Saving for a Daughter But Not a Son
A father’s attempt to combat the wage gap.
"How do we give Ivy the same opportunities as Abe? Do we praise her 21.7 percent more? Hug her 21.7 percent harder?"
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate pentahydrate.
A father’s attempt to combat the wage gap.
"How do we give Ivy the same opportunities as Abe? Do we praise her 21.7 percent more? Hug her 21.7 percent harder?"
Lowell Wood helped bring down the Soviet Union, has created what could be the first concussion-free football helmet, and has regular brainstorming sessions with Bill Gates. He also drives a 20-year-old Toyota with 300,000 miles on it.
Ashlee Vance Bloomberg Businessweek Oct 2015 15min Permalink
Since exposing the Neapolitan mafia by publishing Gomorrah at age 27, Roberto Saviano has lived for nearly a decade under armed guard, shuttling between anonymous hotels and army barracks.
Roberto Saviano The Guardian Jan 2015 15min Permalink
During WWII, a bomber crashes into the Pacific and the crewmen begin an epic battle against dehydration, exposure, and endless attacks by sharks. Adapted from Laura Hillenbrand’s Unbroken.
Laura Hillenbrand Vanity Fair Dec 2010 35min Permalink
“The writer/speaker has certain political convictions or affiliations, and proceeds to filter all reality and spin all assertion according to those convictions and loyalties. Everybody’s pissed off and exasperated and impervious to argument from any other side.”
Dave Eggers, David Foster Wallace The Believer Nov 2003 25min Permalink
What did $3M paid to a US consulting firm get Qaddafi? A glowing profile in The New Republic, written by a Harvard professor, who travelled to Tripoli to interview him. On the consulting company’s dime. Which he failed to disclose.
David Corn, Siddhartha Mahanta Mother Jones Mar 2011 10min Permalink
The White House after Election Day.
David Remnick New Yorker Nov 2016 45min Permalink
As business declines amidst an opioid epidemic in America, Purdue Pharma’s owners the Sackler family are pursuing a new strategy: putting OxyContin in medicine cabinets around the world.
Harriet Ryan, Lisa Girion, Scott Glover LA Times Dec 2016 15min Permalink
Ira Tobolowsky, a prominent lawyer, was burned alive in his North Dallas garage. A strong suspect quickly emerged. So why can’t the cops solve the case?
Jamie Thompson D Magazine May 2017 30min Permalink
“There are no good options. But some are worse than others.”
Mark Bowden The Atlantic Jun 2017 30min Permalink
After school shootings, a teenager challenges the gun culture in her conservative Wyoming town.
Eli Saslow Washington Post May 2018 20min Permalink
After two months in the hospital, a mother finally got to take her premature baby home. Then she spent five years trying to convince him to eat.
Tahmima Anam The Guardian Apr 2019 35min Permalink
An “unknown energy source” has been blamed for debilitating symptoms suffered by Americans posted in Cuba. The real cause may be more surprising.
Dan Hurley New York Time Magazine May 2019 25min Permalink
Jared Lorenzen was a star quarterback in college. He won a Super Bowl. And just like the author, he has spent his entire life fighting, and losing, a battle with his weight.
Tommy Tomlinson ESPN the Magazine Aug 2014 15min Permalink
For eight years, a man without a memory lived among strangers at a hospital in Mississippi. But was recovering his identity the happy ending he was looking for?
Laura Todd Carns The Atavist Oct 2021 35min Permalink
Death on America’s racetracks:
At 2:11 p.m., as two ambulances waited with motors running, 10 horses burst from the starting gate at Ruidoso Downs Race Track 6,900 feet up in New Mexico’s Sacramento Mountains.
Nineteen seconds later, under a brilliant blue sky, a national champion jockey named Jacky Martin lay sprawled in the furrowed dirt just past the finish line, paralyzed, his neck broken in three places. On the ground next to him, his frightened horse, leg broken and chest heaving, was minutes away from being euthanized on the track. For finishing fourth on this early September day last year, Jacky Martin got about $60 and possibly a lifetime tethered to a respirator.
