Rotten Ice
Traveling by dogsled in the melting Arctic.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Good Quality Magnesium Sulfate in China.
Traveling by dogsled in the melting Arctic.
Gretel Ehrlich Harper's Apr 2015 10min Permalink
A Kenyan runner loses himself in Alaska.
Seth Wickersham ESPN May 2012 20min Permalink
Life on an oil rig in the Arctic.
Jeanne Marie Laskas GQ Sep 2008 40min Permalink
Experiments in making others feel good.
Tom Chiarella Esquire Sep 2009 10min Permalink
Life in Nucla, Colorado.
Lois Beckett The Guardian Jul 2017 20min Permalink
Skiing in the shadow of Mount Everest.
Chris Ballard Sports Illustrated Feb 2020 30min Permalink
A story of America in three scams.
Richard Warnica Hazlitt Dec 2021 1h Permalink
In 2009, three followers of an Oprah-endorsed motivational speaker named James Arthur Ray died in an Arizona sweat lodge. Now, after serving two years in prison for negligent homicide, Ray is trying to get back on the self-help circuit.
Matt Stroud The Verge Dec 2013 25min Permalink
In 1916, a pair of 29-year-old women, bored with their lives in Upstate New York, took teaching jobs in a remote area of the Rocky Mountains. This is the story of what they found.
Dorothy Wickenden New Yorker Apr 2009 30min Permalink
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 the unlikeliest murder suspects in the city’s history.”
Matthew McGough The Atlantic Jun 2011 35min Permalink
In 2005, the prisoner who had set the U.S. penal system record for years in solitary confinement was moved to what’s called “the Alcatraz of the Rockies”—a jail in Colorado built just for him.
Alan Prendergast Westword Aug 2007 20min Permalink
When New York built a prison designed to house two men in a single cell, it launched a new experiment in crime control. A look at life inside this prison and in the tiny town surrounding it.
Jennifer Gonnerman Village Voice May 1999 20min Permalink
A profile of Viktor Bout, believed to be the largest arms trafficker in the world. A Russian who bought his first cargo planes at age 25, Bout has been in the news recently after being arrested in Thailand.
Peter Landesman New York Times Magazine Aug 2003 30min Permalink
It was the middle of the day in the steamy Philippine jungle and the sun was merciless. Director Francis Ford Coppola, dressed in rumpled white Mao pajamas, was slowly making his way upriver in a motor launch.
Maureen Orth Newsweek Jun 1977 15min Permalink
Last fall, when the deadliest blaze in America in a century blew through Northern California, thousands of people—including those in the tiny community of Helltown—were forced to flee. This is the story of four friends who stayed to fight.
Robert P. Baird GQ Apr 2019 30min Permalink
In late 2018, Pittsburgh’s Jewish community was mourning the deadliest antisemitic attack in U.S. history. Then a stranger and his family landed in their midst.
How the former CEO of McKinsey, who was indicted in the largest insider trading case in United States history, got played.
Anita Raghavan New York Times Magazine May 2013 20min Permalink
On the trail of Austin Tice and the late James Foley, freelance journalists who were kidnapped in Syria in 2012.
James Harkin Vanity Fair Apr 2014 20min Permalink
What the neighborhood of Higher Blackley in Manchester says about “one of the least understood and most discriminated-against groups in society.”
Simon Kuper Financial Times Jun 2014 10min Permalink
On the platonic but volatile relationship between fashion designer Alexander McQueen, who committed suicide in 2010 and professional muse Isabella Blow, who committed suicide in 2007.
Maureen Callahan Vanity Fair Aug 2014 20min Permalink
Why do Syrian civilians in a Turkish camp live in relative luxury?
Mac McClelland New York Times Magazine Feb 2014 25min Permalink
How four prisoners in solitary confinement launched the largest hunger strike in American history.
Benjamin Wallace-Wells New York Feb 2014 30min Permalink
In Silicon Valley, up all night coding in the dorms with the aspiring Mark Zuckerbergs of tomorrow.
Christopher Beam New York Sep 2011 15min Permalink
Alumni report in secret on Delphian, the mysterious boarding school that Scientology built in the mountains of Oregon.
Benjamin Carlson The Daily Sep 2011 Permalink
In 1988, 59 fifth graders in Washington D.C. were promised a free college education. This is the story of what followed.
Paul Schwartzman Washington Post Dec 2011 40min Permalink