Next Year in Jerusalem
When her brother embraced Orthodox Judaism, the author began to question her own reality and went to Israel to find some answers.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
When her brother embraced Orthodox Judaism, the author began to question her own reality and went to Israel to find some answers.
Ellen Willis Rolling Stone Apr 1977 1h20min Permalink
How the VFX industry plateaued —and where it might go from here.
Bilge Ebiri New York Dec 2018 15min Permalink
What happens when people who have trouble fitting into a traditional workplace get one designed just for them?
Susan Dominus The New York Times Magazine Feb 2019 30min Permalink
The World Wide Fund for Nature funds vicious paramilitary forces to fight poaching.
Tom Warren, Katie J.M. Baker Buzzfeed News Mar 2019 25min Permalink
Vivia, an intellectually disabled woman, had long wanted a child but decided instead to adopt a doll.
Bianca Giaever The Believer Jun 2019 25min Permalink
Last October, Super Typhoon Yutu wreaked havoc on Saipan. Today, residents still struggle—and no one feels it more than the kids.
Rachel Ramirez Grist Oct 2019 10min Permalink
In January 2000, American Pyscho bombed at Sundance. It was just the beginning.
Tim Molloy MovieMaker Jan 2020 Permalink
A statewide movement wants to remove populist Mike Dunleavy from office.
Dan Kaufman New Yorker Mar 2020 30min Permalink
Visas for farmworkers have surged under Trump. But the program has subjected some workers to horrific abuse.
Suzy Khimm, Daniella Silva NBC Jul 2020 20min Permalink
Filipino teachers, hired to fill historic shortages in the South and elsewhere, fight their exploitation by opportunistic recruiters.
Rachel Mabe Oxford American Aug 2020 30min Permalink
At a laboratory in Manhattan, researchers have discovered how SARS-CoV-2 uses our defenses against us.
James Somers The New Yorker Nov 2020 30min Permalink
Searching for Dave Chappelle ten years after he left his show.
Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah The Believer Oct 2013 35min Permalink
As a diagnosis, it’s too vague to be helpful—but its rise tells us a lot about the way we work.
Jill Lepore New Yorker May 2021 15min Permalink
For decades, poppers have been the go-to sex drug for gay men. But where do they come from?
David Mack Buzzfeed Jul 2021 20min Permalink
In Austin and cities around the country, prices are skyrocketing, forcing regular people to act like speculators. When will it end?
Using his good looks and charm to lure over young women into his VW, Bundy terrorized the Pacific Northwest and then Utah, leaving over 30 corpses in desolate forest gravesite clusters. After being caught in Colorado, he escaped twice, the second time fleeing to Florida by train and going on a murderous rampage.
TM The only other time I saw you was in Bleecker Bob’s in the ‘70s. You walked in eating pizza and wearing aviator glasses and Bleecker Bob showed you an Ian Dury picture sleeve and you said, “I don’t listen to music by people I don’t wanna fuck.” PS (laughter) Yeah, that was me.
Patti Smith, Thurston Moore BOMB Magazine Nov 1996 20min Permalink
She went to jail 35 years ago after driving the getaway car in an infamous robbery and defiantly refusing to admit the act was wrong. Her sentence was 75 years. But something changed in prison — Judy Clark went from radical to model inmate. This week her sentence was commuted.
Tom Robbins New York Times Magazine Jan 2012 25min Permalink
The fight over an alleged Israeli war crime.
Batya Ungar-Sargon Tablet May 2014 30min Permalink
The Harvard Law professsor on billionaires, politics and Uber.
Nitasha Tiku Valleywag Jun 2014 15min Permalink
An investigation into how Rikers Island guards treat the roughly 4,000 inmates who are mentally ill.
Michael Winerip, Michael Schwirtz New York Times Jul 2014 20min Permalink
A journey on the Sunset Limited, which ferries people from Louisiana to California.
Nathaniel Rich New York Times Magazine Feb 2013 20min Permalink
Longform’s guide to murder, corruption, extortion, and incompetence - committed by police officers around the country.
A murder case in Los Angeles, cold since the late ’80s, heats up thanks to breakthroughs in forensic science and leads detectives to one of their own.
Matthew McGough Atlantic Jun 2011 35min
The rise and fall of the Seven-Seven—stationed in the war zone of 1980’s Crown Heights, Brooklyn—and how an idealistic young recruit became part of cash-snatching, drug-reselling, renegade clique of cops.
Michael Daly New York Dec 1986 30min
Rogue cops in the LAPD Rampart division’s anti-gang CRASH unit (Community Resources Against Street Hoodlums) were involved in everything from drug smuggling and bank robberies to, allegedly, the murder of Notorious BIG.
A cop kills a fellow officer during a drug bust and claims it was an accident. Others suspect that it wasn’t.
Sean Flynn GQ Aug 2008 35min
How the New Orleans Police Department failed during Hurricane Katrina.
Dan Baum New Yorker Jan 2006 45min
In 2008, a Brooklyn cop grew gravely concerned about how the public was being served. So he began carrying a digital sound recorder, secretly recording his colleagues and superiors.
Graham Rayman Village Voice May 2010 25min
It can’t be all bad! Here’s the story of a group that posed as cops and built “most far-flung, most organized, and most brazen example of homosexual extortion in the nation’s history” before the law enforcement took them down.
William McGowan Slate Jul 2012 30min
Dec 1986 – Jul 2012 Permalink
Two sisters help detectives solve a decades-old cold case by identifying their father as their mother’s killer.
Michael E. Miller The Miami New Times May 2013 20min Permalink
A family’s struggle with mental illness and the criminal justice system.
Brantley Hargrove Dallas Observer Sep 2012 25min Permalink