The Wanderer
Traveling with President Clinton.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate pentahydrate in China.
Traveling with President Clinton.
David Remnick New Yorker Sep 2006 1h20min Permalink
Growing up with Charlie Brown.
Jonathan Franzen New Yorker Nov 2004 30min Permalink
On learning to jog.
Haruki Murakami New Yorker Jun 2008 20min Permalink
How political science understands voters.
Lous Menand New Yorker Aug 2004 Permalink
What makes a graduate program predatory?
Anne Helen Petersen Culture Study Jul 2021 10min Permalink
“Hillary Clinton was never a shy person.”
Connie Bruck New Yorker May 1994 2h10min Permalink
On one of the great final acts in sports history.
David Halberstam The New Yorker Dec 1998 20min
On the self-inflicted torture of Rick Barry.
Tony Kornheiser Sports Illustrated Apr 1983 35min
On the brilliance, and elusiveness, of the great Knicks point guard.
Woody Allen Sport Nov 1977 15min
The most successful player in league history, Bill Russell, was also its most candid.
Gilbert Rogin Sports Illustrated Nov 1963
A rare glimpse of Kobe Bryant’s nonstaged private life.
Mike Sager Esquire Nov 2007 25min
The story of Billy Ray Bates, who had the talent to be an all-time great, but drank himself out of the league and ended up playing in the Philippines, where he had a few wild years before booze ended his career for good.
Rafe Bartholomew Deadspin Jun 2010 15min
Nov 1963 – Jun 2010 Permalink
A father and his daughter’s brain tumor.
Aleksandar Hemon New Yorker Jun 2011 25min
How Marv Marinovich’s plan to engineer his son into the greatest quarterback of all time backfired.
Mike Sager Esquire May 2009 1h15min
The writer on his father’s religious devotion to personal style. Among the maxims: “the turtleneck is the most flattering thing a man can wear”; “there is nothing like a fresh burn”; and “always wear white to the face.”
Paul Wayment made a profound mistake, left his 2-year-old son alone in his truck as he tracked deer in the wilderness. The boy was gone when he returned. The story of a collective struggle to find a just punishment.
Barry Siegel Los Angeles Times Dec 2001 30min
Swept out to sea by a riptide, a father and his 12-year-old autistic son struggle to stay alive. As night falls, the dad comes to a devastating realization—if they remain together, they’ll drown together.
Justin Heckert Men's Journal Nov 2009 25min
On the talent, ego, and late father of Bryant Gumbel.
Rick Reilly Sports Illustrated Sep 1988
Sep 1988 – Jun 2011 Permalink
Talese never got an interview with Ol’ Blue Eyes, but, as he told his editor, after three months of reporting he may have gotten something more elusive: “the truth about the man.”
Gay Talese Esquire Apr 1966
Searching for the hermetic media giant.
Philip Weiss New York Aug 2007 25min
Four years after a disastrous MTV performance had led him to avoid the public, Rose was back on stage—Asian guru and secret oxygen chamber in tow.
John Jeremiah Sullivan GQ Nov 2006 35min
A pilgrimage to J.D. Salinger’s New Hampshire home.
Ron Rosenbaum Esquire Jun 1997 35min
Searching for Kirk Johnson, whose ass was one of the Internet’s earliest memes.
Adrian Chen Gawker Apr 2012 15min
Apr 1966 – Apr 2012 Permalink
Navigating life as a brilliant teenage girl.
David Finkel Washington Post Jun 1993 30min Permalink
America’s underground Chinese restaurant workers.
Lauren Hilgers New Yorker Oct 2014 25min Permalink
How a serial killer and his teenage accomplice used listings for “the job of a lifetime” to lure their victims, all single men, to the backwoods of Ohio.
Hanna Rosin The Atlantic Aug 2013 40min
Inside the underground economy of stolen bikes.
Patrick Symmes Outside Jan 2012 25min
A New Yorker finds an unlikely house guest on Craigslist.
Brian Boucher New York Jan 2006 15min
An early investigation of “Craigslist Killer” Philip Markoff.
Maureen Orth Vanity Fair Oct 2009 30min
How Craigslist dealers do business.
David Shapiro, Joe Coscarelli The Village Voice Apr 2011 15min
Jan 2006 – Aug 2013 Permalink
On boxer Canelo Alvarez.
Jay Caspian Kang Grantland Sep 2012 Permalink
On Lance Armstrong’s return to racing after cancer.
Michael Specter New Yorker Jul 2002 35min Permalink
Tracking Spalding Grey’s descent towards suicide.
Oliver Sacks New Yorker Apr 2015 15min Permalink
A father and his daughter’s brain tumor.
Aleksandar Hemon New Yorker Jun 2011 25min Permalink
From Joe Paterno to coal miners, the rodeo to fruit pickers, our story picks by the GQ correspondent.
Laskas on Longform.
An ode to mayonnaise.
Rick Bragg Gourmet Nov 2010 10min Permalink
A Taliban intelligence chief’s death and resurrection.
Mujib Mashal Harper's Jan 2014 25min Permalink
A wandering long-distance canoeist goes missing.
Ben McGrath New Yorker Dec 2015 40min Permalink
“It’s beyond strange that so many humans are clueless about how they should feed themselves. Every wild species on the planet knows how to do it; presumably ours did, too, before our oversized brains found new ways to complicate things. Now, we’re the only species that can be baffled about the ‘right’ way to eat.”
Mark Bittman, David L. Katz New York Mar 2018 35min Permalink
Tom Bissell was an acclaimed young writer when he started playing Grand Theft Auto. For the last three years he has been sleep deprived, cocaine fueled, and barely able to write a word—and he has no regrets.
Tom Bissell The Guardian Mar 2010 20min Permalink
Why didn’t we?
Evan Ratliff Wired Jun 2020 30min Permalink
Billy Mitchell’s quest for video game perfection.
David Ramsey Oxford American May 2006 Permalink
Experimental neuroscience, everlasting consciousness, and conjoined minds — our favorite articles about the brain.
What the sensation of an uncontrollable itch can tell us about how the brain operates.
Atul Gawande New Yorker Jun 2008 30min
The shared life of Tatiana and Krista Hogan.
Susan Dominus New York Times Magazine May 2011 30min
How some scientists are turning to connectomes—maps of the brain’s neural circuitry—to make the case for brain preservation, mind uploading, and eternal life.
Evan R. Goldstein The Chronicle of Higher Education Jul 2012 20min
Susie McKinnon cannot hold a grudge. She is unfamiliar with the feeling of regret and oblivious to aging. She has no core memories. And yet she knows who she is.
Erika Hayasaki Wired Apr 2016
Is there really such a thing as brain death?
Gary Greenberg New Yorker Aug 2001 20min
Eagleman, a neuroscientist, describes how groundbreaking advances in the science of brain have changed our understanding of volition in criminal acts, and may erode the underpinnings of our justice system.
David Eagleman The Atlantic Jul 2011 30min
Edna Kelly’s brain goes under the knife.
Jon Franklin The Baltimore Sun Dec 1978 15min
Dec 1978 – Apr 2016 Permalink