My Brother's Keeper
Throughout their troubled lives, identical twins William and Chris Cormier shared a preternatural bond. Then the body of a Florida journalist ended up in their backyard.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate pentahydrate.
Throughout their troubled lives, identical twins William and Chris Cormier shared a preternatural bond. Then the body of a Florida journalist ended up in their backyard.
Tony Rehagen Atlanta Magazine Feb 2013 15min Permalink
On cushy jobs in web development, deeply un-cushy opportunities in writing, and our assumptions about the value of labor.
James Somers Aeon Jun 2013 15min Permalink
What the writer’s newly revealed letters mean for her long-debated legacy.
Hermione Lee New York Review of Books Jun 2013 15min Permalink
A profile of DJ Larry Levan, whose sets at New York’s Paradise Garage in the 80s had an almost religious appeal.
A profile of Chuck Blazer, “the man who built — and bilked — American soccer.”
Ken Bensinger Buzzfeed Jun 2014 30min Permalink
On mirror-touch synethesia, the power (or curse) of knowing exactly how others feel.
Erika Hayasaki Pacific Standard Jul 2015 15min Permalink
On the underground economy of full-service Southern California apartment complexes marketed to Chinese birth-tourists.
Benjamin Carlson Rolling Stone Aug 2015 30min Permalink
The struggles of Xavier University, a tiny, historically-black school in New Orleans, to train students for medical school.
Nikole Hannah-Jones New York Times Magazine Sep 2015 20min Permalink
The definitive story of a ubiquitous software. PowerPoint’s origins, its evolution, and its mind-boggling impact on corporate culture.
Ian Parker New Yorker May 2001 20min Permalink
Early last year, 10 churches were torched in East Texas. The culprits? Two Baptist teens having a crisis of faith.
Pamela Colloff Texas Monthly May 2011 30min Permalink
How automated ‘execution algorithms’ are taking the world’s markets on a wild ride that few economists can even understand, much less control.
Donald MacKenzie London Review of Books May 2011 20min Permalink
What it means to become a superpower while three quarters of the population lives on less than fifty cents per day—four scenes from India in transition.
Siddhartha Deb Guernica Sep 2011 25min Permalink
Seth Rogen, Amy Pascal, and the inside story of Sony’s hacking saga.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Feb 2015 30min Permalink
Notes from a never-finished biography of the neurologist, humanist and writer.
Lawrence Weschler Vanity Fair Apr 2015 30min Permalink
The multimillionaire David Gundlach had trouble, all his life, reading social cues. For reasons no one quite understands, he left most of his fortune to Elkhart, Indiana.
Allison Copenbarger Vance Indianapolis Monthly Jul 2014 20min Permalink
On stolen bicycles, “a solvent in America’s underground economy, a currency in the world of drug addicts and petty thieves.”
Patrick Symmes Outside Jan 2012 25min Permalink
After two people are found dead in Yellowstone National Park, a team of investigators tracks down the unlikely culprit: a grizzly bear.
Jessica Grose Slate Apr 2012 40min Permalink
On fashion, gender, a finding oneself in a pair of drop-crotch pants.
E. Alex Jung The Morning News Apr 2012 25min Permalink
A year with Major Steve Beck as he takes on the most difficult duty of his career: casualty notification.
Jim Sheeler Rocky Mountain News Nov 2005 50min Permalink
A profile of the Hollywood star-maker behind Vanna White, Pamela Anderson and Jenny McCarthy.
John H. Richardson Esquire Aug 1999 30min Permalink
In 2003, Gary Coleman ran for governor of California. But what he really wanted was to have never come to Hollywood in the first place.
Hank Stuever Washington Post Aug 2003 15min Permalink
An interview with William Gibson on the “dark, dark world of marketing, advertising, and trend forecasting.”
Jesse Pearson Vice Sep 2010 Permalink
A history of entrepreneurship in New York City, starting with shipping magnate Jeremiah Thompson’s big gamble in the 1820s: scheduled departures.
Edward L. Glaeser City Journal Nov 2010 20min Permalink
A (graphically) detailed account of a bear’s attack on a father and daughter hiking in Glacier National Park.
Thomas Curwen The Los Angeles Times Apr 2007 20min Permalink
In 1926, at the age of 12, Barbara Follett published a critically acclaimed novel. Fourteen years later, she disappeared.
Paul Collins Lapham's Quarterly Dec 2010 Permalink