The Piscivore's Dilemma
A vegan sets out to see if there’s an ethical, sustainable way to eat fish in 2015.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate Monohydrate.
A vegan sets out to see if there’s an ethical, sustainable way to eat fish in 2015.
Tim Zimmermann Outside May 2015 25min Permalink
Kevin Hart wanted a scholarship to play Division I college football. It didn’t come. So he made one up–and called a press conference.
Tom Friend ESPN Jan 2009 35min Permalink
Stories from inside slaughterhouses, car dealerships, and an 1800s insane asylum.
Undercover at a dealership to learn the tricks of the trade, of which there are many.
Chandler Phillips Edmunds Jan 2001 1h45min
Undercover in the online-shipping industry.
Mac McClelland Mother Jones Mar 2012 30min
Undercover in a women’s insane asylum. On an island. In 1887.
Nellie Bly Jan 1887 2h25min
Undercover as a Juggalette.
Emma Carmichael Deadspin Aug 2011 15min
Undercover going through airport security.
Jeffrey Goldberg The Atlantic Nov 2008 15min
Undercover with Afghanistan’s drug-smuggling border police.
Matthieu Aikins Harper’s Dec 2009 30min
Undercover in high school.
Cameron Crowe Playboy Sep 1981 15min
Jan 1887 – Mar 2012 Permalink
Cars driving themselves into walls. Hospitals frozen. Elevators jammed. A scenario that could happen based on what already has.
Reeves Wiedman New York Jun 2016 30min Permalink
Are megafarmers Lynda and Stewart Resnick visionary philanthropists or shrewd water barons?
Josh Harkinson Mother Jones Aug 2016 20min Permalink
Anna Nicole Smith molded herself into an American fantasy. When that fantasy fell apart, we blamed her for it.
Sarah Marshall Buzzfeed Feb 2017 35min Permalink
Abraham never fit in. Hisham finally felt at home. Then their worlds collided in western Arkansas.
Sabrina Tavernise New York Times Aug 2017 35min Permalink
Eight calls to 911. Three visits by five police officers. One woman’s senseless death.
Vivan Ho San Francisco Chronicle Oct 2017 25min Permalink
“GOD Almighty, you can get killed in Baltimore—for no reason at all.”
Barry Michael Cooper Spin May 1986 Permalink
“We are beginning to understand what ails us, and it’s not something an oxygen facial or a treadmill desk can fix.”
Anne Helen Petersen Buzzfeed Jan 2019 30min Permalink
He never saw it coming.
Matthew Campbell, Kae Inoue, Jie Ma, Ania Nussbaum Businessweek Jan 2018 25min Permalink
In 1997, a logger-turned-activist named Grant Hadwin cut down a very special tree. Then he bought a kayak and disappeared.
John Vaillant New Yorker Nov 2002 25min Permalink
When a brain injury leads to a personality change and then prison time, a neuroscientist wonders if his brother could have been saved.
Tim Requarth Longreads Oct 2019 Permalink
An investigation into how police departments can fail to solve rape cases but still get credit.
Allison Ross Tampa Bay Times Jan 2020 15min Permalink
What will we lose when Najin and Fatu die?
Sam Anderson New York Times Magazine Jan 2021 30min Permalink
In a Plano bowling alley one night, Bill Fong came so close to perfection that it nearly killed him.
Michael J. Mooney D Magazine Jun 2012 20min Permalink
Sewage epidemiology has been embraced in other countries for decades, but not in America. Will Covid change that?
Miranda Weiss Undark Apr 2021 25min Permalink
How NFL wide receiver Demaryius Thomas lost his mother and grandmother to drug dealing, and how he plans on bringing them home.
Eli Saslow ESPN Nov 2014 10min Permalink
Rukmini Callimachi discusses how she covers ISIS for The New York Times.
See also: Longform Podcast #129: Rukmini Callimachi (Part 2)
Nov 2015 Permalink
A family struggles as a 42-year-old husband, father and son becomes increasingly isolated.
Stephanie McCrummen Washington Post Jun 2014 25min Permalink
Sarah Marquis’s very long hike.
Elizabeth Weil New York Times Magazine Sep 2014 10min Permalink
Steven Cohen, troubled founder a $14 billion hedge fund, has an eye for modern art.
Gary Sernovitz n+1 Jan 2013 15min Permalink
How governments and private companies have engaged in digital arms trading by building a global black market for ‘zero day’ hacks.
Tom Simonite Technology Review Feb 2013 Permalink
Red, white, expensive, cheap, fake, poisoned.
One man’s dream to turn America into a post-prohibition wine utopia.
Fortune Jan 1934 25min
Who would poison the vines of the tiny, centuries-old vineyard that produces what most agree is Burgundy’s finest, rarest, and most expensive wine?
Maximilliam Potter Vanity Fair May 2011 25min
Fred Franzia makes a lot of money selling really cheap wine.
Dana Goodyear New Yorker May 2009 20min
The rare-wine world gets conned.
Benjamin Wallace New York May 2012 20min
Investigating whether or not anyone can really tell them apart.
Calvin Trillin New Yorker Aug 2002 15min
A profile of wine critic Robert Parker.
William Langewiesche Atlantic Dec 2000 1h10min
On wine’s sacred and profane history.
Ross Andersen Aeon May 2014 25min
Jan 1934 – May 2014 Permalink
“I guess what you post on Facebook matters.” An 18-year-old faces 10 years in jail for a sarcastic threat on Facebook.
Craig Malisow Dallas Observer Feb 2014 10min Permalink