Dara L. Miles, Griffin Palmer, Joe Drape, Walt Bogdanich New York Times Mar 2012 25min Permalink
How the Newtown Bee covered Sandy Hook.
Rachel Aviv New Yorker Dec 2013 20min Permalink
Not available in full:
“The Playground” (Terrance McCoy • Amazon Kindle Singles)
Inside Moammar Gadhafi’s secret surveillance network.
Matthieu Aikins Wired May 2012 25min
Breakneck growth has made China an economic miracle. But will the destruction of families prove to be too high a cost?
Deborah Jian Lee, Sushma Subramanian Foreign Policy May 2012
How the museum-quality 55,000 film collection that an East Village video store gave away ended up in a small, possibly mob-run village in Sicily.
Karina Longworth Village Voice Sep 2012
The Kabul hospital that treats all sides.
Luke Mogelson New York Times Magazine May 2012 35min
Swift acceptance of gays by the Israeli military helped transform Israel into one of the most gay-friendly countries in the world.
Brian Schaefer Moment Magazine Sep 2012 15min
A profile of the world’s most notorious weapons trafficker.
Nicholas Schmidle New Yorker Mar 2012 35min
Unexploded ammunition near U.S. firing range poses peril for Afghans.
Kevin Sieff The Washington Post May 2012
An investigation into slavery in Mauritania.
Edythe McNamee, John D. Sutter CNN Mar 2012 30min
Thailand is the United States’ second-largest supplier of foreign seafood. The accounts of ex-slaves, Thai fishing syndicates, officials, exporters and anti-trafficking case workers, illuminate an opaque offshore supply chain enmeshed in slavery.
In 1982, the Guatemalan military massacred the villagers of Dos Erres, killing more than 200 people. Thirty years later, a Guatemalan living in the US got a phone call from a woman who told him that two boys had been abducted during the massacre – and he was one of them.
See also: “Finding Oscar” (Sebastian Rotella, Ana Arana • ProPublica, Fundación MEPI)
In 1982, the Guatemalan military massacred the villagers of Dos Erres, killing more than 200 people. Thirty years later, a Guatemalan living in the US got a phone call from a woman who told him that two boys had been abducted during the massacre – and he was one of them.
See also: “Finding Oscar” (Sebastian Rotella, Ana Arana • ProPublica, Fundación MEPI)
Mar–Sep 2012 Permalink
The writer, entering her thirties single and adrift, heads to San Francisco to spend time with Kink.com’s Princess Donna Dolore and attend a gangbang “where all the men were dressed as panda bears.”
Emily Witt n+1 May 2013 35min Permalink
Gretchen Molannen was perpetually aroused. She couldn’t work or sleep.
On December 1, the day after this story was published, she killed herself.
Leonora LaPeter Anton The Tampa Bay Times Nov 2012 10min Permalink
With Just Mayo, Josh Tetrick wanted to build the first sustainable-food unicorn. He’ll need to fend off the feds first.
Peter Waldman, Ellen Huet, Olivia Zaleski Businessweek Sep 2016 20min Permalink
“Those who were born in the U.S.S.R. and those born after its collapse do not share a common experience,” wrote Svetlana Alexievich, who won the Nobel Prize in literature in 2015. “It’s like they’re from different planets.”
Julia Ioffee National Geographic Nov 2016 15min Permalink
"I have the sensation, as do my friends, that to function as a proficient human, you must both 'keep up' with the internet and pursue more serious, analog interests."
An essay on technology’s reach into daily life.
Alice Gregory n+1 Nov 2010 10min Permalink
No one knew how Suzanne Jovin ended up in a wealthy neighborhood away from Yale’s campus in New Haven, or why she was brutally stabbed on the sidewalk, apparently by someone she knew. The only suspect that police named was her thesis advisor.
Suzanna Andrews Vanity Fair Aug 1999 35min Permalink
One student’s struggle, and the lawsuit that could put an end to a controversial “neutrality policy” in the Minnesota school district.
Jessica Lussenhop City Pages Sep 2011 10min Permalink