Behind Enemy Lines With a Suburban Counterterrorist
How one woman is monitoring the jihadi network from a home office in Montana.
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How one woman is monitoring the jihadi network from a home office in Montana.
He was supposed to be the Dallas Cowboys’ star running back. Instead, Joseph Randle is in prison.
Dan Greene Sports Illustrated Jan 2017 30min Permalink
How did Josh Tetrick’s vegan-mayo company become a Silicon Valley darling—and what is he really selling?
Bianca Bosker The Atlantic Oct 2017 25min Permalink
The latest federal NCAA probe is no different.
Kevin Armstrong New York Daily News Mar 2018 20min Permalink
A daughter investigates her father’s belief that the government is subjecting him and thousands more to to mind control.
Jean Guerrero Wired Oct 2018 25min Permalink
A lifelong runner is hit with a mysterious physical breakdown and forced to begin contemplating the end.
Christopher Solomon Outside Dec 2018 10min Permalink
"I think what Kanye West is going to mean is something similar to what Steve Jobs means. I am undoubtedly, you know, Steve of Internet, downtown, fashion, culture. Period. By a long jump. I honestly feel that because Steve has passed, you know, it’s like when Biggie passed and Jay-Z was allowed to become Jay-Z."
Jon Caramanica New York Times Jun 2013 20min Permalink
An investigation into allegations that Rwandan President Paul Kagame is assassinating exiled dissidents.
Geoffrey York, Judi Rever The Globe and Mail May 2014 20min Permalink
An audacious plan to create a new energy source could save the planet from catastrophe. But time is running out.
Raffi Khatchadourian New Yorker Mar 2014 1h Permalink
An investigation into rising crime rates in small American cities. Is a lauded antipoverty program to blame?
Hanna Rosin The Atlantic Jul 2008 35min Permalink
Race relations at the gigantic and soul-crushing Smithfield slaughterhouse, where annual turnover is 100 percent: 5,000 people are hired, 5,000 quit.
Charlie LeDuff New York Times Jun 2000 25min Permalink
The Mosul Dam is failing. A breach would cause a masssive wave that could kill as many as a million and a half people.
Dexter Filkins New Yorker Dec 2016 25min Permalink
“His goal is to stay in power another day, another year, and to deal with complications when—and if—they arise.”
Julia Ioffe The Atlantic Dec 2017 Permalink
A new pro league is paying teenagers six figures to quit high school for basketball.
Bruce Schoenfeld The New York Times Magazine Nov 2021 30min Permalink
Wright Thompson is a senior writer for ESPN. His new book is Pappyland: A Story of Family, Fine Bourbon, and the Things That Last.
“If you’re going to write a profile of someone … you have to find some piece of common ground with them so that no matter how famous or good or noble or bad—or no matter how cartoonish their most well-known attributes are—it shrinks them. And once they’re small enough to fit in your hand, I think it changes the entire experience of asking questions about their lives.”
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Dec 2020 Permalink
Al Baker is a crime reporter at The New York Times, where he writes the series “Murder in the 4-0.”
“When there’s a murder in a public housing high rise, there’s a body on the floor. Jessica White in a playground, on a hot summer night. Her children saw it. Her body fell by a bench by a slide. You look up and there’s hundreds of windows, representing potentially thousands of eyes, looking down on that like a fishbowl. …They’re seeing it through the window and they can see that there’s a scarcity of response. And then they measure that against the police shooting that happened in February when there were three helicopters in the air and spotlights shining down on them all night and hundreds of officers with heavy armor going door to door to door to find out who shot a police officer. They can see the difference between a civilian death and an officer death.”
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Mar 2017 Permalink
James Verini, a freelance writer based out of Nairobi, won the 2015 National Magazine Award for Feature Writing.
“That is probably the most alien, jarring thing about working in Africa: life is much cheaper. More to the point, death is very close to you. We're very removed from death here. Someone can die at 89 in their sleep here and it's called a tragedy. In Africa, I find that I'm often exposed to it. That's part of why I wanted to live there.”
Thanks to TinyLetter and Trunk Club for sponsoring this week's episode.
Jun 2015 Permalink
Tom Bissell is a journalist, critic, video game writer, and author of The Disaster Artist: My Life Inside The Room, the Greatest Bad Movie Ever Made. His latest book is Magic Hours.
