A Triumph of the Comic-Book Novel
A consideration of Chris Ware.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate.
A consideration of Chris Ware.
Gabriel Winslow-Yost New York Review of Books Dec 2012 20min Permalink
A profile of Maggie Gallagher, founder of National Organization for Marriage.
Mark Oppenheimer Salon Feb 2012 35min Permalink
Part one of a planned nine-part serialized biography of Harrison Gray Otis, the “inventor of modern Los Angeles.”
Future installments will include Otis’s interlude as “emperor of the Pribilofs,” his military atrocities in the Philippines, his bitter legal battles with the Theosophists, the Otis-Chandler empire in the Mexicali Valley, the Times bombing in 1910, the notorious discovery of fellatio in Long Beach, and Otis’s quixotic plan for world government.
“For the first few days after the surgery, it was difficult to separate out my newly implanted sense from the bits of pain and sensation created by the trauma of having the magnet jammed in my finger.”
Ben Popper The Verge Aug 2012 20min Permalink
A minute by minute account of the officers and first responders on the scene of the San Bernadino shooting and the subsequent firefight between police and and the Farooks.
Brian Ross, Megan Christie, Josh Margolin, Rhonda Schwartz, Paul Blake ABC News Dec 2016 10min Permalink
A profile of Benicio Del Toro.
Wil S. Hylton Esquire Mar 2003 15min Permalink
The government says Matt DeHart is an online child predator. DeHart—and his parents—say he’s being framed over his knowledge of CIA secrets.
David Kushner Buzzfeed Mar 2015 40min Permalink
As the city is transformed by gentrification and inequality, comedies have begun depicting it as a place of magical connection.
Willy Staley New York Times Magazine Jan 2020 15min Permalink
Three years after a devastating wildfire, a California community faces another crisis: PTSD. Is what’s happening there a warning to the rest of us?
The rise and dissolution of the magazine that nearly took down a president.
Byron York The Atlantic Nov 2001 50min Permalink
Eco-tourism in the Himalayas.
The valley is everything you'd want and more. An icy milky river thunders over rocks and below steep wooded slopes are lush fields where people are working the land, oblivious to the Gore-Tex procession. Oblivious but not unaffected: the houses are smart, the prayer wheels freshly painted, just about everyone has a mobile phone, it seems, and is on it, and there are very few places you can't get a signal around here. This is not really the place to come if you're looking for peace and quiet.
Sam Wollaston The Guardian Apr 2012 Permalink
Chains, knives, fists, and, of course, those crude and unreliable homemade affairs called zip guns were the staples in the more vicious gang wars in the 1940s and 1950s. Today there is scarcely a gang in the Bronx that cannot muster a factory-made piece for every member—at the very least, a .22-caliber pistol, but quite often heavier stuff: .32s, .38s, and .45s, shotguns, rifles, and—I have seen them myself—even machine guns, grenades, and gelignite, an explosive. One gang, the Royal Javelins, has acquired some walkie-talkie radios.
Gene Weingarten New York Mar 1972 15min Permalink
What led to the death of a 5-year-old boy, “the Everychild in the state system.”
Patricia Wen Boston Globe May 2014 20min Permalink
A cultural history of Bitcoin and what happened when the nascent virtual currency began to be covered by the mainstream media.
Felix Salmon Medium Apr 2013 20min Permalink
The untold story of how anger became the dominant emotion in our politics and personal lives—and what we can do about it.
Charles Duhigg The Atlantic Jan 2019 50min Permalink
The Brooklyn Nets were built to be an unbeatable superteam of eccentric basketball superstars. Will they dominate the N.B.A. playoffs?
Sam Anderson The New York Times Magazine Jun 2021 30min Permalink
How one of the world’s foremost Beatles collectors died homeless on the streets of Little Rock.
Will Stephenson Arkansas Times Mar 2016 25min Permalink
What it takes to defect from the military state of one of the world’s youngest countries.
Alexis Okeowo New Yorker Dec 2016 35min Permalink
On the U.S. government’s pursuit of a legendary hacker.
Janet Reitman Rolling Stone Dec 2012 40min Permalink
As mainstream rock declines and disappears from the radio, an examination of seven bands who were amongst the biggest of their respective eras.
Steven Hyden Grantland Feb 2013 1h45min Permalink
In the wake of Rumours, the band endures a series of break-ups.
Cameron Crowe Rolling Stone Mar 1977 30min Permalink
On the life and legacy of one of soccer’s legends, who died Wednesday.
Brian Phillips The Ringer Oct 2019 35min Permalink
The Interstellar director and the art of the blockbuster cult film.
Gideon Lewis-Kraus New York Times Magazine Oct 2014 25min Permalink
A history of the Hollywood publicity racket.
Anne Helen Petersen The Virginia Quarterly Review Jan 2013 30min Permalink
In an era when America’s great sportswriters were as big as the athletes they covered, W.C. Heinz may have been the best of the bunch.
Jeff MacGregor Sports Illustrated Sep 2000 25min Permalink