To Understand Kid Rock’s Politics, We Attempted to Go to All Six of His Shows at Little Caesars Arena
“Love you when you hate us,” Rock proclaims with arms spread. “Welcome to the greatest fuckin’ show on Earth.”
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“Love you when you hate us,” Rock proclaims with arms spread. “Welcome to the greatest fuckin’ show on Earth.”
Jerilyn Jordan Detroit Metro Times Sep 2017 25min Permalink
Madrid, 1937:
Then for a moment it stops. An old woman, with a shawl over her shoulders, holding a terrified thin little boy by the hand, runs out into the square. You know what she is thinking: she is thinking she must get the child home, you are always safer in your own place, with the things you know. Somehow you do not believe you can get killed when you are sitting in your own parlor, you never think that. She is in the middle of the square when the next one comes.
Martha Gellhorn Collier's Jul 1937 15min Permalink
Rick Ross was born William Leonard Roberts II in 1976, and he borrowed his stage name (and the associated big-time cocaine-selling hustler persona) from the legendary L.A. drug lord Freeway Ricky Ross. But the website MediaTakeout uncovered a photograph of William Leonard Roberts II when he was a Florida corrections officer. Most people thought that'd be the end of his career. Freeway Ricky Ross then sued him for stealing his name. None of it mattered. Rick Ross the rapper just sold more records.
Devin Friedman GQ Oct 2011 20min Permalink

A collection of reporting from inside slaughterhouses, car dealerships, and an 1800s insane asylum.

A collection of picks on the history, friends and foes of gay rights.
It’s been 46 years since she gave her famous commencement address at Wellesley. What she was trying to say then—that politics is personal, that she believes in human connection above all else—she is trying to say again in 2016. Maybe she’s been trying to say it all along.
Ruby Cramer Buzzfeed Jan 2016 25min Permalink
On what you do and don’t learn in medical school.
Atul Gawande New York Oct 2014 10min Permalink
Convicted and facing jail time plus a crippling fine in Sweden, the founders of the torrent site The Pirate’s Bay have scattered across the world towards new lives: fatherhood in Laos, a junkie’s life in Phnom Penh, and start-up work in Berlin.
Cyrus Farivar Ars Technica Oct 2012 10min Permalink
Manny Ramirez is a deeply frustrating employee, the kind whose talents are so prodigious that he gets away with skipping meetings, falling asleep on the job, and fraternizing with the competition.
Ben McGrath New Yorker Apr 2007 25min Permalink
A conversation with NYU Law Professor Philip Alston on the legality of ‘targeted killings’ by drones, which have made headlines in Pakistan, but also have been deployed by the C.I.A. in countries like Yemen.
Scott Horton Harper's Jun 2010 10min Permalink
A DHL tycoon’s small plane disappeared near the Phillipines amidst rumors of children fathered with teenage Asian villagers. Every scrap of his DNA went missing, but that didn’t stop a forensic mathematician.
Matt Smith San Francisco Weekly Apr 2000 15min Permalink
A profile of The Rock, the best friend you didn’t know you had.
Caity Weaver GQ May 2017 20min Permalink
Theresa Buchanan, a professor at LSU, “used the f-word in class, overshared about her personal life, and could be brutally candid in her critiques of the student teachers under her tutelage.” Should she have been fired?
Andrew Goldman Elle Jul 2017 Permalink
Roberto Primero Luis set out across the U.S.-Mexico border last year as previous Guatemalan migrants had. But the crossing has changed.
James Verini New York Times Magazine Aug 2020 35min Permalink
Buford Highway, in suburban Atlanta, has long been a place where immigrant entrepreneurs could build businesses and get ahead. Not this year.
Matthew Shaer New York Times Magazine Nov 2020 30min Permalink
Compiled by Elon Green, a contributing editor at Longform, and Josephine H., an editor at Tits and Sass, who has been stripping and writing in Detroit for over 10 years.
Susannah Breslin ambitiously self-publishes a piece on the rise and advancing crash of the pornography industry in a certain suburb of Los Angeles.
Susannah Breslin susannahbreslin.net Oct 2009
A former sex worker interviews a longtime John on how it feels to pay.
Antonia Crane The Rumpus Jun 2012 20min
The Great Recession’s impact on the legalized prostitution industry in Nevada: more hookers, fewer johns.
Michael Albo LA Weekly Sep 2010 20min
A 3-part investigation of human trafficking and the international sex trade, with stops in Costa Rica, Moldova, and the Philippines.
Sean Flynn GQ Mar 2006 30min
Cycles of boom and bust in the drilling town of Williston, N.D., as seen from the perspective of an itinerant dancer filling one of three slots at the only strip club in town, Whispers.
Susan Elizabeth Shepard Buzzfeed Jul 2013
The rise and fall of a boom-era escort agency in New York City.
Mark Jacobson New York Magazine Jul 2005
The lives of women who make their living on the web.
Sam Biddle Gizmodo Sep 2012 20min
Jul 2005 – Jul 2013 Permalink
Arriving in China at 23, Sidney Rittenberg spent 35 years as a “friend, confidante, translator, and journalist” for the Communist Party’s top leaders. In this interview, he recalls both his friendship with Chairman Mao and the 16 years he spent in solitary confinement.
Matt Schiavenza The Atlantic Dec 2013 20min Permalink
In 1999, “original superagent” Leigh Steinberg represented 86 NFL athletes. His life today:
At age 63, Steinberg -- for years hailed as the real-life Maguire -- now finds himself a bankrupt, recovering alcoholic, plotting a comeback from the bottom. And before 10 p.m. tonight, as mandated by the California Bar Association, he must show that his urine is clean.
Daniel Roberts, Pablo S. Torre Fortune Apr 2012 15min Permalink
Joshua Williams was 18 when he was arrested in 2014 for stealing a bag of chips and lighting a QuikTrip trash can on fire in the aftermath of a protest sparked by the death of Antonio Martin near Ferguson, MO. He is still in prison.
Zach Baron GQ Jun 2020 10min Permalink
A few years ago, before anyone knew his name, before rap artists from all over the country started hitting him up for music, the rap producer Lex Luger, born Lexus Lewis, now age 20, sat down in his dad’s kitchen in Suffolk, Va., opened a sound-mixing program called Fruity Loops on his laptop and created a new track... Months later, Luger — who says he was “broke as a joke” by that point, about to become a father for the second time and seriously considering taking a job stocking boxes in a warehouse — heard that same beat on the radio, transformed into a Waka song called “Hard in da Paint.” Before long, he couldn’t get away from it.
Alex Pappademas New York Times Magazine Nov 2011 15min Permalink
A letter to his unborn son about the wonders of being an only child.
John Hodgman Psychology Today Jan 2007 10min Permalink
Duke Nukem 3D made its creators filthy rich. Trying to complete its sequel nearly destroyed them.
Clive Thompson Wired Dec 2009 20min Permalink
College is when we first get drunk. Euripides’ The Bacchae can help us learn how to do it right.
Rob Goodman The Chronicle of Higher Education Dec 2014 10min Permalink
What happend to Serafim Todorov after the 1996 Olympic featherweight semifinals.
Sam Borden New York Times Apr 2015 10min Permalink
From the Greeks to George Lucas, 2,200 years of failure.
Becky Ferreira The Awl Feb 2011 25min Permalink