A Boy Among Men
A teenaged prisoner is left unprotected by America’s laws against prison rape.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
A teenaged prisoner is left unprotected by America’s laws against prison rape.
Maurice Chammah The Marshall Project Feb 2015 30min Permalink
The Rattlesnake Derby is like a bass-fishing tournament, except you really don’t want a bite.
Jeff MacGregor Sports Illustrated Jul 1998 15min Permalink
For Sue Bird and Megan Rapinoe, the work is just getting started.
Emma Carmichael GQ Feb 2021 20min Permalink
Naomi Campbell, at 51, is discovering what comes after global icon.
Michaela angela Davis The Cut Aug 2021 20min Permalink
The organization is listening to criticism — and changing.
Dana Goldstein Vox Sep 2014 20min Permalink
Why Donald Trump’s closest aide is leaving the White House.
Olivia Nuzzi New York Mar 2018 30min Permalink
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Jonathan Abrams covers the NBA for Grantland.
"Players know that with the stories I do I'm not trying to burn anybody. I'm trying to tell a story for what it's worth and be honest to that person. ...That's one of my main goals, that you know why this person is [a certain] way when they step on the court. You know why Monta Ellis is going to keep shooting the ball. You know why Zach Randolph is such a gritty player. What these guys have gone through growing up, it materializes in their game."
Thanks to this week's sponsor, TinyLetter!
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Jun 2013 Permalink
Sometimes your mom keeps the monsters at bay, and sometimes, she is one.
Darcey Steinke Granta Oct 2014 30min Permalink
Is the desire in teens to switch their sex a mental disorder that needs treatment?
Natasha Vargas-Cooper Good Sep 2011 10min Permalink
Adult life for the autistic is littered with misunderstandings, anger, and group homes.
Bob Plantenberg Buzzfeed Feb 2015 20min Permalink
Is Mike Huckabee the GOP’s best hope in 2012? Mike Huckabee’s not so sure.
Ariel Levy New Yorker Jun 2010 35min Permalink
Charles Duhigg is a New York Times reporter and author of The Power of Habit.
"The stuff that gets cut out gets cut out for a reason. The discipline of space is always a good discipline. If it deserves to be read, it shouldn't be on the cutting room floor ... If it ends up on the cutting room floor, there's usually a reason why."
Thanks to TinyLetter for sponsoring this week's episode!
Jan 2013 Permalink
Lisa Belkin is a journalist and the author of four books. Her latest is Genealogy of a Murder: Four Generations, Three Families, One Fateful Night.
“I didn’t experience it as luck. It—and this is going to be a little woo woo—but it really felt like these people had been sitting there for 100 years saying, Well, it took you long enough, because everything just fit together. I didn’t have to manipulate anything.”
May 2023 Permalink
David Wolman is the author of six books and a magazine features writer who has written for Wired, Outside, and The New York Times. His latest article is ”Vanished in the Pacific.”
“I feel like conversations about characters, character development, strong characters gets a little nauseating in my field sometimes because it’s like, of course — you need that like you need periods at the ends of sentences. Do we really have to keep saying it? But in this conversation it’s worth saying, because there are great ideas out there where the sources or the characters just really weren't there and then you’re tucking your tail in between your legs to look for the next one.”
Dec 2022 Permalink
Elizabeth Kolbert, author of Field Notes from a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change and The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History, is a staff writer at The New Yorker.
“I still nurse the idea in my heart of hearts that something you write, that there’s some key to this all. We’re all looking for the skeleton key that’s going to unlock it, and people will go, ‘Oh, that’s why we have to do something!’ I don’t want to say that I completely dispensed with that. I think that’s what motivates most journalists—this information is going to somehow make a difference. On the other hand, I have dispensed a lot of that. Now we’re so deep into all of this. The more you know about climate change and the numbers involved and the scale involved of what we need to do to really mitigate this problem, you know that we’re moving in absolutely the wrong direction. It’s not like we’re moving slowly, we’re moving in the wrong direction. It’s very hard to say anything I write is going to turn this battleship around.”
