William Langewiesche on Longform
From shipbreakers in India to a sniper in Afghanistan, organized crime in Naples to pirates in the Gulf of Aden — browse our complete archive of more than 20 articles by William Langewiesche.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Magnesium sulphate Exports from China.
From shipbreakers in India to a sniper in Afghanistan, organized crime in Naples to pirates in the Gulf of Aden — browse our complete archive of more than 20 articles by William Langewiesche.
From grizzlies in Alaska to whales at SeaWorld, stories of animals turning on humans. At Slate.
Iran’s sex-obsessed old guard reacts to a state where “the majority of the population is young.… Young people by nature are horny. Because they are horny, they like to watch satellite channels where there are films or programs they can jerk off to.… We have to do something about satellite television to keep society free from this horny jerk-off situation.”
Karim Sadjadpour Foreign Policy Apr 2012 30min Permalink
She was a thirteen-year-old from the Chabad Lubavitch community who would dip into a barbershop bathroom to swap her orthodox clothes for those of a streetwalker. Her pimping and rape allegations against a group of black men in their twenties, repeatedly recanted and then reaffirmed, would send the D.A.’s office into disarray.
Alan Feuer, Colin Moynihan New York Times Jun 2012 10min Permalink
From Joe Paterno to coal miners, the rodeo to fruit pickers, our story picks by the GQ correspondent.
Laskas on Longform.
The Cosmo editor and author of Sex and the Single Girl’s rocky real-life relationships.
Gerri Hirshey New York Apr 2016 15min Permalink
When the most famous amnesiac in history died, the battle for custody of his brain began.
Luke Dittrich New York Times Magazine Aug 2016 25min Permalink
After Moneyball became a best-seller, Michael Lewis learned that many of the ideas it presented to the general public had actually been introduced decades earlier by a pair of Israeli psychologists.
Adapted from The Undoing Project: A Friendship That Changed Our Minds.
Michael Lewis Vanity Fair Nov 2016 30min Permalink
“Missy (Misdemeanor) Elliott, the twenty-five-year-old hip-hop performer who is energetically redefining the boundaries of rap music, is a singer, a songwriter, an arranger, a producer, and a talent scout. Six months ago, few people outside the music industry had heard of her; six months from now, it will be necessary to pretend that you’ve known about Missy Elliott for years.”
Hilton Als New Yorker Oct 1997 20min Permalink
In 1980, four American nuns were murdered in El Salvador. This is the story of how a young American official stationed there singlehandedly found the culprits.
Excerpted from Weakness and Deceit: America and El Salvador's Dirty War
Raymond Bonner The Atlantic Feb 2016 20min Permalink
Ahmed Naji’s novel was not overtly political, but the “protagonist performs cunnilingus, rolls hash joints and gulps from bottles of vodka” which led a lawyer to press charges against him for causing a fluctuation in his blood pressure when the novel was excerpted in a Cairo newspaper, even though it had been approved by censors.
Jonathan Guyer Rolling Stone Feb 2017 20min Permalink
Kids say it’s fun to take cars. They brag to each other about how many they’ve stolen and the sleekest models they’ve sped away in. They say they are bored and that it’s easy, sharing videos of themselves driving at 120 miles per hour. They smile with key fobs, offering rides on Facebook. But all of the biggest car thieves had something to run from.
Lisa Gartner, Zachary T. Sampson Tampa Bay Times Aug 2017 20min Permalink
“Didion was one of the boys, clearly, in the sense that men had noticed her writing and wanted to publish her. But she also couldn’t quite fit into their regime.”
Michelle Dean Buzzfeed Mar 2018 20min Permalink
“For him, I was a blot on a spectacular ascent. For me, it was the opposite.”
Life as Steve Jobs's daughter when he denied being your dad.
Lisa Brennan-Jobs Vanity Fair Aug 2018 15min Permalink
Within the world of law enforcement, bounty hunting is something of an aberration. An accident arising from the combination of common law, frontier justice, chattel slavery, and capitalism. No other job is more American. Bounty hunting’s legality is a mishmash of confusing requirements, regulations, and certifications that vary widely by state.
Jeff Winkler GQ Jul 2019 35min Permalink
They were an organized group of ex-strippers, plus a few role players recruited from Craigslist. They fished for marks in strip clubs, Wall Street cocktail bars, and even TGI Fridays, and then lured them to strip clubs. The marks woke up with little memory of the night before and their credit cards maxed out.
Jessica Pressler New York Dec 2015 30min Permalink
The stories that sprung up around if not quite about Trump were as brutal and lazy as the man himself; they teased themselves endlessly from one episode to the next, building toward a brutal grand finale in which America’s heroes would murder its villains, on TV, at some time to-be-determined.
David Roth Defector Jan 2021 10min Permalink
Over the last several years, millions of dollars worth of antique rhino horns have been stolen form collections around the world. The only thing more unusual than the crimes is the theory about who is responsible: A handful of families from rural Ireland known as the Rathkeale Rovers.
Charles Homans The Atavist Magazine Mar 2014 1h15min Permalink
From football fields in Texas to the real Ridgemont High, a collection of picks to help remember a time you might rather forget.
