Something’s Got to Give
In a windowless room just outside of New York City, overworked air traffic controllers manage the world’s most-trafficked piece of sky—until all those blips on the screen become too much.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_where to buy magnesium sulfate.
In a windowless room just outside of New York City, overworked air traffic controllers manage the world’s most-trafficked piece of sky—until all those blips on the screen become too much.
Darcy Frey New York Times Magazine Mar 1996 35min Permalink
Jimmy Lai, a Hong Kong tabloid tycoon, thinks he’s found the future of journalism: an animation assembly line that can crank out clips recreating–or anticipating, or imagining–breaking news.
Michael Kaplan Wired Aug 2010 20min Permalink
“I hate classical music: not the thing but the name. It traps a tenaciously living art in a theme park of the past. It cancels out the possibility that music in the spirit of Beethoven could still be created today.”
Alex Ross Pop Matters Oct 2010 15min Permalink
Just don’t call it Jurassic Park.
Zach Baron GQ Oct 2016 20min Permalink
Nearly 4 years ago, a 12-year-old boy was murdered in a small town in upstate New York. The suspects are well known, but nobody has been convicted of the crime.
Jordan Ritter Conn Grantland Jul 2015 25min Permalink
A trip down America’s most haunted road.
Taffy Brodesser-Akner Atlas Obscura Oct 2015 20min Permalink
Thirty years ago, Elizabeth Haysom and Jens Soering fell in love as freshman at the University of Virginia. It was the same year Haysom’s parents were brutally murdered. Each says the other committed the crime.
Nathan Heller New Yorker Nov 2015 45min Permalink
Thirty-year-old payment processing CEO Dan Price made an audacious decision and was rewarded with viral stardom. But what were his real motivations?
Karen Weise Bloomberg Businessweek Dec 2015 15min Permalink
Years after the era of the “superpredator,” Taurus Buchanan is still paying for a crime of his youth.
Corey G. Johnson, Ken Armstrong Mother Jones Jan 2016 20min Permalink
Feminism brought the opposition together for the Women’s March on Washington. But how long will that last, and how many converts can it win?
Amanda Hess New York Times Magazine Feb 2017 25min Permalink
In a time when no one agrees on anything, some vague consensus can be found around the idea that more American manufacturing would be good. Rarely does someone say publicly, “Actually, I think there should be less American manufacturing.” (Although it happens.)
Meredith Haggerty Racked Feb 2018 30min Permalink
A maverick war correspondent, Hemingway’s third wife was the only woman at D-Day and saw the liberation of Dachau. Her husband wanted her home in his bed.
Paula McLain Town & Country Jul 2018 15min Permalink
Cancer surgery for $700, a heart bypass for $2,000. Pretty good, but under India’s new health-care system, it’s not good enough.
Ari Altstedter Bloomberg Businessweek Mar 2018 15min Permalink
The world’s largest jewelry retailer was a cesspool of harassment and unfair treatment of women who worked there.
Taffy Brodesser-Akner New York Times Magazine Apr 2019 30min Permalink
Newly unearthed documents reveal how an environmental-minded socialite became an ardent nativist whose money helped sow the seeds of the Trump anti-immigration agenda.
Nicholas Kulish, Mike McIntire New York Times Aug 2019 20min Permalink
A Florida family opted for restorative justice over the death penalty for the man who murdered their mom. What happened next made them question the very meaning of justice.
Eli Hager The Marshall Project Jul 2020 30min Permalink
The fathers and father figures of Michael Brown, Terence Crutcher, Daniel Prude, Rayshard Brooks, George Floyd, and Jacob Blake reflect on the violence that forever altered their families’ lives.
Mosi Secret GQ Dec 2020 30min Permalink
The Charleston-based evangelicals had much in common: guns, God, Trump. What went wrong, only one of them could say.
Alice Robb Vanity Fair Sep 2021 25min Permalink
Compiled by Elon Green, a contributing editor at Longform, and Josephine H., an editor at Tits and Sass, who has been stripping and writing in Detroit for over 10 years.
Susannah Breslin ambitiously self-publishes a piece on the rise and advancing crash of the pornography industry in a certain suburb of Los Angeles.
Susannah Breslin susannahbreslin.net Oct 2009
A former sex worker interviews a longtime John on how it feels to pay.
Antonia Crane The Rumpus Jun 2012 20min
The Great Recession’s impact on the legalized prostitution industry in Nevada: more hookers, fewer johns.
Michael Albo LA Weekly Sep 2010 20min
A 3-part investigation of human trafficking and the international sex trade, with stops in Costa Rica, Moldova, and the Philippines.
