Queer Food Is Hiding in Plain Sight
From kitchen camp to political plates, queer people have been shaping food culture for decades.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Magnesium sulphate Exports from China.
From kitchen camp to political plates, queer people have been shaping food culture for decades.
Kyle Fitzpatrick Eater Jun 2018 15min Permalink
The true story of M Company: from Fort Dix to Vietnam in 50 days.
He has seduced and swindled young women for millions and is a fugitive from justice in several countries.
Natalie Remøe Hansen, Kristoffer Kumar, Erlend Ofte Arntsen, Tore Kristiansen VG Feb 2019 10min Permalink
How do you move on from being the best?
Genna Buck The Walrus Feb 2019 20min Permalink
The state loses a football field’s worth of land every hour and a half. Now engineers are in a race to prevent it from sinking into oblivion.
Elizabeth Kolbert New Yorker Mar 2019 25min Permalink
Home-funeral guides believe that families can benefit from tending to—and spending time with—the bodies of their deceased.
Maggie Jones New York Times Magazine Dec 2019 35min Permalink
From Kenya to Amsterdam to New Jersey, an industry collapses in a matter of weeks.
Zeke Faux, David Herbling, Ruben Munsterman Bloomberg Businessweek Apr 2020 10min Permalink
A trans activist from El Salvador who has helped countless trans migrant women fight for asylum in the U.S. finds asylum for herself.
Alice Driver Longreads Jul 2020 15min Permalink
Where does Strawberry-Kiwi Snapple come from? Givaudan is part of a tiny, secretive industry that produces new flavors.
Raffi Khatchadourian New Yorker Nov 2009 40min Permalink
Oral histories from a Dorset village on lockdown.
Jess Morency 19 Silver Linings Nov 2020 Permalink
How a 16-year-old from suburban Connecticut became the most famous teen in America.
Rachel Monroe The Atlantic Nov 2020 20min Permalink
In St. Louis, a former rival could end up springing Felix Key from a 28 year sentence.
Ryan Krull Riverfront Times Dec 2020 Permalink
Observers have long warned of rising forced labor in Xinjiang. Satellite images show factories built just steps away from cell blocks.
Alison Killing, Megha Rajagopalan Buzzfeed Dec 2020 20min Permalink
When it comes to data from India’s 500 million daily internet users, everything is for sale.
Snigdha Poonam, Samarth Bansal Rest of World Dec 2020 Permalink
The city is beating the pandemic. Can it also recover from decades of division and neglect?
Jonathan Mahler New York Times Magazine Jun 2021 45min Permalink
An ocean race from the Olympic Peninsula to Alaska, with no motors allowed.
Abe Streep Outside Oct 2015 20min Permalink
How a drifter from Milwaukee became the chief executioner of the Cuban Revolution—and a test case for U.S. civil rights.
Tony Perrottet The Atavist Magazine Oct 2021 40min Permalink
A few miles north of San Francisco, off the coast of Sausalito, is Richardson Bay, a saltwater estuary where roughly one hundred people live out of sight from the world. Known as anchor-outs, they make their homes a quarter mile from the shore, on abandoned and unseaworthy vessels, doing their best, with little or no money, to survive.
A dispatch from Vermont, which is in the midst of what the governor calls a “full-blown heroin crisis.”
David Amsden Rolling Stone Apr 2014 25min Permalink
In northern Nigeria, radical Islamic terrorist group Boko Haram is facing a vigilante backlash from armed teenagers with nothing to lose.
Alex Preston GQ (UK) Feb 2014 25min Permalink
For many, the answer from the state is “yes.” An investigation into what legally determines a person’s ability to parent.
Seth Freed Wessler ProPublica May 2014 20min Permalink
How the self-proclaimed “inventor of all things streaming” went from dot-com millionaire to crime ring accomplice.
Russ Buettner New York Times Aug 2012 10min Permalink
How Georgia halted its drug epidemic, but not its addicts–and what the U.S. might learn from their efforts.
Graeme Wood The New Republic May 2013 15min Permalink
The bumpy ride from St. Petersburg and Moscow, through a Russia slipping back into the 19th century.
Ellen Barry New York Times Oct 2013 Permalink
The underground economy of child sex trafficking, and what happens after someone is rescued from it.
J. David McSwane Sarasota Herald-Tribune Oct 2013 1h5min Permalink