound recorder, secretly recording his colleagues and superiors.
Graham Rayman Village Voice May 2010 25min
It can’t be all bad! Here’s the story of a group that posed as cops and built “most far-flung, most organized, and most brazen example of homosexual extortion in the nation’s history” before the law enforcement took them down.
William McGowan Slate Jul 2012 30min
Dec 1986 – Jul 2012 Permalink