The Underground Movement Trying to Topple the North Korean Regime
Adrian Hong says he leads a group of “freedom fighters” conducting a revolution. Has the U.S. already betrayed them?
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_where to buy magnesium sulfate.
Adrian Hong says he leads a group of “freedom fighters” conducting a revolution. Has the U.S. already betrayed them?
Suki Kim New Yorker Nov 2020 35min Permalink
The irreconcilable differences between Orthodoxy and secularism increasingly end up in court.
Larissa MacFarquhar New Yorker Nov 2020 40min Permalink
Great dreams, terrible dreams, no dreams at all—a collection of stories about slumber, at Slate.
Collections Business Sex Travel
Paris Hilton, Princeton phonies, and the prince who blew through billions—a collection of articles on young money.
“They cruise the city in chauffeured cars, blasting rap, selling pot to classmates. How some of New York’s richest kids joined forces with some of its poorest.”
Nancy Jo Sales New York Dec 1996 20min
Georgia and Patterson Inman, 15-year-old twins, are the only living heirs to the $1 billion Duke tobacco fortune. They are also emotional wrecks who have barely survived a hellacious childhood.
Sabrina Rubin Erdely Rolling Stone Aug 2013 40min
On the brother of the Sultan of Brunei, Prince Jefri Bolkiah, who has “probably gone through more cash than any other human being on earth.”
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Jul 2011 45min
An overachiever on what he did and didn’t learn at Princeton.
Walter Kim The Atlantic Jan 2005 35min
A profile of Paris Hilton at the height of her fame.
Vanessa Grigoriadis Rolling Stone Nov 2003 10min
An invite-only social network for Georgetown assholes.
Angela Valdez Washington City Paper Jul 2007 30min
How two sisters, heirs to the Bronfman fortune, may have blown $100 million supporting the cult-like group NXIVM.
Maureen Tkacik The New York Observer Aug 2010
A profile of Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, the Malibu-dwelling, “fantastically corrupt” dictator-in-waiting of Equatorial Guinea. Teodorin, as his friends call him, is considered by U.S. intelligence to be “an unstable, reckless idiot.”
Ken Silverstein Foreign Policy Mar 2011 20min
Dec 1996 – Aug 2013 Permalink
A collection of stories about celebrity, debauchery and tragedy on the open seas.</p>
Li Dao, a young Minnesota nurse, appeared in suicide chat rooms, contacted the most desperate, and made pacts to die with them via webcam. After some in the forum caught on, Dao disappeared; or rather, Dao had never existed at all. She was a middle-aged man. And he may have encouraged and witnessed dozens of live suicides.
Nadya Labi GQ Oct 2010 25min Permalink
Modern methods allow the Islamic State to keep up its systematic rape of captives under medieval codes.
Rukmini Callimachi New York Times Mar 2016 Permalink
Stories about looking for people who don't want to be found.
On June 4, 1989, the bodies of Jo, Michelle and Christe were found floating in Tampa Bay. This is the story of how Glen Moore and his detectives brought the killer to justice.
Thomas French St. Petersburg Times Oct 1997 3h30min
On the lifestyle of a fugitive retiree, and how it came to an end.
Shelley Murphy, Maria Cramer The Boston Globe Oct 2013 25min
The search for a disgraced ex-LAPD officer bent on killing his former colleagues and their families.
Christopher Goffard, Kurt Streeter, Joel Rubin The Los Angeles Times Dec 2013 25min
It started as a bluebird New Year’s Day in Mount Rainier National Park. But when a gunman murdered a ranger and then fled back into the park’s frozen backcountry, every climber, skier, and camper became a suspect—and a potential victim.
Bruce Barcott Outside Sep 2012 25min
A Montana sheriff and a manhunt in the mountains.
Richard Ben Cramer Esquire Oct 1985 35min
Can a writer disappear in America for a month with a $5,000 bounty on his head?
Evan Ratliff Wired Nov 2009 35min
The search for Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev.
Globe Staff The Boston Globe Apr 2013 55min
The making of Thelma & Louise.
Sheila Weller Vanity Fair Mar 2011 30min
Oct 1985 – Dec 2013 Permalink
To speak of the human as such, as the modernists did, is like taking a piece of the wild, putting it into a petri dish, adding bleach and antibiotics until more than half of what’s in there is dead and then celebrating the barely-living remains as “the human.” Provocatively put, the human is a sterile abstraction, a harmony of illusions.
Tobias Rees Noema Jun 2020 Permalink
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A collection of hopeful stories about technology curated by MIT's Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee, authors of New York Times bestseller The Second Machine Age. Featuring articles by John Maynard Keynes, Clive Thompson, Garry Kasparov and more.
A son chronicles his father’s death:
My father's mortician was a careless barber. Stepping up to the open casket, I realized too much had been taken off the beard. The sides were trimmed tidy, the bottom cut flat across. It was a disconcerting sight, because in his last years, especially, my father had worn his beard wild, equal parts loony chemist and liquor store Santa. The mortician ought to have known this, I thought, because he knew the man in life. My father — himself the grandson of a funeral home director — would drop by Davey-Linklater in Kincardine, Ontario, now and then for a friendly chat. How's business? Steady as she goes? Death was his favourite joke.
Dave Cameron The Walrus Dec 2010 25min Permalink
New from 7STOPS: </em>Donald Judd, Judge Roy Bean, and the impact each man had on his West Texas home.
Note From the Editors: As we were reporting this story, Newsweek Media Group fired Newsweek Editor Bob Roe, Executive Editor Ken Li and Senior Politics Reporter Celeste Katz for doing their jobs. Reporters Josh Keefe and Josh Saul were targeted for firing before an editor persuaded the company to reverse its decision. As we continued working on the story, we were asked to take part in a review process, which, we ultimately learned, involved egregious breaches of confidentiality and journalism ethics.
