The One-Man Drug Company
Lenny makes $5,000 a week selling coke. It was easy to get into the business after finishing prep school. Getting out and going legit after his final score is proving much more difficult.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which is the biggest magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules manufacturer.
Lenny makes $5,000 a week selling coke. It was easy to get into the business after finishing prep school. Getting out and going legit after his final score is proving much more difficult.
David Amsden New York Apr 2006 25min Permalink
In an Oklahoma City neighborhood usually left off city maps, the federal government is implementing its $300 million anti-poverty plan: teaching poor Americans how to get married.
Katherine Boo New Yorker Aug 2003 50min Permalink
The Bohemian Grove is an exclusive, all-male club made up of Presidents, ambassadors, and other world leaders, with a 33 year waiting list for membership. Their booze-soaked annual retreat outside of San Francisco had never been infiltrated—until this story.
Philip Weiss Spy Nov 1989 Permalink
We now know that most mass extinctions in Earth’s history were caused by the same thing. What we don’t know is when it will happen next.
Howard Lee Ars Technica Nov 2017 15min Permalink
At a South Korean laboratory, a once-disgraced doctor is replicating hundreds of deceased pets for the rich and famous.
David Ewing Duncan Vanity Fair Aug 2018 20min Permalink
Black women have been telling the truth about America for a long time. As a Black woman in journalism, my obligation is no less than that.
More than 100,000 city public school students lack permanent housing, caught in bureaucratic limbo that often seems like a trap. This is what their lives are like.
Samantha M. Shapiro New York Times Magazine Sep 2020 50min Permalink
When an 11-year-old Black girl in Jim Crow America discovers a seemingly worthless plot of land she has inherited is worth millions, everything in her life changes—and the walls begin to close in.
Lauren N. Henley Truly*Adventurous Feb 2021 20min Permalink
The Christian organization Teen Challenge, made up of more than a thousand centers, claims to reform troubled teens. But is its discipline more like abuse?
Rachel Aviv New Yorker Oct 2021 Permalink
On the sins of the lazy translator.
Vladimir Nabokov The New Republic Aug 1941 10min Permalink
A 9-part series on the past, present and future of the BBC.
Charlotte Higgins The Guardian Apr–Aug 2014 3h Permalink
On the universal drive to grow and reproduce.
Annie Dillard The Atlantic Nov 1973 25min Permalink
The aftermath of a stranger’s death and the puzzle of psychosis.
Christopher Frizzelle The Stranger Aug 2012 25min Permalink
The anatomy of a bungled, massively expensive undercover sting conducted by the Seattle Police Department.
Brendan Kiley The Stranger May 2011 35min Permalink
The long arm of the DEA reaches into Liberia to bust a cocaine trafficker.
Yudhijit Bhattacharjee The Guardian Mar 2015 20min Permalink
The events that led the writer to spend 60 days in jail.
Alexis Paige The Rumpus Mar 2015 15min Permalink
The politics and rhetoric of Trevor Noah’s appointment as the new host of the Daily Show.
Wesley Morris Grantland Apr 2015 15min Permalink
The musicians of Mali find themselves in the middle of a civil war.
Joshua Hammer The Atavist May 2015 35min Permalink
The taming of the political reporter.
Alessandra Stanley, Maureen Dowd GQ Sep 1988 25min Permalink
The story of an 80-year-old hoax.
Michael LaPointe The Atlantic May 2018 35min Permalink
When the Swiss Alps heat up, the ice gives up bodies and secrets.
Sean Flynn GQ Oct 2018 20min Permalink
Survivors of the real ‘Central Park Five’ attacker speak for the first time.
Sarah Weinman The Cut Jun 2019 25min Permalink
Apocalypse camp at the dawn of the Great Extinction.
Lauren Groff Harper's Feb 2020 25min Permalink
A week in the life of a family weathering the coronavirus.
Reyhan Harmanci The Cut Apr 2020 10min Permalink
In the age of citizen journalism, smartphones and streaming video, bearing witness to human rights violations is getting easier. Is it also making justice more complicated?
Matthew Shaer New York Times Magazine Feb 2015 20min Permalink