Daniel Wolfe Is Killing Himself Live on Facebook
The search for an Iraq veteran on the brink of suicide.
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The search for an Iraq veteran on the brink of suicide.
Zach Baron GQ Aug 2015 25min Permalink
A Native American family’s fight for housing security in the city and on the reservation.
Julian Brave NoiseCat High Country News Feb 2018 20min Permalink
A profile of Mo Isom, a former goalie on the LSU women’s soccer team now trying to kick for the football team.
Jordan Conn Grantland Aug 2012 30min Permalink
Bibek Dhong traveled from Nepal to Malaysia to test cameras for the new iPhone 5. When production ended abruptly, he and his coworkers found themselves stranded for two months without money, food or passports.
Cam Simpson Businessweek Nov 2013 15min Permalink
He was arrested for pushing his three grandsons so hard on a Grand Canyon hike that rangers feared for their lives. Their account of the summer they spent with their youthful grandpa would include an uncanny understanding of marijuana strains and a stopover in Jamaica.
Michael Rubino Indianapolis Monthly Aug 2012 25min Permalink
Shared parenting is usually better for children—but the model fails for many women forced to co-parent with their abusers.
Megan O’Matz ProPublica Sep 2021 25min Permalink
Searching for Puddles the Clown, whose cover of Lorde’s “Royals” made him an Internet star.
Justin Heckert Grantland Mar 2014 20min Permalink
For decades, airlines failed to turn a profit despite having a monopoly on the sky. This year they’re expected to make billions. Here’s why.
Alex Mayyasi Priceonomics Nov 2015 10min Permalink
The young people fighting for democracy will be back.
Lauren Hilgers New York Times Magazine Feb 2015 20min Permalink
After an election deadlock that held the country hostage for months, two former rivals confront Afghanistan’s patronage and corruption.
Mujib Mashal Al Jazeera Feb 2015 Permalink
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Brian Hickey, a journalist who was induced into a coma after being left for dead following a hit and run accident, reports the story of his recovery.
Brian Hickey Philadelphia Magazine May 2009 15min Permalink
A profile of Jon Stewart, who’s now run The Daily Show for more than a decade.
Chris Smith New York Sep 2010 20min Permalink
“It takes this huge amount of will and energy for anything to happen to you.”
Kathryn Borel, Nora Ephron The Believer Mar 2012 20min Permalink
A group of Latina women across the country have been working in secret, turning their homes into shelters for abused immigrant women.
Lizzie Presser California Sunday Oct 2018 15min Permalink
When jail healthcare is outsourced to for-profit medical providers, inmates pay the price.
Max Blau Atlanta Magazine Dec 2019 25min Permalink
For months, Emile Weaver denied her pregnancy. A gruesome discovery forced her to confront the truth.
Alex Ronan Elle Jan 2020 40min Permalink
A cooking column for people with AIDS claimed the right to pleasure, but in each recipe was embedded an urgent appeal.
Jonathan Kauffman Hazlitt Apr 2020 15min Permalink
Eighteen hours inside one COVID ward, observing what it takes to care for the sickest patients.
Lauren Caruba San Antonio Express-News Jun 2020 20min Permalink
Finding the author of Pictures for Sad Children.
Justin Ling Input Nov 2021 30min Permalink
She was mocked for her clothes and for her hair. Tabloids published nude photos of her and covered her custody fight. The defense called her hysterical. The judge condescended to her. She lost. And then she became a punchline. Twenty years later, thanks in part to The People v. O.J. Simpson, Marcia Clark is finally being seen in full.
Rebecca Traister New York Feb 2016 15min Permalink
Stephen Bannon and Jeff Sessions, the new attorney general, have long shared a vision for remaking America. Now the nation’s top law-enforcement agency can serve as a tool for enacting it.
Emily Bazelon New York Times Magazine Feb 2017 25min Permalink
Reginald Dwayne Betts is a poet, lawyer, and founder of the nonprofit Freedom Reads. His New York Times Magazine article "Could an Ex-Convict Become an Attorney? I Intended to Find Out" won the National Magazine Award. His new podcast is Almost There.
“I felt like I had to own becoming something and intuitively understood that if I didn't lay claim to desiring to be something, that it would be too many other forces that would be pulling on me to dictate that I become something else. … When you say you're a writer, if you know nothing else, then you know that you read. You pay attention to the world. … And prison became the metaphor by which I understood the world and poetry became the medium by which I understood what it meant to write about the world and what it meant to take seriously the responsibility to write about the world that I knew.”
Sep 2023 Permalink
Driving cross-country in a chemical tanker.
John McPhee New Yorker Feb 2003 50min Permalink
A profile of Gil-Scott Heron.
Alec Wilkinson New Yorker Aug 2010 25min Permalink