A Life Worth Ending
The author on his mother’s deteriorating health and the “price of longevity.”
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate pentahydrate in China.
The author on his mother’s deteriorating health and the “price of longevity.”
Michael Wolff New York May 2012 25min Permalink
“My Vassar College Faculty ID affords me free smoothies, free printing paper, paid leave, and access to one of the most beautiful libraries on Earth. It guarantees that I have really good health care and more disposable income than anyone in my Mississippi family. But way more than I want to admit, I’m wondering what price we pay for these kinds of ID’s, and what that price has to do with the extrajudicial disciplining and killing of young black human beings.”
Kiese Laymon Gawker Nov 2014 10min Permalink
As China’s growing upper class has pushed the price of ivory above $700/pound, a look at both the supply and demand side of the global trade in (mostly) illicitly acquired elephant tusks.
Alex Shoumatoff Vanity Fair Aug 2011 40min Permalink
Along for the ride with a boatload of refugees risking their lives.
The haunted past of Amy Bishop, a University of Alabama neurobiologist who shot six colleagues during a staff meeting.
Heartbreak at the edge of the earth.
Ariel Levy New Yorker 15min
“Oh, my God. This is going to be a huge one.”
“Who would expect the Embassy of Cambodia? Nobody. Nobody could have expected it, or be expecting it. It’s a surprise, to us all. The Embassy of Cambodia!”
Zadie Smith New Yorker 35min
Why medical bills are killing us. [sub req’d]
A cancer doctor on losing his wife to cancer.
Peter B. Bach New York May 2014 25min Permalink
On childhood amnesia, or why we don’t remember much before age seven.
Kristin Ohlson Aeon Jul 2014 15min Permalink
On Daphne du Maurier and her novel, Rebecca.
Carrie Frye Gawker Sep 2014 10min Permalink
Ruth Thalí became an overnight sensation on a game show. Then she disappeared.
Daniel Alarcón California Sunday Oct 2014 25min Permalink
David Letterman weathers a sex and extortion scandal.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Apr 2010 30min
Johnny Carson, profiled at the top of his game.
Kenneth Tynan New Yorker Feb 1998 1h30min
An out-of-character conversation.
Eric Spitznagel Playboy Oct 2012 30min
A profile of Kimmel published just after he got the late-night job.
Jason Gay New York Observer May 2002 10min
A writer for Conan O’Brien on how The Tonight Show really ended and on how his boss got screwed
Todd Levin GQ Jul 2010 20min
Steve Allen, the original host of The Tonight Show, in his cranky, later years.
Josh Getlin Los Angeles Times Jan 1998 10min
Jan 1998 – Oct 2012 Permalink
The Spanish police believed he was a missing American teen. So, seemingly, did the Texas family who had lost him three years prior. Who they had actually found was Frédéric Bourdin, was a 23-year-old Frenchman on the run.
David Grann New Yorker Aug 2008 45min
He was an 18-year-old Marine bound for Iraq. She was a high school senior in West Virginia. They grew intimate over IM. His dad started contacting her. No one was who they claimed to be.
Nadya Labi Wired Aug 2007 15min
For nearly a decade, Laura Albert lived a double life as troubled teen turned cult writer JT LeRoy, writing books, chatting constantly with celebrities, and convincing another woman to appear as JT LeRoy in public.
Nancy Rommelmann LA Weekly Feb 2008
Jerry Joseph showed up in a small Texas town seemingly out of nowhere, produced a birth certificate that said he was of age, and quickly became a star for the local high-school basketball team. It was a role he’d played before.
Michael J. Mooney GQ Jul 2011 25min
The story of Alan Young, a career con whose go-to move was to pose as a member of the Temptations and smooth-talk his way into luxury hotel rooms and limo rides.
Kara Platoni East Bay Express Mar 2002 30min
When a man named Clark Rockefeller snatched his daughter during a custody dispute, what the D.A. called “the longest con I’ve seen in my professional career” unraveled.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Jan 2009 55min
Mar 2002 – Jul 2011 Permalink
Excerpts from Live From New York, an oral history of SNL.
Tom Shales and James Andrew Miller Vanity Fair Sep 2002 45min
SNL in its grim 20th season through the lens of first-year (and only-year) cast member Janeane Garofalo.
Chris Smith New York Mar 1995 35min
A pre-30 Rock profile of Tina Fey.
Virginia Heffernan New Yorker Nov 2003 20min
Eight years removed from the show, Murray was at the peak of his box office power and living in a secluded farmhouse in the Hudson River Valley.
Timothy White New York Times Magazine Nov 1988
How one of the most maligned cast members in SNL history ended up a talking head on Fox News.
