Things Fall Apart
A feat of elegant design wowed elite architects and promised to bring education to poor children in Nigeria. Then it collapsed.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate pentahydrate.
A feat of elegant design wowed elite architects and promised to bring education to poor children in Nigeria. Then it collapsed.
Allyn Gaestel The Atavist Magazine Feb 2018 30min Permalink
In South Carolina, civil forfeiture targets black people’s money most of all, exclusive investigative data shows.
Anna Lee, Nathaniel Cary, Mike Ellis The Greenville News Jan 2019 15min Permalink
How a bunch of Canadian hipsters wound up smuggling cocaine (and getting caught).
Kate Knibbs The Ringer Dec 2019 25min Permalink
The difficult final year of a much-loved and legendarily difficult woman.
Elizabeth Wurtzel Gen Jan 2020 20min Permalink
What could the political effects be of a media that actually served working-class Americans?
Carla Murphy Dissent Dec 2019 10min Permalink
A pilot program in Mississippi offers a glimpse of the possibilities.
Katia Savchuk Marie Claire Jul 2020 Permalink
A profile of the actor, who died yesterday at age 43.
Reggie Ugwu New York Times Jan 2019 10min Permalink
An interview with the creator and star of “I May Destroy You.”
Durga Chew-Bose Garage Sep 2020 Permalink
Forget about the ticks. A pattern of harm follows “Lyme-literate medical doctors.”
Lindsay Gellman Bloomberg Businessweek Oct 2020 15min Permalink
Private executioners paid in cash. Middle-of-the-night killings. False or incomplete justifications.
Isaac Arnsdorf ProPublica Dec 2020 20min Permalink
Inside the race to eliminate one of nature’s biggest threats.
Chris Sweeney Boston Magazine May 2021 15min Permalink
"I don't know if I was as angry as much as I was misunderstood. A lot of the things we did contained a lot of humor that went over people's heads."
Andrew Nosnitsky Pitchfork Jan 2012 10min Permalink
Members of the multiplicity community say they are many different people–sometimes so many they think of themselves as a city–all existing within one body.
Tori Telfer Vice May 2015 15min Permalink
“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 Permalink
An investigation into slavery in Mauritania:
An estimated 10% to 20% of Mauritania’s 3.4 million people are enslaved — in “real slavery,” according to the United Nations’ special rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery, Gulnara Shahinian. If that’s not unbelievable enough, consider that Mauritania was the last country in the world to abolish slavery. That happened in 1981, nearly 120 years after Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation in the United States. It wasn’t until five years ago, in 2007, that Mauritania passed a law that criminalized the act of owning another person. So far, only one case has been successfully prosecuted.
Edythe McNamee, John D. Sutter CNN Mar 2012 30min Permalink
The author of I Know What You Did Last Summer investigates her own daughter’s unsolved murder.
Tim Stelloh Buzzfeed May 2014 35min Permalink
Inside the collapse of TelexFree, an alleged $1 billion pyramid scheme that duped investors worldwide.
Beth Healy, Nathan B. Thompson Boston Globe Jun 2014 15min Permalink
How the self-proclaimed “inventor of all things streaming” went from dot-com millionaire to crime ring accomplice.
Russ Buettner New York Times Aug 2012 10min Permalink
A Liberian road trip with the creator of MTV, Ralph Reed and a reformed cannibal named General Butt Naked.
Joe Hagan Men's Journal Feb 2013 25min Permalink
A profile of Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.
Jenna Russell, Jenn Abelson, Patricia Wen, Michael Rezendes, David Filipov The Boston Globe Apr 2013 15min Permalink
In a Turkish hotel, veterans of the Libyan Revolution meet with their fractured Syrian counterparts to transfer know-how and heavy weaponry.
Rania Abouzeid Time May 2013 15min Permalink
The dangerous work of harvesting your food.
Bernice Yeung, Grace Rubenstein Center for Investigative Reporting Jun 2013 25min Permalink
An investigation into the big and often troubling business of caring for aging Americans.
A.C. Thompson, Jonathan Jones ProPublica Jul–Aug 2013 55min Permalink
What the rapidly changing world of teenage hook-up culture means for young women.
Nancy Jo Sales Vanity Fair Sep 2013 25min Permalink
An analysis of Let Us Now Praise Famous Men and Cotton Tenants, the original manuscript.
Leslie Jamison Oxford American Oct 2013 30min Permalink