Saul is a Longform contributing editor.
Celeste Katz, Josh Keefe, Josh Saul Newsweek Feb 2018 10min Permalink
Munich, the Dream Team, and the search for Nadia Comaneci—a collection of articles on the highs and lows of Olympic history.
The first modern games were staged in 1850 by a surgeon named William Penny Brookes in a town called Much Wenlock.
Frank Deford Smithsonian Jul 2012
An American gold medalist in the hurdles describes his experience at the 1896 Olympics in Athens.
Thomas P. Curtis The Atlantic Dec 1932 10min
On the scene of the darkest games in Olympic history.
E.J. Kahn New Yorker Sep 1972 15min
Three years after her gold-medal performance—and amidst rumors of a fall from grace—the author travels to Transylvania to track down gymnast Nadia Comaneci. He also enjoys several drinks with her coach, Béla Károlyi.
Bob Ottum Sports Illustrated Nov 1979 25min
On the eve of the 1992 Summer Olympics, the Dream Team held a closed-door scrimmage in Monaco. Michael Jordan led one team, Magic Johnson the other. Two decades later, a game report.
Jack McCallum Sports Illustrated Jul 2012 25min
How the media and law enforcement fingered the wrong man for the 1996 Olympic Park bombing.
Marrie Brenner Vanity Fair Feb 1997 1h15min
Sex in the Olympic Village.
Sam Alipour ESPN Jul 2012 15min
How science is “helping athletes approach perfection.”
Mark McClusky Wired Jun 2012 15min
How the government cleared the streets in advance of the 1988 Olympics.
Kim Ton-Hyung, Foster Klug Associated Press Apr 2016 15min
Dec 1932 – Apr 2016 Permalink
As someone who’s knocked on countless doors with nothing but a hunch and a prayer, I believe all doomed reporting missions should be seen through to their end. Besides, Zelonka’s pluck was entertaining, and I’d come all this way, so we went, two guys in masks, one zapped on Monster Energy and the other on Starbucks double espresso, roaming an empty office park in Rancho Cucamonga as the world was falling apart.
J. David McSwane ProPublica Jun 2020 30min Permalink
From his testimonoy before the House Unamerican Activities Committee to his final fight, a collection of picks on the folk singer, who died Monday.</p>
Capote, Talese, Orwell, Boo—masters of the craft, in their own words. New at Slate.
Behind-the-scenes stories from The Godfather, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, and one of the phenomenal flops in Hollywood history. At Slate.
Before I met Robert Jeffress, I wanted to hate him. Jeffress is the conservative preacher who made national headlines in October, when he called Mormonism a cult. He’s the senior pastor at First Baptist Dallas, the oldest megachurch in America, and I am certainly not a Baptist. He endorsed Rick Perry for president, and I’m definitely no fan of Perry’s. As a matter of fact, Robert Jeffress and I probably disagree on every major political and religious issue. And yet, I really, really like him.
Michael J. Mooney D Magazine Jan 2012 15min Permalink
“Which is how, despite the drinking, the stealing, the racist outburst, the abysmal courtroom performance, the disbarment, and the ultimate imprisonment of his lead attorney, an intellectually disabled man has ended up on the verge of execution.”
Marc Bookman Mother Jones Apr 2014 20min Permalink
Tech investors gave Seth Bannon, co-founder of the seemingly surging startup Amicus, over four million dollars, despite knowing almost nothing about him.
Noam Scheiber The New Republic Sep 2014 15min Permalink
A story of bird and human patterns.
For a daily short story recommendation from our editors, try Longform Fiction or follow @longformfiction on Twitter.
Robyn Ryle Luna Luna Oct 2014 10min Permalink
A collection of picks about the best and worst bettors in the world.
In 2007, Harrah’s made 5.6 percent of its total Las Vegas revenue off a single person: Terrance Watanabe.
Alexandra Berzon Wall Street Journal Dec 2009 10min
A story of gambling addiction, in seven parts.
Jay Kang Morning News Oct 2010 20min
“On a small scale, Titanic Thompson is an American legend. I say on a small scale, because an overpowering majority of the public has never heard of him. That is the way Titanic likes it. He is a professional gambler. He has sometimes been called the gambler’s gambler.”
John Lardner True Apr 1951 25min
In 1980, a bankrupt gambler came up with a plan to get his money back. He built an incredibly complex bomb, one that was impossible to defuse and that only he knew how to move, and snuck it into a Lake Tahoe casino with an extortion note demanding $3 million. Part of the plan worked. Part of it did not.
Adam Higginbotham The Atavist Magazine Jul 2014 1h25min
How Billy Walters, the world’s most successful gambler, keeps winning.
Mike Fish ESPN the Magazine Feb 2015 10min
On playing chess and waiting to get arrested.
David Hill McSweeney's Nov 2011 10min
“Again I ask, Is this really the way the American people want it to be?”
Robert F. Kennedy The Atlantic Apr 1962 10min
The men who say they’ll try to save the once-bustling gambling resort town.
Nick Paumgarten New Yorker Aug 2015 40min
Apr 1951 – Aug 2015 Permalink
How a network of evangelical Christian crisis pregnancy centers turned the complex reality behind black abortion rates into a single, fictional story.
Akiba Solomon Color Lines May 2013 20min Permalink
Manny Pacquiao, possibly the greatest boxer of his era and still in his fighting prime, on the campaign trail for a congressional seat in the remote, untamed Southern province of the Phillipines that spawned him.
Andrew Marshall The Post Aug 2010 15min Permalink