The Snatchback
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.
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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 young and ascendant Frank Sinatra, “who ruled crowds by seductive magnetism and surrounded himself with courtiers, but had once been an adolescent alone in his room listening to Bing Crosby on his Atwater-Kent.”
Geoffrey O'Brien New York Review of Books Feb 2011 15min Permalink
What happened when the founder of North Face and Esprit bought a chunk of Chile the size of a small state, intending to live with a select group inside it and turn it case study for ecological preservation. It turned out, however, that Chileans didn’t really like that idea.
William Langewiesche The Atlantic Jun 1999 20min Permalink
With Washington State debating a bill that would force Christian pregnancy centers to be more forthright about their anti-abortion agenda, a pair of reporters hear firsthand what the centers are telling young women.
Cienna Madrid The Stranger Feb 2011 Permalink
A plague leads sea stars to tear off their own arms.
Nathaniel Rich Vice May 2015 20min Permalink
On the Republican slate for the 2016 presidential election: “Of the dozen or so people who have declared or are thought likely to declare, every one can be described as a full-blown adult failure.”
Chris Lehmann LRB Jun 2015 15min Permalink
After a flawed sexual assault investigation, a Naval Academy instructor made it his mission to prove he did nothing wrong. The discovery of a lost cell phone told a more complicated story.
John Woodrow Cox Washington Post Mar 2016 30min Permalink
The writer investigates her late husband Ted Streshinsky, whose photographs documented the 1960s, and J. Edgar Hoover’s attempts to label him a Soviet spy.
Shirley Streshinsky The American Scholar Jun 2016 25min Permalink
On NFL siblings Michael and Martellus Bennett, who “tend to perplex people.”
Mina Kimes ESPN Aug 2016 15min Permalink
Kim Suozzi, who died at 23, chose to have her brain preserved for future revival. It’s not as far-fetched a prospect as you’d think.
Amy Harmon New York Times Sep 2015 Permalink
Classic interviews (Steve Jobs, Malcolm X, The Beatles) and stories dating back to the magazine’s earliest days — our complete archive of Playboy articles.
In 1993 a black teenager in London was randomly stabbed to death by a gang of white youths. Twenty years later, they would be at the center of the trial of the decade.
They were cousins who grow up in Raqqa amidst parties, beaches, even bikinis. They married ISIS fighters to protect their families, then became morality policers.
Azadeh Moaveni New York Times Nov 2015 Permalink
Every year, thousands of teenagers from one city in Nigeria risk death and endure forced labor and sex work on the long route to Europe.
Ben Taub New Yorker Apr 2017 45min Permalink
From “Idiocracy” to “Silicon Valley,” the writer and director has established himself as America’s foremost chronicler of its own self-destructive tendencies.
Willy Staley New York Times Magazine Apr 2017 20min Permalink
Imagine you felt like your skin was always on fire. Imagine you couldn’t even feel a bone break. The genetic link between those two extremes could hold the key to ending physical suffering.
Erika Hayasaki Wired Apr 2017 20min Permalink
To support their families back home, women from the Philippines have found work and a new way of life in Israel. But at what price?
Ruth Margalit New York Times Magazine May 2017 20min Permalink
“It was a crumbling Parkdale rooming house, populated by drug users and squatters and available on the cheap. We were cash-strapped, desperate to move and hemmed in by a hot market.”
Catherine Jheon Toronto Life May 2016 15min Permalink
A young, pregnant woman named Laci Peterson disappears, her husband begins to act strangely, and one of the largest media circuses in history descends on the sleepy community of Modesto, CA.
Maureen Orth Vanity Fair Aug 2003 15min Permalink
How the Kremlin built one of the most powerful information weapons of the 21st century — and why it may be impossible to stop.
Jim Rutenberg New York Times Magazine Sep 2017 35min Permalink
The intertwined destinies of Siti Aisyah, a 25-year-old devout Muslim villager turned prostitute and eventual assassin, and Kim Jong-nam, who was raised as the heir to the North Korean dictatorship and died in a Malaysian airport.
Doug Bock Clark GQ Sep 2017 30min Permalink
In 1921, a teenager died alone in Kentucky and was buried without a name. A century later, a team of sleuths set out to find his identity.
Alina Simone The Atavist Magazine Sep 2017 1h Permalink
"I'm gonna come after you with everything I have." —Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones to NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell
Don Van Natta Jr., Seth Wickersham ESPN the Magazine Nov 2017 20min Permalink
First came seizures. Then he began forgetting words. By age four he could barely walk. The story of the race to save a child from a genetic death sentence.
Amitha Kalaichandran The Atavist Magazine Dec 2017 35min Permalink
In 2001, a young Japanese woman walked into the North Dakota woods and froze to death. Had she come in search of the $1 million dollars buried nearby in the film Fargo?
Paul Berczeller The Guardian Jun 2003 15min Permalink