India’s Golden Chance
How the next generation of Indian women could break the country’s cycle of early motherhood and forced marriage.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which are the china suppliers of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate for agriculture.
How the next generation of Indian women could break the country’s cycle of early motherhood and forced marriage.
Meera Subramanian VQR Feb 2014 30min Permalink
On tragedy, mythology, and the spectacular crash of the Spider-Man musical and its creator, Julie Taymor.
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 bizarre story of the disappearance of “downtown legend” John Lurie after a former friend resolved to take his life.
Tad Friend New Yorker Aug 2010 35min 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
He was one of Israel’s greatest spies. Then he brought his own country to the brink of war.
Ronen Bergman The Atavist Magazine Apr 2015 1h10min Permalink
A manifesto from one of the first professional bloggers on a new ‘golden age of journalism.’
Andrew Sullivan The Atlantic Nov 2008 20min Permalink
On a group of women whose lives were forever altered by the Leif Garrett episode of Behind the Music.
Danielle Gardner LA Weekly Jul 2000 25min Permalink
Most of the country is trying to keep guns out of schools. A town in rural Idaho is taking the opposite approach.
Anne Helen Petersen Buzzfeed Mar 2016 25min Permalink
An interview with the founding editor of the New York Review of Books, who died Monday.
Mark Danner New York Apr 2013 30min Permalink
A profile of then-First Lady Barbara Bush, published just before the 1992 presidential election. The lede: “Even Barbara Bush’s stepmother is afraid of her.”
Marjorie Williams Vanity Fair Aug 1992 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
The reckonings of one of the South’s white suburban women, whose loyalty is key to whether Trump is reelected.
Stephanie McCrummen Washington Post Mar 2020 20min Permalink
An interview with Gabriela López, the head of the San Francisco Board of Education.
Isaac Chotiner New Yorker Feb 2021 Permalink
On the experience of having a stroke.
Geoff Dyer London Review of Books Mar 2014 15min Permalink
A profile of Carmelo Anthony, newly anointed savior of the New York Knicks.
Will Leitch New York Apr 2011 10min Permalink
On the life and afterlife of Che Guevara.
Christopher Hitchens New York Review of Books Jul 1997 25min Permalink
The stories of a record-setting chain of transplants.
Kevin Sack New York Times Feb 2012 Permalink
A profile of William Heirens, the convicted “Lipstick Killer” of Chicago, who died this week.
Robert McClory Chicago Reader Aug 1989 35min Permalink
Rachel Khong is a journalist and author whose latest novel is Real Americans.
“It's about the ways in which we miss each other as human beings and can't fully communicate what it is like to be ourselves. … And I think that's what makes it so interesting to me, to work on a novel and to spend so much time trying to get down on the page what it feels like to be a human being who's alive. … I think the effort itself is what human relationships are.”
May 2024 Permalink
The gangs of Brooklyn’s Brownsville, an area with the higest concentration of public housing in America.
Eric Konigsberg New York Jun 2014 20min Permalink
The backstory of “The Duke in His Domain,” Truman Capote’s 1957 New Yorker profile of Marlon Brando.
Douglas McCollam Columbia Journalism Review Nov 2012 20min Permalink
On the foreign workers of Dubai, who now make up 90 percent of the city’s population.
Cynthia Gorney National Geographic Jan 2014 20min Permalink
A profile of the Bronx immigrant family on the other end of your Chinese takeout menu.
Kevin Heldman Capital New York Oct 2011 20min Permalink
A man living in the Boston suburbs learns he could be one of the only survivors of a 1982 massacre in Guatemala.
Sebastian Rotella ProPublica May 2012 40min Permalink