Gus Garcia-Roberts Miami New Times Jan 2012 20min
A sweeping, honest interview published just before Murphy announced he wouldn’t host the Oscars included his first public comments on SNL in years.
Brian Hiatt Rolling Stone Nov 2011 25min
Nov 1988 – Jan 2012 Permalink
Dispatches revealing the March 1968 murder of 109 Vietnamese civilians during a search-and-destroy mission on a rumored Viet Gong stronghold, often referred to in military circles as Pinkville, actually the village of My Lai.
Seymour M. Hersh St. Louis Post-Dispatch Jul 1968 20min
How the racism of white players and coaches ruined the NFL’s St. Louis Cardinals.
Jack Olsen Sports Illustrated Dec 1968 15min
An eyewitness account of Robert Kennedy’s assassination.
Pete Hamill Village Voice Jun 1968 15min
On Van Morrison’s grounbreaking album, which was released in November 1968.
Lester Bangs Nov 1979 15min
From the Apollo 8 flight journal.
The speech Martin Luther King, Jr delivered the day before he died.
Martin Luther King, Jr Apr 1968 20min
Apr 1968 – Nov 1979 Permalink
A young couple’s story.
Amy Harmon New York Times Dec 2011 20min
On a child diagnosed with autism.
Amy Leal Chronicle of Higher Education Oct 2011 15min
The long, happy, surprising life of 77-year-old Donald Gary Triplett, the first person ever diagnosed with autism.
John Donvan and Caren Zucker Atlantic Oct 2011 30min
Should autism be celebrated? A look at the neurodiversity movement.
Andrew Solomon New York May 2008 25min
Autistic individuals have great difficulty breaking into many professions. One exception may be computer programming, where the difficulty of forming emotional attachments and communicating is not necessarily a problem.
Gary Anthes Computerworld Apr 1997
As part of his obsessive search for evidence of UFOs, Gary McKinnon worked his way into thousands of government computers. The U.S. charged him with terrorism. Doctors diagnosed him with Asperger’s.
David Kushner IEEE Spectrum Jul 2011 10min
Apr 1997 – Dec 2011 Permalink
Just over a decade ago, Specter set out to answer this question: How did Lance Armstrong manage the greatest comeback in sports history?
Michael Specter New Yorker Jul 2002 35min
An academic ghostwriter explains his trade.
In 1969, the sports establishment was wrestling with whether to embrace performance-enhancing drugs, decry them, or look the other way.
Bil Gilbert Sports Illustrated Jun 1969
AshleyMadison.com and the business of infidelity.
Sheelah Kolhatkar Businessweek Feb 2011 20min
The story of the MIT Blackjack Team.
Ben Mezrich Wired Sep 2002 30min
A quiz show scandal and its aftermath, as told by its star.
Charles Van Doren New Yorker Jul 2008 30min
There are enough stories about steroids in baseball to fill an entire collection. But there’s only one story about steroids and trying to interview a down-and-out Jose Canseco.
Pat Jordan Deadspin Mar 2008 15min
Jun 1969 – Jul 2012 Permalink
A mother-son bus trip from Florida to Juarez.
Jack Kerouac Holiday May 1965 10min Permalink
An essay on Jay-Z.
Zadie Smith T Magazine Sep 2012 15min Permalink
What happened when two guys set out to convert their Colombian megachurch to Orthodox Judaism.
Graciela Mochkofsky California Sunday Apr 2016 25min Permalink
Meet Martha Beck.
Taffy Brodesser-Akner Businessweek May 2016 20min Permalink
An ousted NBA general manager considers his next step.
Chris Ballard Sports Illustrated Nov 2016 25min Permalink
Rebecca Traister New York May 2016 35min
Mac McClelland Audobon Society May 2016 30min
Jennifer Percy New York Times Magazine Aug 2016 25min
Wil S. Hylton New York Times Magazine Jul 2016 30min
George Saunders New Yorker Jun 2016 40min
Bronwen Dickey Popular Mechanics Aug 2016 20min
Pamela Colloff Texas Monthly Mar 2016 50min
Mar–Aug 2016 Permalink
Ronald Reagan made Linda Taylor a notorious American villain. Her other sins were far worse.
Josh Levin Slate Dec 2013 1h5min Permalink
Why your phone may (or may not) be killing you.
Nathaniel Rich Harper's May 2010 Permalink
How a Massachusetts psychotherapist fell for a Nigerian e-mail scam.
Mitchell Zuckoff New Yorker May 2006 20min Permalink
A long talk with Willie Nelson about pot.
Chris Heath GQ Aug 2015 25min Permalink
On our ability to multitask.
Tim Harford Financial Times Sep 2015 20min Permalink