
The Golden Bough
In 1997, a logger-turned-activist named Grant Hadwin cut down a very special tree. Then he bought a kayak and disappeared.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
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
Trump came out and took a lunch break, still being mobbed by cameras on the way in and out. On his way back in, I asked him how he would feel about getting picked for a jury. He paused, weighing whether to grace me with a precious sound bite. He turned to me and said, “If it happens, it happens.”
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 trip to Turkey for a soccer game between bitter rivals and its accompanying madness.
Spencer Hall SB Nation Apr 2014 30min Permalink
On Nigeria’s citizen vigilantes who’ve banded together to fight Islamist terrorists.
Compiled by Elon Green.
On being gay in the military, three years before Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.
Jane Gross New York Times Apr 1990 10min
Meet Faygele ben Miriam (formerly John Singer), the radical activist “beyond the leading edge” of the same-sex marriage fight.
Eli Sanders Tablet Jun 2012
A conservative case for gay marriage.
Andrew Sullivan The New Republic Aug 1989
In 1920, Harvard University officials suspected that some students were gay. So they kicked them all out.
Benoit Denizet-Lewis The Good Men Project Jun 2010 10min
The activists, politicians, and social trends that led to 2012’s gay marriage victories.
Molly Ball The Atlantic Dec 2012 10min
As tens of thousands come out of the closet, gay political activism heats up.
Jeffrey Schmalz New York Times Magazine Oct 1992 25min
A profile of Maggie Gallagher, founder of National Organization for Marriage.
Mark Oppenheimer Salon Feb 2012 35min
Erwynn Umali, Will Behrens, and the first gay wedding on a military base.
Katherine Goldstein Slate Jul 2012 25min
Aug 1989 – Dec 2012 Permalink
The multiple lives of accused Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.
Janet Reitman Jul 2013 45min
How Jerry Lee Lewis got away with murdering 25-year-old Shawn Michelle Stevens, his fifth wife.
Richard Ben Cramer Mar 1984 1h
He was a nobody who became a porn star, a porn star who became a destitute freebaser, an addict who set up his dealer to be robbed, and finally witness to a retaliatory massacre at the house they called Wonderland.
Mike Sager Mar 1989 50min
How two friends, working with nothing but an Internet connection, a couple of cellphones and a steady supply of weed, beat out Fortune 500 giants like General Dynamics to score a huge arms contract.
Guy Lawson Mar 2011 45min
How a middle-class jock from a Texas border town who became La Barbie, one of the most ruthless and feared cartel leaders in Mexico.
Vanessa Grigoriadis, Mary Cuddehe Aug 2011 25min
Matthew Weigman was blind, overweight, 14 and alone. He could also do anything he wanted with a phone. Sometimes that meant calling Lindsay Lohan. Other times it meant sending a SWAT team to an enemy’s door.For
David Kushner Dec 2009
Inside the most sensational murder in the history of study abroad.
Nathaniel Rich Jun 2011 30min
Mar 1984 – Jul 2013 Permalink
A father and his 9-year-old daughter watch Harvard play Yale in football.
George Plimpton Sports Illustrated Nov 1981 Permalink
A writer embarks on a seven-year trek from Africa to Tierra Del Fuego.
Paul Salopek National Geographic Dec 2013 20min Permalink
Hollywood makes bad movies because “rotten pictures make money.”
Pauline Kael New Yorker Jun 1980 25min Permalink
How U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan murdered innocent civilians and mutilated their corpses – and how their officers failed to stop them.
Mark Boal Rolling Stone Mar 2011 35min Permalink
When they go to bed tonight, white people will be five times likelier to get a good night’s sleep than African-Americans.
Brian Resnick National Journal Oct 2015 25min Permalink
More than 500 Germans, including a former rapper named Deso Dogg, have joined ISIS in Syria.
Der Spiegel Nov 2014 10min Permalink
Designing your own narcotics online isn’t just easy—it can be legal, too.
Mike Power Matter Jan 2014 30min Permalink
Obama’s presidency may well be defined by whether or not he can curb unemployment. Step One: find a decent idea.
Peter Baker New York Times Magazine Jan 2011 Permalink
“There wasn’t anything normal about this.”
Matt Apuzzo, Michael S. Schmidt, Adam Goldman, Eric Lichtblau New York Times Apr 2017 30min Permalink
On former Knicks savior Stephon Marbury and his post-NBA life playing in China.
Wells Tower GQ Apr 2011 25min Permalink
How Edith Windsor fell in love, got married, and won a landmark case for gay marriage.
Ariel Levy New Yorker Sep 2013 30min Permalink
Minara Akhter came to America with uncertainty and hope. Then her husband, a Muslim religious leader, was murdered in a suspected hate crime.
Rahima Nasa ProPublica Sep 2018 15min Permalink