Thanks to MailChimp, Skagen, Squarespace, and Pitt Writers for sponsoring this week's episode.
Oct 2018 Permalink
Matt Levine is a finance columnist for Bloomberg Opinion . His newsletter is Money Stuff.
”I write a lot about people who have gotten in trouble with the SEC or the Justice Department. And a surprising subset of them will email me. And often I will have made fun of them, and they'll be like, ‘That was pretty fair.’”
Jun 2022 Permalink
Joe Sexton is a senior editor at ProPublica and a former reporter and editor at the New York Times, where he led the team that produced "Snow Fall."
"My experience in a newspaper newsroom over the years has been: The word you hear least often, the word that's hardest for people to say in that environment, is the word yes. It's safer to say no. You get second-guessed less often if you say no. Your job's not on the line if you say no. But if you're willing to say yes and you're willing to face the consequences of having said yes, then quite amazing things can happen."
Thanks to Random House and TinyLetter for sponsoring this week's episode.
Dec 2013 Permalink
“The grand jury witness who testified that she saw Michael Brown pummel a cop before charging at him ‘like a football player, head down,’ is a troubled, bipolar Missouri woman with a criminal past who has a history of making racist remarks and once insinuated herself into another high-profile St. Louis criminal case with claims that police eventually dismissed as a ‘complete fabrication.’”
William Bastone, Andrew Goldberg, Joseph Jesselli The Smoking Gun Dec 2014 10min Permalink
Megan Kimble is the former executive editor of The Texas Observer and has written for The New York Times, Texas Monthly, and The Guardian. Her new book is City Limits: Infrastructure, Inequality, and the Future of America’s Highways.
“I have never lived in a city that was not wrapped in highways. It’s hard for me to imagine anything else. And I think that’s true for a lot of people today. ... [But] we have known since the origins of the interstate highways program that building highways through cities doesn’t fix traffic. And yet we keep doing it. To me, that really fueled a lot of the book. It wasn’t supposed to be this way.”
Apr 2024 Permalink
How Chicago is key to a business moving tons of drugs for billions of dollars.
Jason McGahan Chicago Oct 2013 Permalink
Eli Saslow is a Pulitzer-winning feature writer for the Washington Post. His new book is Rising Out of Hatred: The Awakening of a Former White Nationalist.
“If I'm writing about somebody once for 5,000 words in the Washington Post — someone who's addicted to drugs, say — I am choosing in the public eye where their story ends. Like, that's it. People aren't going to know any more. That's where I'm going to leave them being written about. And of course, that is inherently artificial — nothing ends, their life is continuing. This is just where the narrative ends. I recognize the weight in ways that maybe I didn’t before.”
Thanks to MailChimp, Outside the Box, Squarespace, and Pitt Writers for sponsoring this week's episode.
Sep 2018 Permalink
A two-part breakdown of how mental illness is diagnosed and treated.
Marcia Angell New York Review of Books Jul 2011 35min Permalink
Deep in southwest Arkansas is a state park that charges visitors $10 to search for gems that can be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Katherine LaGrave Afar May 2021 20min Permalink
Katherine Eban is an investigative journalist and contributing writer at Fortune Magazine. Her new book is Bottle of Lies: The Inside Story of the Generic Drug Boom.
“I am not known for my optimism. I think it’s hard to do this work and retain a sunny view of humankind. I hate to say that. On the other hand, I do believe there will always be whistleblowers. And it’s interesting to me that even in the darkest spaces, even when it looks like everything is arrayed against them, there are people who will say: ‘This just isn’t right, and I must do something.’ Which is kind of extraordinary.”
Thanks to Mailchimp and Pitt Writers for sponsoring this week's episode.
Jan 2020 Permalink