Getting Off
Inside the competitive, lucrative, swashbuckling world of DWI attorneys in Houston.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate pentahydrate in China.
Inside the competitive, lucrative, swashbuckling world of DWI attorneys in Houston.
Mike Giglio Houston Press Nov 2009 20min Permalink
The horror of being mentally ill in Florida’s prisons.
Eyal Press New Yorker Apr 2016 30min Permalink
A profile, months in the making, of now-former national security adviser Michael Flynn.
Nicholas Schmidle New Yorker Feb 2017 40min Permalink
How anti-poaching funds end up in the hands of vicious paramilitaries.
Tom Warren, Katie J.M. Baker Buzzfeed Mar 2019 Permalink
On a century of Muslim misrepresentation in Hollywood.
Omar Mouallem The Ringer May 2019 30min Permalink
On the plight of indigenous suicide in Alaska.
Devon Heinen New Statesman Jan 2020 25min Permalink
On the epidemic of deaths in jails.
Dana Liebelson, Ryan J. Reilly Huffington Post Jul 2016 15min Permalink
A rape case in which most of the evidence lies in the archives of Twitter and Instagram divides a football-crazed town of 18,400.
Juliet Macur, Nate Schweber New York Times Dec 2012 Permalink
Josh Dean has written for GQ, Fast Company, New York, and more. His latest piece, "The Life and Times of the Stopwatch Gang," was just published by The Atavist.
“I sort of reject the whole idea of something being beneath me. There are obviously some stories I wouldn’t do or that I have no interest in, but this job is fun and should be fun. And I wouldn’t turn something down that seems like a fun thing for me to do just because maybe the story is not something that 10,000 people are going to tweet about. I don’t give a shit.”
Thanks to TinyLetter, Squarespace, Lynda and HP Matter for sponsoring this week's episode. If you would like to support the show, please leave a review on iTunes.
Mar 2015 Permalink
A judge on the history and injustice of the plea bargain in America.
Jed S. Rakoff New York Review of Books Oct 2014 15min Permalink
On the culture of plastic surgery in Los Angeles, and how the reporter’s life changed when she got a pair of fake boobs.
Amy Wallace Los Angeles Jan 2002 20min Permalink
The life of Reverend Charles Moore, who died by self-immolation in the parking lot of a Texas strip mall.
Michael Hall Texas Monthly Dec 2014 35min Permalink
The curious rise and spectacular crash of the Alliance of American Football, a new league that went under in just eight weeks.
Conor Orr Sports Illustrated May 2019 15min Permalink
Cord Jefferson is the West Coast editor at Gawker.
"I consider myself to be a sincere human being. And I think that the way the internet carries itself, the way the internet has dialogues, is often insincere. That concerns me. I don't ever want to lose my sincerity. I don't ever want to lose my ability to feel emotional about things that I write about. I don't ever want to have a distance from everything that I write. I think that can be a danger of writing too much for the internet, that you develop this elitist distance from everything. That nothing really matters, you know?"
Thanks to TinyLetter and Hulu Plus for sponsoring this week's episode.
Sep 2013 Permalink
Dr. Jelani Cobb is a New Yorker staff writer and the author of three books, including The Substance of Hope: Barack Obama and the Paradox of Progress. He teaches journalism at Columbia University.
“Ralph Wiley — the sports writer, late Ralph Wiley — told me something when I was 25 or so, and he was so right. He said I should never fall in love with anything I’ve written. … The second thing he told me was, ‘You won’t get there overnight, and believe me, you don’t want to.’ I’m embarrassed to say that I didn’t get it when he told me that. I was like — why would I not want to get there overnight? Now I’m like: Thank God I didn’t get there overnight. Because there’s so much writing I would have to explain.”
Thanks to MailChimp, Quip, and Audible for sponsoring this week's episode.
Sep 2017 Permalink
George Saunders has written for The New Yorker and GQ. His latest collection of short stories is Tenth of December.
“Maybe you would understand your artistry to be: put me anywhere. I'll find human beings, I'll find human interest, I'll find literature. And I guess you could argue the weirder, or maybe the less explored the place, the better.”
Thanks to TinyLetter and Audible for sponsoring this week's episode. For a free audiobook of your choice, go to audiblepodcast.com/longform.
Jan 2014 Permalink
“The patron saint of adult thumb-suckers is a 65-year-old Long Island salesman who looks strikingly like Hunter S. Thompson, down to the tinted aviator sunglasses and bald spot.”
Pearl Gabel Lenny Jul 2016 Permalink
Advice from 1982 on how and why one should buy a computer. “I can hardly bring myself to mention the true disadvantage of computers,” Fallows writes, “which is that I have become hopelessly addicted to them.”
James Fallows The Atlantic Jul 1982 Permalink
Three years ago, the Republican-led House was close to reaching a compromise on immigration. This is the story of what went wrong.
Alec MacGillis ProPublica Sep 2016 30min Permalink
Inside the effort to exonerate the “Starved Rock Killer.” After 60 years behind bars for one of this state’s most infamous crimes, Chester Weger is out to prove his innocence with DNA testing.
Jake Malooley Chicago Magazine Dec 2021 50min Permalink
Born into Sea Org; a diary of a misspent youth (and adulthood) in the service of Scientology. “One of the first things I learned in the Sea Org, because I was a receptionist, was how to handle process servers.” (25,000 words)
Ex-Scientology Kids Jan 2011 1h40min Permalink
McKay Coppins is a senior political writer for Buzzfeed News and the author of The Wilderness: Deep Inside the Republican Party's Combative, Contentious, Chaotic Quest to Take Back the White House.
“I am part of the problem. Not in the sense that it’s my fault Trump ran, but in the sense that I’m one of many who for his entire life have mocked him and ridiculed him. He’s a billionaire—I don’t feel any moral guilt about it. But if being I’m honest with myself that same part of me can also, when not checked, be projected onto vast swathes of people. It’s easy to have a lazy classism about the type of people who would vote for Donald Trump.”
Thanks to MailChimp and Blue Apron for sponsoring this episode.
Aug 2016 Permalink
Jonathan Goldstein is an audio producer and the host of Heavyweight.
“I wasn’t taking myself very seriously, initially. I liked working with my friends and family because I think I was a little more comfortable with them. Then in the second season people were writing in with real problems, and they were looking at me as a kind of expert. It was terrifying to meet with these people and see the look of hopefulness in their eyes. ... I realized I need to step it up and even if I didn’t feel like an expert—an expert in an invented field that doesn’t really exist—that I’d really have to take that on with seriousness.”
Jan 2023 Permalink
In the aftermath of rape, a transition from prey to predator.
Kathleen Hale Hazlitt Jun 2014 25min Permalink
In the U.S. military, more than half of rape victims are men.
Nathaniel Penn GQ Sep 2014 Permalink