The Last Person You’d Expect to Die in Childbirth
The U.S. has the worst rate of maternal deaths in the developed world. The story of a neonatal nurse helps illustrate why.
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The U.S. has the worst rate of maternal deaths in the developed world. The story of a neonatal nurse helps illustrate why.
Nina Martin, Renee Montagne ProPublica May 2017 35min Permalink
Stephen Miller, the 31-year-old White House advisor, became steeped in white nationalism in the unlikeliest of places: a Santa Monica high school and Duke University.
William D. Cohan Vanity Fair Jun 2017 25min Permalink
On the relative plausibility of impossible beings.
Kathryn Schulz New Yorker Oct 2017 20min Permalink
How 88rising is making a place for Asians in hip-hop.
Hua Hsu New Yorker Mar 2018 25min Permalink
Stories about the cases that wind through the Old Supreme Court Chamber and the justices who have shaped its legacy.
Sex, the Constitution, and the Supreme Court.
Jill Lepore New Yorker May 2015 20min
Analysis of the trial from future Supreme Court justice.
Felix Frankfurter The Atlantic Mar 1927 1h15min
Every law student knows John Brady’s name. But few know the story of the bumbling murder that ended in a landmark legal ruling.
Thomas L. Dybdahl The Marshall Project Jun 2018 20min
The Supreme Court justice on gay rights, the problem with consensus, and the Devil.
Jennifer Senior New York Oct 2013 25min
In 1976, newly appointed Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens voted to reinstate capital punishment in the United States. Thirty years later, he argued that it’s unconstitutional. Here, he explains why he changed his mind.
John Paul Stevens New York Review of Books Dec 2010 15min
How Chief Justice John Roberts pulled off Citizens United.
Jeffrey Toobin New Yorker May 2012 40min
How Neil Gorsuch became the second-most-polarizing man in Washington.
Simon van Zuylen-Wood New York May 2018 20min
On the combined force of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and his wife Virginia, a Tea Party stalwart.
Jeffrey Toobin New Yorker Aug 2011 35min
No one argues before the Supreme Court more than Tommy Goldstein.
Noam Scheiber The New Republic Apr 2006 20min
Mar 1927 – Jun 2018 Permalink
Christopher Daniels’ political beliefs got him in trouble. Though the FBI won’t comment, he is likely the first person ever imprisoned for being a “black identity extremist.”
Peter Simek D Magazine Sep 2018 25min Permalink
The Booker Prize-winning novelist on fantasy, reality, and a religious crisis that has never ended.
Jia Tolentino New Yorker Jan 2019 Permalink
Once the bright young hope of the Latin-American left, Alan García was caught up in an epic corruption investigation.
Daniel Alarcón New Yorker Jul 2019 30min Permalink
From the beginning, Intuit recognized that its success depended on two parallel missions: stoking innovation in Silicon Valley while stifling it in Washington. Indeed, employees ruefully joke that the company’s motto should actually be “compromise without integrity.”
Justin Elliott, Paul Kiel ProPublica Oct 2019 30min Permalink
The latest research suggests it’s not far-fetched at all—especially when you consider all the societal and cultural factors that make today’s games so attractive.
Ferris Jabr New York Times Magazine Oct 2019 30min Permalink
“This is the remarkable, true story of a rich white male celebrity who abused his power and then apologized for it.”
Nell Scovell Vanity Fair Oct 2019 15min Permalink
“I don’t think [the news media] has ever had a good handle on a political moment. It’s not designed for that. It’s designed for engagement.”
David Marchese New York Times Magazine Jun 2020 25min Permalink
Interviews, documents and jailhouse recordings reveal a clearer picture of the life and death of the 26-year-old emergency room technician.
Rukmini Callimachi New York Times Aug 2020 25min Permalink
The company’s AI algorithms gave it an insatiable habit for lies and hate speech. Now the man who built them can’t fix the problem.
Karen Hao MIT Technology Review Mar 2021 30min Permalink
As the summer months stretched into fall, Justin Edwards would sometimes bump into the man wanted for his attempted murder.
Kyle Hopkins Anchorage Daily News Dec 2021 20min Permalink
A pair of undercover journalists, a boatload of refugees, 200 miles of ocean and a journey that has claimed more than a thousand lives.
Luke Mogelson New York Times Magazine Nov 2013 40min Permalink
Chris McCandless, Sly Stone, and Ida Wood — a collection of stories going inside the lives of outsiders.
At age 17, Eustace Conway moved into the North Carolina woods. He hasn’t compromised since.
Elizabeth Gilbert GQ Feb 1998 25min
Ida Wood, who lived for decades as a recluse in a New York City hotel, would have taken her secrets to the grave—if her sister hadn’t gotten there first.
Karen Abbott Smithsonian Jan 2013
Matthew Weigman was blind, overweight, 14 and alone. He could also do anything he wanted with a phone. Sometimes that meant calling Lindsay Lohan. Other times it meant sending a SWAT team to an enemy’s door.
David Kushner Rolling Stone Sep 2009 25min
How could a one-time rising golf star be gifted with top 10 talent yet struggle to break even on the LPGA tour, possess Madison Avenue magnetism yet be such a loner? But the most difficult thing to understand is this: Why did she take her own life?
Alan Shipnuck Sports Illustrated Dec 2010 30min
The tale of itinerant wanderer Chris McCandless. The magazine story that preceded Into the Wild.