Sean Flynn GQ Mar 2006 30min
Cycles of boom and bust in the drilling town of Williston, N.D., as seen from the perspective of an itinerant dancer filling one of three slots at the only strip club in town, Whispers.
Susan Elizabeth Shepard Buzzfeed Jul 2013
The rise and fall of a boom-era escort agency in New York City.
Mark Jacobson New York Magazine Jul 2005
The lives of women who make their living on the web.
Sam Biddle Gizmodo Sep 2012 20min
Jul 2005 – Jul 2013 Permalink
Arriving in China at 23, Sidney Rittenberg spent 35 years as a “friend, confidante, translator, and journalist” for the Communist Party’s top leaders. In this interview, he recalls both his friendship with Chairman Mao and the 16 years he spent in solitary confinement.
Matt Schiavenza The Atlantic Dec 2013 20min Permalink
In 1999, “original superagent” Leigh Steinberg represented 86 NFL athletes. His life today:
At age 63, Steinberg -- for years hailed as the real-life Maguire -- now finds himself a bankrupt, recovering alcoholic, plotting a comeback from the bottom. And before 10 p.m. tonight, as mandated by the California Bar Association, he must show that his urine is clean.
Daniel Roberts, Pablo S. Torre Fortune Apr 2012 15min Permalink
Nearly 20 years ago in a remote California town, a 16-year-old named Karen Mitchell disappeared. The case went cold, but last month local law enforcement started looking at it again after the arrest of a former resident: Robert Durst.
Michelle Dean The Guardian Apr 2015 15min Permalink
Joshua Williams was 18 when he was arrested in 2014 for stealing a bag of chips and lighting a QuikTrip trash can on fire in the aftermath of a protest sparked by the death of Antonio Martin near Ferguson, MO. He is still in prison.
Zach Baron GQ Jun 2020 10min Permalink
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A collection of picks about people in impossible situations — lost at sea, trapped under boulders, infected with incurable diseases — who somehow survived.
Inspired by Flight 232: A Story of Disaster and Survival, Laurence Gonzales's unforgettable account of a United flight that went down 25 years ago and the 184 souls who lived to tell the story.
The scene inside Flight 232 as it hit the ground, as remembered by passengers who believed their lives were ending.
Laurence Gonzales Flight 232 Jul 2014 15min
John Aldridge fell overboard in the middle of the night, 40 miles from shore, and the Coast Guard was looking in the wrong place. How did he make it?
Paul Tough New York Times Magazine Jan 2014 30min
In 1974, a pair of four-year-old cousins wandered into the jungle near India’s border with Myanmar. The boy was found five days later, temporarily incapable of speech. The girl was gone. For decades, stories echoed through villages of a “wild-looking woman,” sometimes striding beside a tiger. Thirty-eight years later, she returned.
Lhendup G Bhutia Open Aug 2012 10min
When a boulder shifts and pins his hand, a climber on a solo trip is forced to do the unthinkable: amputate his own arm.
Aron Ralston Outside Sep 2004 25min
Two days after the Japanese tsunami, after the waves had left their destruction, as rescue workers searched the ruins, news came of an almost surreal survival: Miles out at sea, a man was found, alone, riding on nothing but the roof of his house.
Michael Paterniti GQ Oct 2011 30min
A day after swimming in an Arkansas water park, Kali Harding was diagnosed with a brain-eating amoeba that kills 99% of the people infects. Kali was the 1%.
Peter Andrey Smith Buzzfeed Jul 2014 25min
How the Chilean miners made it out.
Héctor Tobar New Yorker Jun 2014 55min
In 1912, 300 miles deep on a trek into the uncharted Antarctic wilderness, Douglas Mawson lost most of his crew and supplies. This is the tale of how he got back.
David Roberts National Geographic Jan 2013 10min
A first skydive goes wrong.
Chris Ballard Sports Illustrated Jul 2014 25min
Sep 2004 – Jul 2014 Permalink
A few years ago, before anyone knew his name, before rap artists from all over the country started hitting him up for music, the rap producer Lex Luger, born Lexus Lewis, now age 20, sat down in his dad’s kitchen in Suffolk, Va., opened a sound-mixing program called Fruity Loops on his laptop and created a new track... Months later, Luger — who says he was “broke as a joke” by that point, about to become a father for the second time and seriously considering taking a job stocking boxes in a warehouse — heard that same beat on the radio, transformed into a Waka song called “Hard in da Paint.” Before long, he couldn’t get away from it.
Alex Pappademas New York Times Magazine Nov 2011 15min Permalink