How TikTok Controls Our Attention
“I found it both freeing and disturbing to spend time on a platform that didn’t ask me to pretend that I was on the Internet for a good reason.”
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which is the biggest magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules manufacturer.
“I found it both freeing and disturbing to spend time on a platform that didn’t ask me to pretend that I was on the Internet for a good reason.”
Jia Tolentino New Yorker Sep 2019 Permalink
I cannot burden my family with worry, because to be a burden worse than not being family at all. Like everyone else, I came to the ballpark to get away from something.
Malt Schlizmann Deadspin Oct 2019 15min Permalink
Far too many county jail inmates are dying from suicide, a cause of death critics say can be prevented with reasonable health care services. The problem? Private correctional health care firms may have a goal other than providing adequate care.
Lindsey B. King 5280 Aug 2020 30min Permalink
Over three weeks, COVID-19 delivered “cheap shots.” It took hostages. And it left the Malinowski family with with pain, loss and grief.
Jennifer Pignolet Akron Beacon Journal Dec 2020 15min Permalink
“Before he earned a spot as a soloist with the Houston Ballet, and before he became a social-media phenom with nearly 250,000 Instagram followers and another 470,000 devotees on TikTok, Harper Watters was an eight-year-old boy with a broken nose.”
Mimi Swartz Texas Monthly Oct 2021 Permalink
Not available in full:
“Death Sentence” (Timothy Bolger • Long Island Press)
“A Design for Healing” (Melissa Harris • The Chicago Tribune)
“A Killing in Cordova: The Trial and Tribulations of Harry Ray Coleman” (Graham Hillard • Memphis Magazine)
“Taxpayers’ $8.4 million Spent on Doomed Project” (Mike Morris • Houston Chronicle)
Frozen fish from the supermarket often has excess ice — and consumers pay the price.
Inside New Jersey’s halfway houses.
After the 2001 terrorist attacks, California lawmakers sought a way to channel the patriotic fervor and use it to help victims, families and law enforcement. Their answer: Specialty memorial license plates emblazoned with the words, “We Will Never Forget.”
The anatomy of a sex abuse scandal at a Christian school in Oklahoma.
Kiera Feldman This Land 55min
Police force fails to protect the state’s most vulnerable residents.
A son’s secret brings a Southern Baptist minister to his knees.
How Earl Eugene Mawyer got a chance to be a hero.
On the “toxic legacy” of Anniston, Alabama.
At 24, Ray Wauson was thrilled to land a job as an armored-car guard. But he was entering an unregulated world in which the people guarding the cargo are often defenseless against the cargo itself.
How faulty data lowered Milwaukee’s crime rate.
City cameras track anyone, even Minneapolis Mayor Rybak.
On homeless sex offenders in metro Phoenix.
A year-long examination of the abuse investigations of unlicensed youth reform programs that operate in Florida and are overseen by the Florida Association of Christian Child Caring Agencies, a private, nonprofit group.
On the evening of November 7th 1974, the 7th Earl of Lucan, an inveterate gambler and Backgammon champion with a taste for power boats, snuck into his estranged wife’s basement. He then bludgeoned their nanny with a lead pipe and placed her in a canvas sack, before attempting to murder his wife. Recognizing his voice, she convinced him that she could him escape, then slipped out a bathroom window. Lord Lucan was never seen again.
For the first time, we’re including a Readers’ Poll with our annual best of the year list.
Click here to vote for your favorite three articles of 2015.
Excerpted from Everyone Leaves Behind a Name, a collection of work by journalist Michael Brick, who died in February at the age of 41. Proceeds from the book go to Brick's wife and children.
Michael Brick Harper's May 2013 20min Permalink
Liliana Segura writes for The Intercept.
"My form of advocacy against the death penalty, frankly, has always been to tell those stories that other people aren’t seeing. And to humanize the people—not just the people facing execution, but everyone around them."
Thanks to MailChimp, Mubi, and Tripping.com for sponsoring this week's episode.
Feb 2018 Permalink
A profile of Uruguay President José Mujica, a former revolutionary who’s been shot six times, was imprisoned for 14 years and, since taking office, has shunned the presidential mansion in favor of a small farm while legalizing gay marriage, abortion and marijuana.
Krishna Andavolu Vice May 2014 15min Permalink
“If you have read 6,000 books in your lifetime, or even 600, it’s probably because at some level you find “reality” a bit of a disappointment.”
Joe Queenan The Wall Street Journal Oct 2012 10min Permalink
Why people stampede, and what can be done to prevent “crowd disasters.”
John Seabrook New Yorker Feb 2011 25min Permalink
Two American backpackers, two Indonesian villagers, one small boat, 15 slices of bread, a dozen hard-boiled eggs, ten oranges, five apples, two pineapples, two bags of cookies, two packages of peanuts, eight liters of water, one machete and three weeks adrift at sea.
Paul Ciotti The Los Angeles Times Feb 1986 20min Permalink
Welcome to World of Wonder, the Hollywood production company that celebrates “outsiders, 16th-minute celebrities, conspiracy theorists, penis puppeteers, dictators, street hustlers, porn stars, hackers, homicidal club kids, gender deviants, furries, plushies, and Tori Spelling.”
Natasha Vargas-Cooper Out Feb 2013 15min Permalink
The rise and fall of Synanon, an addiction-recovery cult in California, and its charismatic leader, a one-time homeless wino named Chuck Dederich who taught his followers to berate each other for therapy.
George Pendle Cabinet Apr 2013 15min Permalink
The filmmaker on his relationship with former Manson Family member, currently serving a life sentence for murder. An excerpt from Role Models.
John Waters Huffington Post Aug 2009 1h Permalink
Tyson on his childhood in Brooklyn and the man who changed his life. An excerpt from his upcoming memoir, Undisputed Truth.
Mike Tyson New York Oct 2013 20min Permalink
Each soldier in Iraq and Afghanistan generated around 10 pounds of garbage per day. Most of that trash—along with used equipment and medical supplies and other wastes of war—was burned in open-air pits, emitting a toxic smoke that many soliders blame for their poor health today.
Katie Drummond The Verge Oct 2013 Permalink
Bibek Dhong traveled from Nepal to Malaysia to test cameras for the new iPhone 5. When production ended abruptly, he and his coworkers found themselves stranded for two months without money, food or passports.
Cam Simpson Businessweek Nov 2013 15min Permalink
A technical, thrilling account of how Pinboard, a tiny bookmarking service, dealt with the fire hose of new users after news leaked that Yahoo would discontinue Pinboard’s massive rival, Delicious.
Maciej Ceglowski Pinboard Blog Mar 2011 Permalink
In 1967, Stanley Ann Dunham took her 6-year-old son, Barry, on an adventure to Indonesia. An excerpt from A Singular Woman: The Untold Story of Barack Obama’s Mother.
Janny Scott New York Times Magazine Apr 2011 25min Permalink
Benjamin Korman 7STOPS Sep 2011 10min Permalink
A group of misfit boys from the fringes of Las Vegas form a clique. Then, with murky motives, they decide to murder one of their own and bury him in a desert pit.
Vanessa Grigoriadis Salon Mar 2007 25min Permalink
An essay on craft, excerpted from Writing About Architecture: Mastering the Language of Buildings and Cities.
Alexandra Lange Places Journal Mar 2012 10min Permalink