‘Something Extremely Bad Is Happening Here’
Teens are dying by suicide at an alarming rate. Public health officials call it a crisis. Researchers have identified several clusters nationwide. The survivors in this Arizona community are fighting back.
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Teens are dying by suicide at an alarming rate. Public health officials call it a crisis. Researchers have identified several clusters nationwide. The survivors in this Arizona community are fighting back.
Matthew Shaer Esquire Oct 2020 25min Permalink
Twenty-five years ago this month, “superpredator” was coined in The Weekly Standard. Media spread the term like wildfire, creating repercussions on policy and culture we are still reckoning with today.
Carroll Bogert, Lynell Hancock The Marshall Project Nov 2020 15min Permalink
Twenty-five years ago, the tragedy at the World of Primates building broke the city’s heart and raised a loaded question: What, exactly, do we owe the animals in our care?
Sandy Hingston Philadephia Magazine Dec 2020 20min Permalink
“For so long, we’ve thought keeping our heads down and being invisible in America might help us gain acceptance — but the recent wave of racist violence has shattered that myth.”
Venessa Wong Buzzfeed Mar 2021 20min Permalink
George Otto was a respected family physician with a bustling clinic in the northwest corner of the city. But he had a secret: after hours, he was running a booming fentanyl business.
Brett Popplewell Toronto Life Mar 2021 20min Permalink
In 1970 South Central, pigeon fancying was serious business. But there’s a deeper story behind why these Black Angelenos are entering their fifth and sixth decade raising Birmingham Roller pigeons.
Shanna B. Tiayon Pipe Wrench Jun 2021 30min Permalink
Stranded in Yemen’s war zone, a decaying supertanker has more than a million barrels of oil aboard. If—or when—it explodes or sinks, thousands may die.
Ed Caeser New Yorker Oct 2021 35min Permalink
Ahmaud Arbery went out for a jog and was gunned down in the street. How running fails Black America.
Mitchell S. Jackson Runner's World Jun 2020 30min Permalink
On the Becket Fund, a little-known firm that has become the leading force in the fight for corporations seeking a religious exemption from covering employees’ birth control.
Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux The American Prospect Jun 2014 20min Permalink
CeCe McDonald, a homeless trans teen in Minneapolis, was charged with murder for defending herself. Then she became a folk hero.
Sabrina Rubin Erdely Rolling Stone Jul 2014 25min Permalink
A classic profile of Thelonious Monk, a look at Edward Snowden's life in Moscow and a dispatch from Ferguson — the week's top stories on Longform.
Meet Adam.
Luke Malone Matter Aug 2014 30min
“What transpired in the streets appeared to be a kind of municipal version of shock and awe.”
Jelani Cobb New Yorker Aug 2014
A profile of Thelonious Monk.
Lewis Lapham The Saturday Evening Post Apr 1964 15min
How the GOP took control of state politics in Alabama, leaving black lawmakers — and their constituents — powerless.
Jason Zengerle The New Republic Aug 2014 30min
Catching up with Edward Snowden in Moscow.
James Bamford Wired Aug 2014 10min
Apr 1964 – Aug 2014 Permalink
On what you do and don’t learn in medical school.
Atul Gawande New York Oct 2014 10min Permalink
Norma McCorvey, the “Jane Roe” plaintiff in Roe v. Wade, who left Pro-Choice activism for born-again Christianity and a strange life of financial opportunism, died this week.
Joshua Prager Vanity Fair Feb 2013 20min Permalink
“Five years, four judges, six lawyers, $400,000 in attorney and expert fees and costs, a child yanked back and forth, [and] petty arguing.” Chronicling the slow end of one American marriage.
Leonora LaPeter Anton The Tampa Bay Times Apr 2013 25min Permalink
On the writers, poets and beats in a reclusive California town, where residents repeatedly tear down highway signs indicating its location.
Kevin Opstedal Jack Magazine Nov 2001 25min Permalink
The author participates in the Society for Creative Anachronism’s “Crown Lyst, the twice-yearly event when knights will battle with ancient weapons and the victor will be named the new king.”
Kyle Swenson New Times Broward-Palm Beach Jul 2013 20min Permalink
It started as a bluebird New Year’s Day in Mount Rainier National Park. But when a gunman murdered a ranger and then fled back into the park’s frozen backcountry, every climber, skier, and camper became a suspect—and a potential victim.
Bruce Barcott Outside Sep 2012 Permalink
On Dylan Yount, a man who jumped from a San Francisco building, and the people who watched, recorded and, in some cases, encouraged his suicide.
Albert Samaha San Francisco Weekly Jan 2013 Permalink
In a matter of months she became one of the world’s most famous porn stars. Three years later, she was dead. The rise and fall of Savannah.
Mike Sager GQ Nov 1994 35min Permalink
Sallie Belling was an inspirational figure in her community for having overcome a childhood of abuse, drugs, and prostitution — a childhood her sister Rachel says is pure fiction.
Stephanie Wood The Sydney Morning Herald Feb 2016 15min Permalink
They were florists working in Amsterdam’s largest flower market. They were also members of one of the most powerful arms of the Italian mafia. An investigation into how organized crime has gone global.
Steve Scherer Reuters Apr 2016 Permalink
Forgiveness and the lives of two young men caught in Stockton street gangs.
Daniel Alarcón California Sunday Aug 2016 20min Permalink
For decades, the United States and Britain’s vision of democracy and freedom defined the postwar world. What will happen in an age of Donald Trump and Nigel Farage?
Ian Buruma The New York Times Magazine Nov 2016 20min Permalink
How FPAQ, the Canadian group that controls 72 percent of the world’s supply of maple syrup, caused one of the greatest agricultural crimes in history.
Rich Cohen Vanity Fair Dec 2016 15min Permalink
The authors spend time in Concord, Mass., with people who impersonate Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Louisa May Alcott and Nathaniel Hawthorne.
Eric Pomerance, Laurie Gwen Shapiro Los Angeles Review of Books Oct 2013 35min Permalink