The Baby in the Plastic Bag
One frosty October morning in 1991, a newborn baby boy is found inside a plastic bag in an Oslo graveyard. This is his story, in nine parts.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which are the Chinese suppliers of Magnesium sulfate Anhydrous for industrial use.
One frosty October morning in 1991, a newborn baby boy is found inside a plastic bag in an Oslo graveyard. This is his story, in nine parts.
Bernt Jakob Oksnes Dagbladet Oct 2016 2h Permalink
The idea that people would “inexpensively have access to a tremendous global computation and networking facility” was supposed to create wealth and wellbeing. Has it instead created a technologically advanced dystopia?
Jaron Lanier EDGE Aug 2011 40min Permalink
What do we give up when we become freedom-seeking, self-determining, autonomous entrepreneurs? A lot, actually.
Jennifer Senior New York Jan 2015 15min Permalink
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 Permalink
When New York built a prison designed to house two men in a single cell, it launched a new experiment in crime control. A look at life inside this prison and in the tiny town surrounding it.
Jennifer Gonnerman Village Voice May 1999 20min Permalink
A PR company that worked with dictators and oligarchs deliberately inflamed racial tensions in South Africa—and destroyed itself in the process.
Ed Caesar New Yorker Jun 2018 35min Permalink
Representative Matt Shea has been trying to create a libertarian utopia in the Pacific Northwest, a 51st state called Liberty. And he keeps getting re-elected.
Leah Sottile Rolling Stone Oct 2018 20min Permalink
When Nikki Addimando shot her abusive partner, she thought she had enough proof it was self-defense. Why did the prosecution only see a cold-blooded killer?
Justine van der Leun GEN Magazine May 2020 45min Permalink
How a controversial rationalist blogger became a mascot and martyr in a struggle against the New York Times.
Gideon Lewis-Kraus New Yorker Jul 2020 25min Permalink
An investigation into the deadly use of Tasers by police.
Peter Eisler, Jason Szep, Tim Reid, Grant Smith Reuters Aug 2017 Permalink
Scenes from a class conflict playing out between millionaires and billionaires on Hawaii’s Big Island.
Robert Kolker Bloomberg Businessweek May 2016 15min Permalink
“There was no they.' There was not even a 'he,' no armed person turning on a crowd. But what happened at JFK last night was, in every respect but the violence, a mass shooting.”
David Wallace-Wells New York Aug 2016 15min Permalink
Five classic articles by Adler, the guest on this week’s Longform Podcast.
A voting rights march, from Selma to the statehouse in Montgomery, Alabama.
New Yorker Apr 1965 40min
Rebellious teens on the Sunset Strip.
New Yorker Feb 1967 30min
On the “jarringly, piece by piece, line by line, and without interruption, worthless” writing of Pauline Kael.
New York Review of Books Aug 1980 30min
How one obscure sentence upset the New York Times.
Harper's Aug 2000 45min
Ripping out the guts of an “utterly preposterous document”: the Starr Report on the Monica Lewinsky scandal.
Vanity Fair Dec 1998
Apr 1965 – Aug 2000 Permalink
When an exclusive private school discovered a teacher was sleeping with his 17-year old student, administrators did their best to make the problem vanish.
Claire St. Amant D Magazine Oct 2011 15min Permalink
Lenny makes $5,000 a week selling coke. It was easy to get into the business after finishing prep school. Getting out and going legit after his final score is proving much more difficult.
David Amsden New York Apr 2006 25min Permalink
In an Oklahoma City neighborhood usually left off city maps, the federal government is implementing its $300 million anti-poverty plan: teaching poor Americans how to get married.
Katherine Boo New Yorker Aug 2003 50min Permalink
A son on his father's career behind the bar.
Excerpted from Two and Two.
Rafe Bartholomew hazlitt.net May 2017 20min Permalink
We now know that most mass extinctions in Earth’s history were caused by the same thing. What we don’t know is when it will happen next.
Howard Lee Ars Technica Nov 2017 15min Permalink
I know dudes like me aren’t supposed to talk about depression, but I’ll talk about it. If a real motherfucker like me can struggle with it, then anybody can struggle with it.
Darius Miles The Player's Tribune Oct 2018 25min Permalink
How Niki Nakayama’s kaiseki restaurant became a highly coveted reservation in L.A.
Helen Rosner New Yorker Mar 2019 20min Permalink
How Adam Neumann turned WeWork into a $47 billion business.
Reeves Wiedeman New York Jun 2019 45min Permalink
Shaun MacDonald was an ambitious tech innovator whose start-up was going to revolutionize the crypto economy. His wealthy investors had no idea that their charismatic founder was really Boaz Manor, a notorious Canadian white-collar criminal.
Leah McLaren Toronto Life Nov 2020 25min Permalink
While the virus has ravaged rich nations, reported death rates in poorer ones remain relatively low. What probing this epidemiological mystery can tell us about global health.
Siddhartha Mukherjee New Yorker Feb 2021 25min Permalink
Jeffrey Fang was a ride-hailing legend, a top earner with relentless hustle. Then his minivan was carjacked—with his kids in the back seat.
Lauren Smiley Wired Jun 2021 35min Permalink
A talk from the re:publica conference in Berlin:
The good part about naming a talk in 2017 ‘Notes from an Emergency’ is that there are so many directions to take it. The emergency I want to talk about is the rise of a vigorous ethnic nationalism in Europe and America. This nationalism makes skillful use of online tools, tools that we believed inherently promoted freedom, to advance an authoritarian agenda.
Maciej Ceglowski Idle Words May 2017 20min Permalink