On the start of the high school football season in Odessa, Texas. An adaptation published alongside the release of Bissinger’s 1990 book of the same name, which led to the movie and the show.
Buzz Bissinger Sports Illustrated Sep 1990 25min
Her suicide made headlines around the world after classmates were indicted on felony charges related to bullying, but the real story wasn’t that simple.
Emily Bazelon Slate Jul 2010 15min
At age 22, the author went undercover at his old high school. An excerpt of the book that became the film.
Cameron Crowe Playboy Sep 1981 15min
Mr. Lindwall was the only high school teacher who understood him. Then Mr. Lindwall went to jail, and it was his turn to try to understand.
Robert Kurson Esquire Mar 2000
Sixteen years after graduating, an alumnus heads back to his old stomping grounds in Cleveland.
Devin Friedman GQ Nov 2006 30min
How two love-struck, type-A high school students almost got away with murder.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Dec 1996 40min
Navigating life as a brilliant teenage girl.
David Finkel Washington Post Jun 1993 30min
The profile of a 34-year-old woman named Charity Johnson who tricked people all over the country into believing she was still in high school.
Katie J.M. Baker Buzzfeed Sep 2014 20min
An essay on a fatal car crash in the author’s youth.
Michael Paterniti GQ Mar 2015 30min
The science behind why high school sucks.
Jennifer Senior New York Jan 2013 15min
Sep 1981 – Mar 2015 Permalink
From grizzlies in Alaska to whales at SeaWorld, a collection stories of animals turning on humans.
On Timothy Treadwell, later immortalized in Grizzly Man, who lived and died by the bears of Alaska.
Ned Zeman Vanity Fair May 2004 40min
The life story of Travis the chimp and the family of tow truck operators who raised him like a human child before it all ended in tragedy.
Dan P. Lee New York Jan 2011 25min
The life story of Tilikum, a killer whale who dragged his SeaWorld trainer into the pool and drowned her in 2010. It was the third time the orca had been involved in a death during his 27 years in captivity.
Tim Zimmerman Outside Jul 2010 35min
Encountering a pack of wild dogs in Manhattan.
Rebecca Skloot New York May 2005 10min
“Joe’s hand began to tingle, and he called the group together. The toxins would leave his system in 48 hours, he said. He’d be conscious the whole time.”
Mark W. Moffett Outside Apr 2002 10min
After two people are found dead in Yellowstone National Park, a team of investigators tracks down the unlikely culprit: a grizzly bear.
Jessica Grose Slate Apr 2012 40min
Apr 2002 – Apr 2012 Permalink
Keiko, Nessie, and giant squids: a collection of picks on animals from the deep.
An obsessive marine biologist gambles his savings, family, and sanity on a quest to be the first to capture a live giant squid.
David Grann New Yorker May 2004 45min
A trip to a lobster festival leads to an examination of the culinary and ethical dimensions of cooking a live, possibly sentient, creature.
David Foster Wallace Gourmet Aug 2004 30min
Stalking the disappearing bluefin tuna, the world’s most valuable wild animal.
John Seabrook Harper's Jun 1994 30min
A trip to Scotland and an investigation of enduring belief.
Tom Bissell VQR Dec 1998 35min
On the mysterious and moderately intelligent giant Pacific octopus.
Sy Montgomery Orion Oct 2011 20min
A profile of a celebrity whale.
Susan Orlean New Yorker Sep 2002 25min
In 1992, a Chinese freighter tipped violently in a storm dumping a load of plastic floating infant toys—7,200 red beavers, 7,200 green frogs, 7,200 blue turtles, and 7,200 yellow ducks—to the open sea. This is their story.
Donovan Hohn Harper's Jan 2007 1h35min
In February 2010, a killer whale named Tilikum dragged his SeaWorld trainer into the pool and drowned her. It was the third time the orca had been involved in a death during his 27 years in captivity. This is his story.
Tim Zimmermann Outside Jul 2010 35min
The story of the loneliest whale in the world.
Leslie Jamison The Atavist Magazine Aug 2014 50min
Jun 1994 – Aug 2014 Permalink
“It’s the American view that everything has to keep climbing: productivity, profits, even comedy. No time for reflection. No time to contract before another expansion. No time to grow up. No time to fuck up. No time to learn from your mistakes. But that notion goes against nature, which is cyclical.”
George Carlin, Sam Merrill Playboy Jan 1980 55min Permalink
Last year, a group of young Romanians stole millions of euros worth of art from the Kunsthal museum in Rotterdam. They had previously only robbed homes and thought the artwork would be easy to sell. It was not. So they secreted it back home, where, in an effort to save her son, the leader’s mother burned it.
Lex Boon NRC Handelsblad Oct 2013 Permalink
An interview with Philip Roth on his career, his critics, and his retirement, which he began by re-reading his 31 books to "see whether I’d wasted my time."
More from the Longform archive: writers on writing.
Daniel Sandström, Philip Roth Svenska Dagbladet Mar 2014 10min Permalink
A profile of the highest paid coach in college basketball. A pioneer of one-and-done recruiting, Calipari is also the only coach in NCAA history to have two runs to the Final Four removed from the record books for rules violations.
S.L. Price Sports Illustrated Mar 2011 30min Permalink