To Die For
Robert Blake, Bonny Lee Bakley, and the misery of celebrity.
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Robert Blake, Bonny Lee Bakley, and the misery of celebrity.
David Grann The New Republic Aug 2001 20min Permalink
A scholarly dispute devolves into criminal impersonation.
Batya Ungar-Sargon Tablet Jan 2013 10min Permalink
The life and work of Aaron Swartz, in context.
Tim Carmody The Verge Jan 2013 25min Permalink
How Zion, Ill., a fundamentalist Christian settlement with a population of 6,250, created one of the most popular stations in the country during the early days of radio.
Cliff Doerksen Chicago Reader May 2002 25min
On conservative radio host John Ziegler and modern media.
David Foster Wallace Atlantic Apr 2005 1h30min
An oral history of WFAN, the first all-sports talk radio station.
Alex French and Howie Kahn Grantland Jul 2012 1h5min
A profile of Michael Savage.
Kelefa Sanneh New Yorker Aug 2009 25min
On the BBC radio addresses of E.M. Forster.
Zadie Smith New York Review of Books Aug 2008 20min
A profile of Ira Glass a few years into This American Life.
Marshall Sella New York Times Magazine Apr 1999 20min
On Beck’s rise, pre-fall.
Alexander Zaitchik Salon Sep 2009 15min
Apr 1999 – Jul 2012 Permalink
A conversation about a new art form called “creative journalism,” conducted the same month In Cold Blood was published.
Truman Capote, George Plimpton New York Times Jan 1966 35min
An interview with Talese on his career and daily writing routine.
Katie Roiphe Paris Review 50min
An interview with Katherine Boo about how you cover the world’s poorest.
Emily Brennan Guernica Sep 2012 10min
An essay on motivation.
George Orwell Gangrel Jun 1946 10min
Notes for the next generation.
Lester Bangs Shakin' Street Gazette Dec 1998 20min
And interview with The New Yorker’s John McPhee about how his style has evolved and his routine has endured.
Peter Hessler Paris Review 55min
A manifesto from one of the first professional bloggers on a new “golden age of journalism.”
Andrew Sullivan Atlantic Nov 2008 20min
Jun 1946 – Sep 2012 Permalink
One of the earliest in-depth reports on climate change, Revkin’s piece introduced many to the issue—and to the challenges of addressing it.
Andrew C. Revkin Discover Oct 1988
The perilous existence of the world’s glaciers, “global warming’s ticking time bomb.”
Ben Wallace-Wells Rolling Stone Sep 2010 30min
Why don’t TV weathermen believe in climate change?
Charles Homans Columbia Journalism Review Jan 2010 15min
On the possibilities of geo-engineering.
Graeme Wood Atlantic Jul 2009 15min
The story of how Washington blew its best shot to do something on climate change.
Ryan Lizza New Yorker Oct 2010 40min
Inside the increasingly hostile global-warming debate.
Tom Clynes Popular Science Jun 2012 20min
A primer on climate change economics.
Paul Krugman New York Times Magazine Apr 2010 30min
Oct 1988 – Jun 2012 Permalink
The thin, resentful line between comic and audience.
Patton Oswalt pattonoswalt.com Jun 2013 Permalink
A Chinese underwear merchant rises in Egypt.
Peter Hessler New Yorker Aug 2015 30min Permalink
Meet Britain’s “Batman of obscenity.”
Edward Docx The Guardian Sep 2015 30min Permalink
Inside New Haven’s Special Victims Unit.
Kathy Dobie New York Times Magazine Jan 2016 35min Permalink
A conversation about God, anxiety, and the monkey.
Caity Weaver GQ Feb 2016 20min Permalink
Be nice and listen.
Charles Duhigg New York Times Magazine Feb 2016 20min Permalink
A profile of Pope Francis.
James Carroll New Yorker Dec 2013 40min Permalink
What happened before a woman killed two cyclists.
Sarah Schweitzer Boston Globe Feb 2014 15min Permalink
A reporter on how violent sex helped ease her PTSD.
Mac McClelland Good Jun 2011 10min Permalink
Another look at a popular myth.
For the longest time blues fans didn’t even know what their hero looked like—in 1971, a music magazine even hired a forensic artist to make a composite sketch based on various first-hand accounts—until two photos of Robert Johnson finally came to light. The dapper young man pictured in the most famous photo, dressed in a stylish suit and smiling affably at the camera, hardly looks like a man who has sold his soul to Lucifer.
Ted Gioia Alibi Magazine Aug 2011 Permalink
An essay on heritage, history and literature.
John Jeremiah Sullivan New York Times Magazine Feb 2012 25min Permalink
A portrait of Trayvon Martin’s killer.
Chris Francescani Reuters Apr 2012 10min Permalink
Where crazy things seem normal and normal things seem crazy.
Chuck Klosterman Esquire Jul 2005 Permalink
A profile of the former acting attorney general.
Ryan Lizza New Yorker May 2017 20min Permalink
A man goes searching for his past.
Benjamin Percy Men's Journal Sep 2017 20min Permalink
How a cartel invented and marketed the modern diamond.
Edward Jay Epstein The Atlantic Feb 1982 40min Permalink
Jessica Sidman Washingtonian Dec 2017 15min Permalink
A step-by-step account.
Peter Stark Outside Jan 1997 15min Permalink
An interview with the novelist.
Isaac Chotiner New Yorker Apr 2019 10min Permalink