“I kind of have come around to maybe not as monkish or fanatical devotion to sentence idolatry as I was when I was a younger writer, earlier in my career. I think I’m coming around to a place where a lot of middle-aged writers get to, which is: I tried to rewire and change the world with the beauty of language alone—it didn’t work. Now how about I try to write stuff that’s true, or that’s not determined to show people I am a Great Writer. Like a lot of young writers, you’re driven by that. Then at a certain point you realize A) you’re not going to be the Great Writer you wanted to be, and B) the determination of that is completely beyond your power to control, so best that you just write as best you can and as honestly as you can, and everything else just sort of becomes gravy.”
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Apr 2018 Permalink
Sean Fennessy is the editor-in-chief of The Ringer and a former Grantland editor. He hosts The Big Picture.
"What I try to do is listen to people as much as I can. And try to be compassionate. I think it’s really hard to be on the internet. This is an internet company, in a lot of ways. We have a documentary coming out that’s going to be on linear television that’s really exciting. Maybe we’ll have more of those. But for the moment, podcast, writing, video: it’s internet. [The internet] is an unmediated space of angst and meanness and a willingness to tell people when they’re bad, even when they’ve worked hard on something. That’s like the number one anxiety that I feel like we’re dealing with on a day-to-day basis with everybody, myself included."
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Feb 2018 Permalink
Gay Talese, who wrote for Esquire in the 1960s and currently contributes to The New Yorker, is the author of several books. His latest is A Writer's Life.
"I want to know how people did what they did. And I want to know how that compares with how I did what I did. That's my whole life. It's not really a life. It's a life of inquiry. It's a life of getting off your ass, knocking on a door, walking a few steps or a great distance to pursue a story. That's all it is: a life of boundless curiosity in which you indulge yourself and never miss an opportunity to talk to someone at length."
Thanks to TinyLetter and Warby Parker for sponsoring this week's episode.
Oct 2013 Permalink
Barrett Swanson is a contributing editor at Harper’s and the author of Lost in Summerland.
“You just have to sit there for a long time. That lesson was indisputably crucial for me. Just being willing to talk to someone, even if the first half-hour or hour is unutterably boring, or it doesn’t seem pertinent. These little things, the deeper things, take a while to get at and they kind of burble to the surface at moments when you’re not totally expecting it to happen. So for me, it’s just making myself available for that moment to occur.”
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Jun 2021 Permalink
Ezra Edelman is the director of O.J.: Made in America.
“When I say what I learned is that America is even more fucked up than I had previously thought, it’s that—the superficiality of it. How we are willingly seduced by these shiny people and these shiny things. And, again, when I looked at O.J.’s trajectory, that was an operating principle.”
Thanks to MailChimp, Squarespace, Casper, and Secrets, Crimes, & Audiotape for sponsoring this week's episode.
Feb 2017 Permalink
Andrew Marantz is a staff writer at The New Yorker. His new book is Antisocial: Online Extremists, Techno-Utopians, and the Hijacking of the American Conversation.
“Some nonfiction can be reduced to a bulletpoint primer, but a good book is a good book. Whether it’s fiction or nonfiction, it should create a feeling, it should create a world, it should be a feeling that you want to live in and that tilts the way you see things. Isn’t that the point?”
Thanks to Mailchimp and Pitt Writers for sponsoring this week's episode.
Oct 2019 Permalink
Radhika Jones is the editor-in-chief of Vanity Fair and the editor of Women on Women.
“There are a lot of people who still see the value of talking to someone, having a real conversation — about the things that they’re doing, the things that they’re caring about, the things that they’re afraid of, the things that are challenging — because in that conversation, they themselves will discover things that they didn’t realize. It obviously takes courage. It’s a payoff for the reader, certainly, but I think that there are subjects who understand that there is something there for them, too.”
Thanks to Mailchimp and Pitt Writers for sponsoring this week's episode.
Oct 2019 Permalink
Matthew Cole is an investigative reporter at The Intercept, where he recently published “The Crimes of Seal Team 6.”
“I’ve gotten very polite and very impolite versions of ‘go fuck yourself.’ I used to have a little sheet of paper where I wrote down those responses just as the vernacular that was given to me: ‘You’re a shitty reporter, and I don’t talk to shitty reporters.’ You know, I’ve had some very polite ones, [but] I’ve had people threaten me with their dogs. Some of it is absolutely cold.”
Thanks to Squarespace, Blue Apron, and MailChimp for sponsoring this week's episode.
Mar 2017 Permalink