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Lawyer Richard Luthmann was a Roger Stone-worshipping member of the Staten Island political scene. Then the fake Facebook posts began.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate.
Lawyer Richard Luthmann was a Roger Stone-worshipping member of the Staten Island political scene. Then the fake Facebook posts began.
James D. Walsh New York Apr 2021 20min Permalink
In 1974, a pair of four-year-old cousins wandered into the jungle near India’s border with Myanmar. The boy was found five days later, temporarily incapable of speech. The girl was gone. For decades, stories echoed through villages of a “wild-looking woman,” sometimes striding beside a tiger. Thirty-eight years later, she returned.
Lhendup G Bhutia Open Aug 2012 10min Permalink
“My name is Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor Jr., and my name is also Abdul Kareem, but I’ll explain about that much later.” A three-part personal essay on basketball, family, race and religion.
Jack Olsen, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Sports Illustrated Nov 1969 1h30min Permalink
Rick Ross was born William Leonard Roberts II in 1976, and he borrowed his stage name (and the associated big-time cocaine-selling hustler persona) from the legendary L.A. drug lord Freeway Ricky Ross. But the website MediaTakeout uncovered a photograph of William Leonard Roberts II when he was a Florida corrections officer. Most people thought that'd be the end of his career. Freeway Ricky Ross then sued him for stealing his name. None of it mattered. Rick Ross the rapper just sold more records.
Devin Friedman GQ Oct 2011 20min Permalink
Two men, separated by more than 150 years, discover the folly of attempting Western-style capitalism in Micronesia.
Jonathan Gourlay The Morning News Apr 2014 25min Permalink
On the actors who unwittingly starred in The Innocence of Muslims.
Michael Joseph Gross Vanity Fair Dec 2012 20min Permalink
Conspiracy theories, utopian fantasies, and cult involvement surrounding the international standard of musical tuning.
Colin Dickey The Believer Jan 2013 15min Permalink
Sixty years later, a dishonorably discharged World War I veteran makes one final appeal. The 1980 winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Writing.
Madeleine Blais Tropic Jan 1979 20min Permalink
Stuck between the Taliban and the U.S. Military, Afghanistan’s farmers risk their lives both when they grow, and when they refuse to grow, fields of poppies.
Robert Draper National Geographic Feb 2011 20min Permalink
One part rapist, one part con-man; the story of the seemingly unconvictable Hy Doan.
Denise Grollmus Cleveland Scene Sep 2005 15min Permalink
The story of dog-scent lineup innovator Keith Pikett and the not-so-scientific science behind forensics.
Michael Hall Texas Monthly May 2010 35min Permalink
The author gets a security guard job at this aging textile factory. Part of the City by City project.
Aaron Lake Smith n+1 May 2011 20min Permalink
After the United States demanded the extradition of a drug lord, a bloodletting ensued.
Mattathias Schwartz New Yorker Dec 2011 30min Permalink
A town ruined by the chemical C8, an ingredient in the making of Teflon.
Mariah Blake Huffington Post Highline Aug 2015 35min Permalink
The photographs that Caesar, a Syrian military photographer, smuggled out of Assad’s death dungeons.
Garance le Caisne The Guardian Oct 2015 20min Permalink
It’s the “City of the Big Automobile,” raw and beautiful at once.
Jeffrey Tayler National Geographic Mar 2015 Permalink
From Stefani Joanne Germanotta to Lady Gaga: the self-invented, manufactured, accidental, totally on-purpose creation of the world’s biggest pop star.
Vanessa Grigoriadis New York Mar 2010 30min Permalink
The diary of a Scranton, PA National Guardsmen tasked with guarding the highest profile prisoner in U.S history: a surprisingly amiable Saddam Hussein.
Lisa DePaulo GQ Jun 2005 25min Permalink
The story of Nate Fleming—walk-on point guard at Oklahoma State, fan favorite, golden child—and the 2001 plane crash that took his life.
Tom Friend ESPN Jan 2011 Permalink
From the Greeks to George Lucas, 2,200 years of failure.
Becky Ferreira The Awl Feb 2011 25min Permalink
On the man who has turned the grunt work of packing into a social media phenomenon.
Carolyn Kormann New Yorker Jun 2015 10min Permalink
How two high school wrestling teammates ended up on opposites side of the law during Miami’s cocaine wars.
Brett Forrest ESPN the Magazine Aug 2016 25min Permalink
Mapping the global spread of antigay ideology.
Masha Gessen Harper's Feb 2017 20min Permalink
Flashbacks from the life of Aaron Hernandez from the person who knew him best, his older brother Jonathan.
Michael Rosenberg Sports Illustrated Apr 2016 35min Permalink
An Afghanistan love story.
James Verini The Atavist Magazine Feb 2014 1h Permalink