Jon Krakauer Outside Apr 1993 30min
A profile of the reclusive musician.
David Kamp Vanity Fair Aug 2007 35min
If Charles Brogden pilfered a kitchen, he washed the dishes and mopped the floor before he left. And the law just couldn’t seem to run him down.
Jan Reid, Alan King Texas Monthly Aug 1973 10min
Meeting Christopher Thomas Knight, a.k.a. the North Pond Hermit, who lived alone in the Maine woods for nearly 30 years.
Michael Finkel GQ Aug 2014 30min
On the mysterious life of an the isolated heiress.
Margalit Fox New York Times May 2011
Aug 1973 – Aug 2014 Permalink
"For 20 beautiful years, my homeland was open and (kind of) free. Now, I fear, it’s closing back up."
Previously: Keith Gessen on the Longform Podcast.
Keith Gessen Medium Mar 2014 Permalink
Barbara Williamson co-founded Sandstone, one of the most famous radical experiments in group sex and communal living of the 1970s. Then she got wild.
Alex Mar Atlas Obscura Jun 2016 25min Permalink
Why the future feels frozen in time, as framed by Marshall McLuhan (“We look at the present through a rear-view mirror. We march backwards into the future.”) and William Gibson (“The future is already here; it is just unevenly distributed.”)
Venkatesh Rao Ribbonfarm May 2012 20min Permalink
An investigation into the Dr. Anthony Bosch and his “East Coast version of BALCO,” which allegedly supplied baseball stars Alex Rodriguez, Melky Cabrera and others with performance-enhancing drugs.
Tim Elfrink The Miami New Times Jan 2013 20min Permalink
The most prolific duo in history, the Texas woman who robbed banks dressed a pudgy cowboy, and the story that inspired Dog Day Afternon — a collection of our favorite stories about bank robberies.
Ray Bowman and Billy Kirkpatrick, who began boosting together as teenagers, were arrested only twice during their prolific partnership. The first time was for stealing 38 records from a K-Mart in 1974. The second arrest came in 1997. In between, Bowman and Kirkpatrick robbed 27 banks, including the single biggest haul in United States history: $4,461,681 from the Seafirst Bank in suburban Tacoma.
Alex Kotlowitz New Yorker Jul 2002 20min
Peggy Jo Tallas, a soft-spoken bachelorette, spent much of her adult life doing two things: taking care of her ailing mother and robbing bank after bank dressed as a pudgy, bearded cowboy.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Nov 2005 35min
Anthony Curcio was the pride of his small town in Washington state. A former football star, he had married his high-school sweetheart and was making good money flipping houses. Then the real estate market crashed, and Curcio turned his obsessive attention to planning an ingenious heist involving Craigslist, an inner tube, and $400,000.
David Kushner GQ Oct 2010
The robbers had a helicopter, explosives, and inside information on a $150 million cash repository. But the police were on to them—sort of.
Evan Ratliff Atavist Magazine Jan 2011 45min
A young man named John Wojtowicz, desperate to provide for his children and finance his lover’s sex-change surgery, attempts to rob a Chase branch in Brooklyn. The bank is surrounded almost immediately and a 14-hour standoff ensues. The story inspired Sidney Lumet’s Dog Day Afternoon.
P. F. Kluge, Thomas Moore LIFE Sep 1972
In 2003, a man named Brian Wells robbed a bank in Erie, Pa., with a bomb around his neck. Shortly thereafter, with Wells surrounded by cops and claiming he’d been forced to commit the crime, the bomb detonated, leaving authorities to piece together who had put it there. Eight years later, they’re still not entirely sure who was behind this bizarre crime, or even the true motive.
Rich Schapiro Wired Dec 2010 20min
How a 24-year-old nurse discovered Vegas, high-stakes gambling, and serial bank robbery.
Jeff Maysh BBC Apr 2015 25min
Sep 1972 – Apr 2015 Permalink
Experimental neuroscience, everlasting consciousness, and conjoined minds — our favorite articles about the brain.
What the sensation of an uncontrollable itch can tell us about how the brain operates.
Atul Gawande New Yorker Jun 2008 30min
The shared life of Tatiana and Krista Hogan.
Susan Dominus New York Times Magazine May 2011 30min
How some scientists are turning to connectomes—maps of the brain’s neural circuitry—to make the case for brain preservation, mind uploading, and eternal life.
Evan R. Goldstein The Chronicle of Higher Education Jul 2012 20min
Susie McKinnon cannot hold a grudge. She is unfamiliar with the feeling of regret and oblivious to aging. She has no core memories. And yet she knows who she is.
Erika Hayasaki Wired Apr 2016
Is there really such a thing as brain death?
Gary Greenberg New Yorker Aug 2001 20min
Eagleman, a neuroscientist, describes how groundbreaking advances in the science of brain have changed our understanding of volition in criminal acts, and may erode the underpinnings of our justice system.
David Eagleman The Atlantic Jul 2011 30min
Edna Kelly’s brain goes under the knife.
Jon Franklin The Baltimore Sun Dec 1978 15min
Dec 1978 – Apr 2016 Permalink
“Since we live in an age in which silence is not only criminal but suicidal, I have been making as much noise as I can…”
An informational interview during which the author is advised, “Find a rich husband, and then you can work at whatever you like on the side, and it doesn’t matter, because you already have money.”
Mallory Ortberg The Toast May 2014 10min Permalink