Daniel Knox Gives Our Derelicts the Beautiful Music They Deserve
One day you’re teaching yourself to play the piano in hotel lobbies, the next you’re contributing a song to a David Lynch soundtrack.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
One day you’re teaching yourself to play the piano in hotel lobbies, the next you’re contributing a song to a David Lynch soundtrack.
Tal Rosenberg Chicago Reader Feb 2015 15min Permalink
Hanging out in Moscow with Russia’s yuppie, 20-something journalist revolutionaries:
In other words, the protest was being brought to you by the same people you would have relied on, weeks earlier, for restaurant picks.
Michael Idov New York Jan 2012 20min Permalink
Raffaello Follieri was young, handsome. He was Italian. He was dating Anne Hathaway, hobnobbing with Bill Clinton, and using contacts at the Vatican to launch a lucrative business in the States. Then he was in jail.
Michael Shnayerson Vanity Fair Oct 2008 40min Permalink
If your ex-spouse takes your child and hightails it abroad, the legal system often isn’t on your side. So what can you do? One option: hire a former Army ranger named Gus Zamora to take back your kid.
Nadya Labi The Atlantic Nov 2009 35min Permalink
On the story we tell ourselves about artificial intelligence.
Maciej Ceglowski Idle Words Oct 2016 30min Permalink
What happens when an impoverished island nation enters into a deal to sell its own citizenship in bulk.
Atossa Araxia Abrahamian The Guardian Nov 2015 20min Permalink
Google and Tesla are spending billions to develop driverless technology. George Hotz used an Acura.
Ashlee Vance Bloomberg Businessweek Dec 2015 15min Permalink
Feminism brought the opposition together for the Women’s March on Washington. But how long will that last, and how many converts can it win?
Amanda Hess New York Times Magazine Feb 2017 25min Permalink
As a young social psychologist, she played by the rules and won big: an influential study, a viral TED talk, a prestigious job at Harvard. Then, suddenly, the rules changed.
Susan Dominus New York Times Magazine Oct 2017 35min Permalink
On sleep deprivation in the NBA.
Baxter Holmes ESPN Oct 2019 20min Permalink
People in Blooming Prairie, Minnesota, thought Lois Reiss was a nice wife and grandmother. If she had a vice, it was playing the slots. Then she committed murder.
John Rosengren The Atavist Magazine Sep 2020 40min Permalink
Archaeological discoveries are shattering scholars’ long-held beliefs about how the earliest humans organized their societies—and hint at possibilities for our own,
David Graeber, David Wengrow Guardian Oct 2021 25min Permalink
A plane that fell from the sky, Zadie Smith's love-hate relationship with Manhattan, and the underground network that powers America's Chinese food restaurants — the most read articles this week in the new Longform App, available free for iPhone and iPad.
America’s underground Chinese restaurant workers.
Lauren Hilgers New Yorker 25min
The story of TWA Flight 841.
Buzz Bissinger St. Paul Pioneer Press May 1981 25min
On loving and hating and living in Manhattan.
“I am having a moment, but I only want more. I need more. I cannot merely be good enough because I am chased by the pernicious whispers that I might only be ‘good enough for a black woman.’”
Roxane Gay VQR 10min
Jamie Smith said he was a co-founder of Blackwater and a former CIA officer. He appeared on cable news as a counterterrorism expert and he received millions in goverment contracts to train personnel. The money was real. The resume wasn’t.
Ace Atkins, Michael Fechter Outside 35min
May 1981 Permalink
Elevators, online dating and the mind behind Super Mario Bros. — Paumgarten on Longform.
“From this day forward, Ken doesn’t always have to look like the most basic frat bro ever to get a B- in econ. He can be complicated, mysterious—maybe even vegan. No more Mr. Nice Ken. (Actually, he’ll still be very, very nice.)”
Caity Weaver GQ Jun 2017 15min Permalink
Jackie Thomas was $29,134 in debt and in trouble with state regulators. She hadn’t slept in days. If a judge ruled against her, she’d fail the mothers who could only keep their jobs thanks to the 24-hour child care she offered.
