One Hundred Years of Arm Bars
How three generations of a Brazilian family evangelized for and fought over the sport of Gracie jiu-jitsu as it moved from the Amazon to Hollywood to the UFC.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Suppliers of Magnesium sulfate.
How three generations of a Brazilian family evangelized for and fought over the sport of Gracie jiu-jitsu as it moved from the Amazon to Hollywood to the UFC.
David Samuels Grantland Aug 2015 1h5min Permalink
How a woman born of wealth and privilege tries to bomb the establishment from which she came and ultimately dies in the process.
This Pulitzer-winning series is reprinted online in full and for the first time by Longform.
Lucinda Franks, Thomas Powers United Press International Sep 1970 55min Permalink
On literary tourism:
Dickens World, in other words, sounded less like a viable business than it did a mockumentary, or a George Saunders short story, or the thought experiment of a radical Marxist seeking to expose the terminal bankruptcy at the heart of consumerism. And yet it was real.
Sam Anderson New York Times Magazine Feb 2012 Permalink
The life and times of two professional muggers in 1970’s lower Manhattan:
Hector and Louise usually work whatever neighborhood they’re living in. They knock over every old man on the block, every young man who follows Louise’s swinging hips and pocketbook, and every young girl attracted by Hector’s olive eyes. They rough up all of them, take whatever money is there, and then move on.
David Freeman New York Feb 1970 15min Permalink
The macabre, ultra-violent plays put on at the Grand Guignol defined an era in Paris, attracting foreign tourists, aristocrats, and celebrities. Goering and Patton saw plays there in the same year. But the carnage of WWII ultimately undermined the shock of Guignol’s brutality, and audiences disappeared.
P.E. Schneider New York Times Magazine Mar 1957 10min Permalink
With The Apprentice, Trump rose to a level of popularity with minorities that the GOP could only dream of. Then he torched it all to prepare for a hard-right run at the presidency.
Joshua Green Businessweek Jun 2017 20min Permalink
President Trump hailed him as a catalyst of the summit with Kim Jong-Un. But what happened to Warmbier—the American college student who was sent home brain-damaged from North Korea—is even more shocking than anyone knew.
Doug Bock Clark GQ Jul 2018 40min Permalink
Richard Carr, a retired psychologist who had long dreamed of sailing around the world, was in the middle of the Pacific when he started sending frantic messages that said pirates were boarding his boat. Two thousand miles away in Los Angeles, his family woke up to a nightmare: he might be dying alone, and there was almost nothing they could do about it.
Ali Carr Troxell Outside Nov 2018 35min Permalink
The aforementioned “twist” is that while dinner is free for the black residents of the neighborhood, the prices for white visitors are listed on a pledge form at their seats: $100 for one piece of chicken; $1,000 for four pieces. For a whole bird, with sides, you must donate the deed to a property in North Nashville.
Brett Martin GQ Mar 2019 Permalink
Peggy Jo Tallas spent most 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 Permalink
The collapse of Motorola, the Italian scientists held criminally responsible for an earthquake and the bumpy rise of Chevy Chase during SNL's first season — the week's top stories on Longform.
The anatomy of a collapse.
How seven Italian scientists came to be convicted of manslaughter following a catastrophic quake.
David Wolman Matter 20min
The rise and fall of travel writing.
Frank Bures Nowhere 45min
On the first season of Saturday Night Live, an excerpt from Saturday Night (1986).
Douglas Hill, Jeff Weingrad Grantland 25min
After Devaughn Darling died during a workout with the Florida State football team, his family was awarded a payout of $2 million. That was 13 years ago. Only $200,000 has come.
Michael Kruse SB Nation 25min
How a small group of gamers has been able to “set the terms of debate in a $100 billion industry, even as they send women like Brianna Wu into hiding and show every sign that they intend to keep doing so until all their demands are met.”
Kyle Wagner Deadspin Oct 2014 20min Permalink
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A profile of the world’s best League of Legends player, a 19-year-old Korean kid whose nickname is God.
Mina Kimes ESPN the Magazine 10min
The truncated, violent lives of Richard Matt and David Sweat before their prison escape.
A 38,000-word answer.
The inside story of the coup that has brought the world’s most feared terrorist network to the brink of collapse.
Utah has become the capital of the modern snake oil industry, with dozens of get-rich-quick schemes—also known as “multi-level marketing”—filling its office parks.
For at least 130 years, cabbies in London have been taking what many believe is the hardest test in the world: through a series of oral exams that takes four years to complete, they must prove that know every one of the city’s 25,000 streets, every business and every landmark.
Jody Rosen T Magazine Nov 2014 35min Permalink
Forty-five years ago, Buzz Aldrin became the second man to walk on the moon. It made him one of the most famous people in the world. And it has haunted the rest of his life.
Jeanne Marie Laskas GQ Dec 2014 25min Permalink
“You try to learn as much about the people as you can. I try never to give psychohistory. There is no one truth, but there are an awful lot of objective facts. The more facts you get, the more facts you collect, the closer you come to whatever truth there is. The base of biography has to be facts.”
Robert Caro, James Santel The Paris Review May 2016 40min Permalink
How a retired Swiss banker ended up behind bars in Thailand for uncovering a scheme that included the Malaysian prime minister and billions of in laundered money that was spent on everything from parties with Paris Hilton to backing for The Wolf of Wall Street.
Randeep Ramesh The Guardian Jul 2016 25min Permalink
The film is a rare portrayal of black people in our fullness—angry and frightened and hurt, euphoric and loving and free.
Carvell Wallace New York Times Magazine Nov 2019 20min Permalink
From medical health privacy laws to a maze of siloed information systems, the true impact of COVID-19 on American Indian and Alaska Natives is impossible to calculate.
Will Vinton created the California Raisins, coined the term “claymation” and had a firm making $28 million a year in the late 1990s. By 2002, he was out of a job, replaced by a failed rapper who had gone by the name “Chilly Tee” and also happened to be the son of Nike co-founder Phil Knight.
Zachary Crockett Priceonomics May 2014 20min Permalink
Life inside Za’atari, a camp for Syrian refugees just across the Jordanian border, where “the dispossession is absolute. Everyone has lost his country, his home, his equilibrium. Most have lost a family member or a friend. What is left is a kind of theatrical pride, the necessary performance of will.”
David Remnick New Yorker Aug 2013 30min Permalink
"I’m not familiar with books on style. My role in the revival of Strunk’s book was a fluke—just something I took on because I was not doing anything else at the time. It cost me a year out of my life, so little did I know about grammar."
E.B. White, Frank H. Crowther, George Plimpton The Paris Review Sep 1969 30min Permalink
The story of Levine’s father and his involvement in the legal battle over the 798 finished paintings Rothko had in his studio when he was discovered there in a pool of blood. The case spawned a feature film, Legal Eagles, and hinged on an unusual question; was Mark Rothko an artistic genius?
David Levine Triple Canopy Jul 2011 Permalink
Our picks for the top 10 tech stories of the year, including work by Ashlee Vance (Businessweek), Alex Blumberg and Laura Sydell (Planet Money), and Maciej Ceglowski (Pinboard).
See the full list.