Partial Recall
Can neuroscience take the pain out of painful memories?
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Suppliers of Magnesium sulfate.
Can neuroscience take the pain out of painful memories?
Michael Specter New Yorker May 2014 25min Permalink
The story of Tyrone Hood, who served 21 years for a murder he didn’t commit, and the Chicago criminal justice apparatus that allowed a serial killer to go free.
Nicholas Schmidle New Yorker Jul 2014 40min Permalink
A profile of the Megaupload founder, who has started a political party in New Zealand as the U.S. continues to fight for his extradition.
Carole Cadwalladr The Observer Aug 2014 20min Permalink
He’s spent decades dodging the law. He’s escaped from jail twice by helicopter. He’s given millions to the poor. The story of how Vassilis Paleokostas, Greece’s most wanted man, became a folk hero.
Jeff Maysh BBC Sep 2014 Permalink
Under the cover of curing addicts, they beat and brainwashed their charges in basements across California. When a cult deprogrammer crossed them, he found a rattlesnake in his mailbox.
Matt Novak Gizmodo Sep 2014 Permalink
Ted Ngoy overcame poverty and escaped genocide, made a fortune off doughnuts and gambled it all away. Now he’s back on top, with hundreds of shops in California, but under attack from Dunkin’ Donuts.
Greg Nichols California Sunday Oct 2014 Permalink
Janet Reitman is a Rolling Stone contributing editor and author of Inside Scientology.
"I'm very open about the fact that I know nothing ... Every reporter should admit you know nothing, and when you do, there will be people that will take pity on you, and try to teach you. And then you have to be shrewd enough to know who's spinning you, and who is being genuine."
Aug 2012 Permalink
Joshuah Bearman discusses "The Great Escape," his article about a CIA operation in Iran that became the basis for the new film Argo.
"We were sitting there and we were like, 'This would be perfect for George Clooney.' And it very quickly in fact turned out that George Clooney wanted it. So not long after David and I had been having our daydream, we had this project that Clooney had taken quickly into the empyrean heights of Hollywood."
Thanks to TinyLetter for sponsoring this week's episode!
Oct 2012 Permalink
In 1943, a young research scientist found a cure for TB. It should have been the proudest moment of Albert Schatz’s life, but ever since he has watched, helpless, as his mentor got all the credit.
Veronique Mistiaen The Guardian Nov 2002 15min Permalink
A two-week island experience involving a 70-year-old interloper, his mannequin girlfriend, a couple of dogs and very little else.
Kent Russell The New Republic Sep 2013 35min Permalink
During the last decade, more than 1,500 Americans died after accidentally taking too much of a drug renowned for its safety: acetaminophen, the active ingredient in Tylenol.
Jeff Gerth, T. Christian Miller ProPublica Sep 2013 Permalink
Nina Simone, Guantánamo’s youngest prisoner, and a murderous college student — a collection of articles based on private journals.
The secret diary of Nina Simone.
Joe Hagan The Believer Aug 2010 25min
The diary of a Scranton, PA National Guardsmen tasked with guarding the highest profile prisoner in U.S. history: a surprisingly amiable Saddam Hussein.
Lisa DePaulo GQ Jun 2005 25min
Is an ancient diary the key to discovering the origins of baseball?
Bryan Curtis Grantland Sep 2013
The youngest prisoner held at Guantánamo on his seven years in detention.
Mohammed el Gorani, Jérôme Tubiana London Review of Books Dec 2011 20min
Diary of a veteran gadfly.
George Gurley New York Observer Mar 2013 35min
On the last day of their junior year at Harvard, one roommate kills the other, then hangs herself.
Melanie Thernstrom New Yorker Jun 1996
Jun 1996 – Sep 2013 Permalink
A profile of the policy wonk who shone the light and turned the tide on overseas tax havens.
Steven Pearlstein Washington Post Oct 2013 20min Permalink
Lauren spent six years of her childhood locked in a closet, starved and tortured by her birth mother and stepfather. Miraculously, she survived; that’s when her long road to recovery began.
Eleven years ago, three-year-old Audrey Santo fell into a pool. She nearly drowned. Much of her brain died. She cannot speak, can only barely move. And every Wednesday, pilgrims show up at her family’s house, ready for a miracle.
Gene Weingarten Washington Post Jul 1998 25min Permalink
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For decades, dozens of men with intellectual disabilities lived in an old schoolhouse and did gruesome work in a turkey plant for subminimum wage. No one noticed.
Dan Barry New York Times Mar 2014 Permalink
Passengers get a free ride. Drivers get a passport to the HOV lane. Nobody pays, nobody talks. On “slugging,” the DIY commuter system in D.C. that’s being used by 10,000 people a day and taking thousands of cars off the road.
Emily Badger Pacific Standard Mar 2011 20min Permalink
Who would poison the vines of La Romanée-Conti, the tiny, centuries-old vineyard that produces what most agree is Burgundy’s finest, rarest, and most expensive wine?
Maximillian Potter Vanity Fair May 2011 25min Permalink
Confessions of a yellow journalist:
Let me say that I did very little faking, although there was no special prejudice against it, so long as the fake wasn't libelous.
Silas Bent The Atlantic Jun 1926 20min Permalink
You get steeped in this stuff as a kid, even if some part of you was always skeptical, it's hard to lose the residual sense that everything unfolding in the world—from natural disasters to commerce and geopolitics—signals some approaching doomsday.
Maud Newton The Awl May 2011 15min Permalink
On comics and journalism:
Now, when you draw, you can always capture that moment. You can always have that exact, precise moment when someone’s got the club raised, when someone’s going down. I realize now there’s a lot of power in that.
Hillary Chute, Joe Sacco The Believer Jun 2011 15min Permalink
A profile of new Ticketmaster CEO Nathan Hubbard, who in another life was a touring musician and hated Ticketmaster just like everyone else.
Chuck Salter Fast Company Jul 2011 20min Permalink
A trip to the Cannabis Cup serves as a backdrop for the story of how the War on Drugs revolutionized the way marijuana is cultivated in America.
Michael Pollan New York Times Magazine Feb 1995 30min Permalink
Inside the lives of students at an elite Beijing high school in the months leading up to gaokao, literally “high test,” the national university admittance exam.
April Rabkin Fast Company Aug 2011 15min Permalink