Lizzie Presser ProPublica May 2021 25min Permalink
Wayne Simmons was ideal conservative commentator. A former C.I.A. operative, he ate lunch with Donald Rumsfeld, took trips to Guantánamo aboard Air Force Two, and pumped the party line on Fox News. There was only one problem: Simmons had never been in the C.I.A.
Alex French New York Times Magazine Mar 2016 20min Permalink
A conversation with Monica Lewinsky about bullying, humiliation, and resurrection.
Previously: Jon Ronson on the Longform Podcast and “Shame and Survival,” Lewinsky’s 2014 essay for Vanity Fair.
Jon Ronson The Guardian Apr 2016 15min Permalink
A diagnosis in question.
James Ross Gardner Seattle Met Apr 2014 20min Permalink
How a Soviet swimming champion saved passengers from a sinking trolleybus.
Carl Schreck Grantland Sep 2014 20min Permalink
A spy takes on his own agency.
David Wise Smithsonian Oct 2012 Permalink
Life after scoring 100-plus points in a basketball game.
Justin Heckert Sports Illustrated Dec 2012 25min Permalink
He was an 18 year old Marine bound for Iraq. She was a high school senior in West Virginia. They grew intimate over IM. His dad also started contacting her. No one was who they claimed to be and it led to a murder.
Nadya Labi Wired Aug 2007 15min
John Dirr’s son Eli didn’t really have cancer. In fact, neither Eli nor John Dirr ever existed. The story of a decade-long hoax.
Adrian Chen Gawker Jun 2012
On an affliction for the digital age, “Munchausen by internet.”
Cienna Madrid The Stranger Nov 2012 35min
How a 19-year-old actress and a few struggling Web filmmakers created a star.
Joshua Davis Wired Dec 2006 15min
How a Massachusetts psychotherapist fell for a Nigerian e-mail scam.
Michael Zuckoff New Yorker May 2006 20min
The story was told by Sports Illustrated, CBS News, and countless others: linbeacker Manti Te’o, Heisman trophy candidate and the face of Notre Dame football, was playing brilliantly despite the tragic loss of his girfriend to leukemia early in the season. The reporters missed one key element of Te’o’s story, however: the girl hadn’t died. She couldn’t have. She didn’t exist.
Timothy Burke, Jack Dickey Deadspin Jan 2013 15min
May 2006 – Jan 2013 Permalink
An obsessive marine biologist gambles his savings, family, and sanity on a quest to be the first to capture a live giant squid.
David Grann New Yorker May 2004 45min
On the grief that comes with losing livestock.
E.B. White Atlantic Jan 1948 15min
A profile of a 25-year-old Spanish sensation.
Susan Orlean Outside Dec 1996 25min
The inevitably tragic story of Travis the chimp and the family of tow-truck operators who raised him like a human child.
Dan P. Lee New York Jan 2011
A trip to a lobster festival in Maine leads to an examination of the culinary and ethical dimensions of cooking a live, possibly sentient, creature.
David Foster Wallace Gourmet Aug 2004
Jan 1948 – Jan 2011 Permalink
A profile of the late actor-turned NRA president.
Ed Leibowitz Los Angeles Magazine Feb 2001
Adapting from his book of the same name, Chivers traces how the design and proliferation of small arms, originating from the Pentagon and the Russian army, rerouted the 20th century.
C.J. Chivers Esquire Nov 2010 30min
Most military experts agree that robots, not people, will inevitably do the fighting in ground wars. In Tennessee, a high-end gunsmith is already there. The story of Jerry Baber and his robot army.
Evan Ratliff The New Yorker Feb 2009 20min
How two twentysomethings, equipped with the Internet and weed, ruled the lucrative world of weapons trading … for a while.
Guy Lawson Rolling Stone Mar 2011 45min
On America’s relationship with the right to bear arms, from the founding fathers to the Black Panthers and the Ku Klux Klan.
Adam Winkler Atlantic Sep 2011 20min
The author sits down with notorious (and recently convicted) arms dealer Viktor Bout, Bout’s brother, and a close friend.
Peter Landesman New York Times Magazine Aug 2003 30min
In the days after 9/11, Mark Stroman went on a revenge killing spree in Texas. Rais Bhuiyan survived and, a decade later, tried to stop Stroman’s execution.
Michael J. Mooney D Magazine Oct 2011 25min
Feb 2001 – Oct 2011 Permalink