Delay, Deny and Deflect: How Facebook’s Leaders Fought Through Crisis
On the lengths Mark Zuckberberg and Sheryl Sandberg have gone to protect their power.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which is the biggest magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules manufacturer.
On the lengths Mark Zuckberberg and Sheryl Sandberg have gone to protect their power.
Sheera Frenkel, Nicholas Confessore, Cecilia Kang, Matthew Rosenberg, Jack Nicas New York Times Nov 2018 25min Permalink
A Q&A with Twitter’s CEO on right-wing extremism, Candace Owens, and what he’d do if the president called on his followers to murder journalists.
Ashley Feinberg Huffington Post Jan 2019 20min Permalink
On life in New York with an impossible neighbor named Jared.
Sloane Crosley New Yorker Mar 2018 25min Permalink
Ankle bracelets are promoted as a humane alternative to jail. But private companies charge defendants hundreds of dollars a month to wear the surveillance devices. If people can’t pay, they may end up behind bars.
Ava Kofman ProPublica Jul 2019 25min Permalink
It took only a handful of people to wrongly convict Ed Ates of murder. It took an army to free him from prison. Now comes the hard part.
Michael Hall Texas Monthly Aug 2019 40min Permalink
No one can seem to agree on his surviving merits. He wrote like an angel, the consensus goes, except when he was writing like a malfunctioning sex robot attempting to administer cunnilingus to his typewriter.
Patricia Lockwood London Review of Books Oct 2019 30min Permalink
Until recently, it was possible to believe that there was a middle way, or to be in denial that a decisive moment would come. That’s no longer the case.
Sam Knight New Yorker Nov 2019 25min Permalink
Faith Hope Consolo had the entire press fooled, including us. Then a message came in.
Julie Satow New York Times Jan 2020 15min Permalink
After sitting alone in a forest and not moving for 24 hours, the author reflects on time, mortality, and turning 40.
Mark O'Connell Guardian Jan 2020 25min Permalink
Cancer has taken his voice, but the unlikeliest movie star in Hollywood history still has a lot he wants to say.
Taffy Brodesser-Akner New York Times Magazine May 2020 30min Permalink
Anand Patwardhan spent decades tracking the rise of Hindu nationalism. And now, under an increasingly repressive government, he holds his screenings in secret.
Abhrajyoti Chakraborty New York Times Nov 2020 25min Permalink
His verbal stumbles have voters worried about his mental fitness. Maybe they’d be more understanding if they knew he’s still fighting a stutter.
John Hendrickson The Atlantic Nov 2019 25min Permalink
The fast rise and even faster fall of a trader who bet big with borrowed money.
While many trans athletes have become political lightning rods, nonbinary people like Layshia Clarendon are left out of the conversation. In a sex-segregated sports world, where do they fit in?
Britni de la Cretaz Sports Illustrated Apr 2021 20min Permalink
Secret codes. Legal threats. Betrayal. How one couple built a device to fix McDonald’s notoriously broken soft-serve machines—and how the fast-food giant froze them out.
Andy Greenberg Wired Apr 2021 30min Permalink
Sentenced to life in prison at 16, Adolfo Davis hoped a Supreme Court ruling would give him a chance at a new beginning. But nothing about freedom turned out as he expected.
Maddy Crowell The Atavist Magazine May 2021 40min 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 30min Permalink
Federal agencies have long struggled to stop illegal fishing and drug smuggling in the Gulf of Mexico. In recent years, it’s only gotten worse.
John Burnett Texas Monthly Nov 2021 Permalink
Authorities say an American electronics engineer committed suicide after working on a project involving a Chinese telecom giant. His family believes he was murdered.
Raymond Bonner, Christine Spolar The Financial Times Feb 2013 20min Permalink
How the author of Friday Night Lights spent more than half a million dollars over three years on “eighty-one leather jackets, seventy-five pairs of boots, forty-one pairs of leather pants, thirty-two pairs of haute couture jeans, ten evening jackets, and 115 pairs of leather gloves.”
Buzz Bissinger GQ Mar 2013 25min Permalink
On former nursing student One L. Goh, who killed six people at Oikos University in Oakland, California, and what it means to the Korean immigrant community.
Jay Caspian Kang New York Times Magazine Mar 2013 20min Permalink
Feature Writing, Reporting, Essays and Criticism, Public Interest — a full list of the nominees announced today.
Not availble in full:
"Agent Zapata" (Mary Cuddehe • The Atavist)
“Cancer's Racial Divide” (Adam Smeltz • Pittsburgh Tribune-Review)
“Solitary in Iran nearly broke me. Then I went inside America’s prisons.”
Shane Bauer Mother Jones Oct 2012 10min
How personal information may be used to target you with online ads.
Lois Beckett ProPublica Jun 2012 10min
An amateur linguist loses control of his creation.
Joshua Foer New Yorker Dec 2012 35min
Repetitive motions and no breaks can cause lifelong problems.
Jason Gonzalez Minneapolis Star Tribune Jul 2012 10min
Each year, some 4,500 American workers die on the job and 50,000 perish from occupational diseases. Millions more are hurt and sickened at workplaces, and many others are cheated of wages and abused. A series exploring threats to workers—and the corporate and regulatory factors that endanger them.
A profile of a General Motors CEO Mark Reuss.
Tim Higgins Bloomberg News Oct 2012 15min
In the waning days of summer, at hospitals scattered across the country, teams of physicians faced the same mystery — patients with life-threatening infections with an unknown cause. Ultimately, they would discover that these seemingly isolated cases were the leading edge of an unprecedented outbreak of a rare fungal meningitis.
Carolyn Johnson The Boston Globe Oct 2012
On the struggle for justice and a place to call home.
Paul Kiel ProPublica Apr 2012 1h10min
On the first presidential debate.
Ezra Klein The Washington Post Oct 2012 10min
Mementos left at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial and the man in charge of cataloging them.
Rachel Manteuffel Washingtonian Oct 2012 25min
Army Spc. Erik Schei was shot in the head in Iraq. This is the story of his recovery.
Megan McCloskey Stars and Stripes Nov 2012 15min
Analysis of a decade of federal data shows general public detected far more spills than leak detection technology.
Lisa Song InsideClimate News Sep 2012 10min
Apr–Dec 2012 Permalink
On Cops, cop movies and Ferguson.
Wesley Morris Grantland Aug 2014 15min Permalink
How the tech billionaire came to own 87,000 acres, three hotels, a wastewater treatment plant, a cemetery and 380 cats.
Jon Mooallem New York Times Magazine Sep 2014 30min Permalink