Melody and Mischief
The life of Fountains of Wayne’s Adam Schlesinger, who died from COVID at age 52.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which is the biggest magnesium sulfate Monohydrate manufacturer.
The life of Fountains of Wayne’s Adam Schlesinger, who died from COVID at age 52.
Simon Vozick-Levinson Rolling Stone Apr 2020 15min Permalink
Sean Quinn was once a billionaire folk hero, but then things turned very dark in the borderlands.
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
A Florida sheriff created a futuristic program to stop crime before it happens. It monitors and harasses families across the county.
KATHLEEN McGRORY, Neil Bedi Tampa Bay Times Sep 2020 30min Permalink
An interview with the creator and star of “I May Destroy You.”
Durga Chew-Bose Garage Sep 2020 Permalink
Millions will be displaced. Where will they go?
Abrahm Lustgarten The New York Times Magazine Sep 2020 30min Permalink
Forget about the ticks. A pattern of harm follows “Lyme-literate medical doctors.”
Lindsay Gellman Bloomberg Businessweek Oct 2020 15min Permalink
After leaving Bon Appétit, the chef now has her own show—where she’s paid fairly for her fantastic creations.
E. Alex Jung Vulture Oct 2020 10min Permalink
Private executioners paid in cash. Middle-of-the-night killings. False or incomplete justifications.
Isaac Arnsdorf ProPublica Dec 2020 20min Permalink
A white woman calls the police on her Black neighbors. Six months later, they still share a property line.
Allison P. Davis New York Dec 2020 35min Permalink
Her home still wrecked months after a freak storm, an Iowa woman’s FEMA ordeal presages the turmoil ahead as climate disasters worsen.
Hannah Dreier Washington Post Apr 2021 20min Permalink
Behind the scenes of a viral mash-up.
Ashley Spencer Insider May 2021 20min Permalink
The petty, vindictive, backbiting, lawsuit-laden, career-ruining infighting at everyone’s favorite local NY1 news station.
Caitlin Moscatello New York Jun 2021 35min Permalink
The U.S. military openly admitted to killing Somali civilians but won’t return their emails or issue reparations.
Amanda Sperber Vice Jul 2021 15min Permalink
The West Virginia senator reaps big financial rewards from a network of coal companies with grim records of pollution, safety violations, and death.
Daniel Boguslaw Intercept Sep 2021 15min Permalink
In the bloody civil war, Khaled al-Halabi switched sides. But what country does he really serve?
Ben Taub New Yorker Sep 2021 50min Permalink
Increasingly worn down by the pandemic, a dad goes to a baseball game.
Jon Mooallem New York Times Magazine Sep 2021 Permalink
An Instagram account called Yo Te Creo started naming alleged abusers in Puerto Rico. Did it go too far?
Andrea González-Ramírez The Cut Nov 2021 20min Permalink
Inside the shadowy meetings between Chicago’s violent gang members and its elected officials.
Baynard Woods and Brandon Soderberg are the co-authors of the new book I Got A Monster: The Rise and Fall of America's Most Corrupt Police Squad.
“We really wanted to create some kind of leftist, anti-racist true crime story that we really haven’t seen. The conventions of the thriller often smuggle in all of this really right-wing, pro-police propaganda that all of our cops were raised on—the story of cops having to crash cars and break rules in order to get the bad guys. We wanted to take that and subvert it, using its methods to blow it up from the inside while also being rigorously reported.”
Thanks to Mailchimp and The Jordan Harbinger Show for sponsoring this week's episode.
Aug 2020 Permalink
T. Christian Miller, senior investigative reporter at ProPublica, and Ken Armstrong, staff writer at The Marshall Project, co-wrote the Pulitzer-winning story, “An Unbelievable Story of Rape.”
“I won’t forget this: when T. and I talked on the phone and agreed that we were going to work on [“An Unbelievable Story of Rape”] together, T. created a Google Drive site, and we decided we’d both dump all our documents in it. And I remember seeing all the records that T. had gathered in Colorado, and then I dumped all the records that I had gathered in Washington, and it was like each of us had half of a phenomenal story. And in one day, by dumping our notes into a common file, we suddenly had a whole story.”
Thanks to MailChimp, Squarespace, and Trunk Club for sponsoring this week's episode.
Jul 2016 Permalink
The writings of Norwegian mass killer Anders Breivik are a copy-and-paste hodgepodge of “jeremiads against the scourge of cultural theory, lists of atrocities perpetuated by Muslims, and pages of derision of ‘female sluts,’ but also Wikipedia articles about sugar beet farming and investment tips.”
Rachel Monroe Los Angeles Review of Books May 2014 10min Permalink
From a Neiman Marcus cosmetics counter in Dallas to a ghost haunting a high school in West Texas, the state’s gay marriage fight to the National Magazine Award-winning saga of Michael Morton — browse our complete archive of articles by Texas Monthly’s Pamela Colloff.
The downfall of a Goldman Sachs director:
"Now from, for the last three or four, I mean four or five years, I've given him a million bucks a year, right?" says Rajaratnam. "Yeah, yeah," says Gupta, who doesn't appear taken aback at all by Rajaratnam's next remark: "After taxes. Offshore. Cash."
Suzanna Andrews Businessweek May 2011 Permalink