ESPN Has Seen the Future of TV and They’re Not Really Into It
In the era of cord-cutting and mobile viewing, ESPN is at the crossroads.
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In the era of cord-cutting and mobile viewing, ESPN is at the crossroads.
Ira Boudway, Max Chafkin Businessweek Mar 2017 30min Permalink
The residents of Colorado Springs undertook a radical experiment in government. Here’s what they got.
Caleb Hannan Politico Magazine Jun 2017 15min Permalink
A first-hand account of San Francisco in the hours and days after the devastating 1906 earthquake.
Jack London Collier's May 1906 10min Permalink
Inside the empire of Botox.
Cynthia Koons Businessweek Oct 2017 15min Permalink
In Northern Albania, vengeance is as likely a form of restitution as anything the criminal-justice system can offer.
Amanda Petrusich VQR Nov 2017 30min Permalink
How to create a floating city.
Oliver Franklin-Wallis Wired (UK) Apr 2018 15min Permalink
The opioid’s potency has transformed the global trafficking—and policing—of narcotics.
Esmé E Deprez, Li Hui, Ken Wills Bloomberg May 2018 15min Permalink
Seth Herter’s life was full of delusions. But the murder was all too real.
Doyle Murphy Riverfront Times Jul 2018 20min Permalink
Bringing a serial killer to justice reveals the country’s other sources of death and suffering.
Shaun Raviv The Big Roundtable Mar 2015 1h20min Permalink
How an economic war has pushed millions to the brink of starvation.
Declan Walsh New York Times Oct 2018 25min Permalink
The untold story of how anger became the dominant emotion in our politics and personal lives—and what we can do about it.
Charles Duhigg The Atlantic Jan 2019 50min Permalink
Millions of Americans have taken antidepressants for many years. What happens when it’s time to stop?
Rachel Aviv New Yorker Apr 2019 25min Permalink
Lessons from the death of a venture-backed, Facebook-dependent, millennial-focused news site.
Maxwell Strachan Huffington Post Jul 2019 30min Permalink
What happens when a wealthy patron wears out his welcome in the “strangest, most conflicted place in all of Texas”?
Mimi Swartz Texas Monthly Jan 2020 35min Permalink
The bizarre story of what happened when Chinese crypto millionaire Justin Sun acquired BitTorrent.
Chris Harland-Dunaway The Verge Sep 2020 Permalink
A growing body of research suggests that trees can communicate and cooperate in the wild.
Ferris Jabr New York Times Magazine Dec 2020 25min Permalink
Behind the scenes of a viral mash-up.
Ashley Spencer Insider May 2021 20min Permalink
The Brooklyn Nets were built to be an unbeatable superteam of eccentric basketball superstars. Will they dominate the N.B.A. playoffs?
Sam Anderson The New York Times Magazine Jun 2021 30min Permalink
The musician, producer and archivist is driven by one thing: a mission to spread the joy of Black music.
Jazmine Hughes The New York Times Magazine Oct 2021 30min Permalink
How airlines woo the rich.
David Owen New Yorker Apr 2014 20min Permalink
The Arctic, sailors and scurvy.
Colin Dickey Lapham's Quarterly Sep 2013 15min Permalink
A profile of Jordan at 50.
Wright Thompson ESPN Feb 2013
The girlfriend who wasn’t and everyone who bought it.
Timothy Burke, Jack Dickey Deadspin Jan 2013 15min
Bobby Riggs, the mob and “The Battle of the Sexes.”
Don Van Natta Jr. ESPN Aug 2013 35min
The life and sudden death of NASCAR’s Dick Trickle.
Jeremy Markovich SB Nation Jul 2013 30min
How sports channels extort cable subscribers.
Patrick Hruby Sports on Earth Jul 2013 20min
Jan–Aug 2013 Permalink
A series of mysterious, dangerous interactions in a bathhouse.
Roberto Bolaño New Yorker Apr 2013 20min
A series of linked fantasies, veering from the whimsical to the grave.
Rachel Swirsky Apex Mar 2013
The appearance of a “mole man” reflects the past and realities of a hardscrabble town.
Claire Vaye Watkins Kenyon Review Jan 2013 10min
A party game drives a woman to reflect upon a history of manipulation.
Anna Noyes Vice Jun 2013 55min
Greek heroes and gods roam suburban America.
Jan–Jul 2013 Permalink
From 1976 to 1986, one of the most violent serial criminals in American history terrorized communities throughout California. He was little known, never caught, and might still be out there. The author, along with several others, can’t stop working on the case.
Michelle McNamara Los Angeles Feb 2013 30min
William Sparkman Jr., a census worker, was found hanging from a tree in rural Kentucky. He was naked, hands bound, with the letters “FED” written across his chest. Inside the investigation into how—and why—he died.
Rich Schapiro The Atlantic Mar 2013 35min
After a botched bank robbery in 1990, Sture Bergwall, aka Thomas Quick, confessed to a string of brutal crimes. He admitted to stabbings, stranglings, incest and cannibalism. He was convicted of eight murders in all, and after the final trial he went silent for nearly a decade. But a few years ago, Bergwall came forward again—there was one more secret he had to tell.
Chris Heath GQ Aug 2013 45min
How a killer and his teenage accomplice used listings for “the job of a lifetime” to lure their victims, all down-and-out single men, to the backwoods of Ohio.
Hanna Rosin The Atlantic Aug 2013 40min
The haunted past of Amy Bishop, a University of Alabama neurobiologist who shot six colleagues during a staff meeting.
Patrick Radden Keefe New Yorker Feb 2013 55min
Feb–Aug 2013 Permalink
How the singer became the target of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics’ early, racially-motivated war on drugs. </br></br>
Excerpted from Chasing the Scream: The First and Last Days of the War on Drugs.
Johann Hari Politico Magazine Jan 2015 20min Permalink