The Wolf Hunters of Wall Street
How Brad Katsuyama, a trader at the sleepy Royal Bank of Canada, discovered that the stock market was rigged and assembled a team to change it.
Adapted from Flash Boys: A Wall Street Revolt.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Suppliers of Magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
How Brad Katsuyama, a trader at the sleepy Royal Bank of Canada, discovered that the stock market was rigged and assembled a team to change it.
Adapted from Flash Boys: A Wall Street Revolt.
Michael Lewis New York Times Magazine Mar 2014 45min Permalink
David Headley helped plot the Mumbai terror attacks. Now his best friend is on trial for conspiring with him. The prosecution’s key witness: David Headley. The story of an informant trying to save his own life from the witness stand.
Liz Mermin The Caravan Jun 2011 30min Permalink
HEMINGWAY: You go to the races? PLIMPTON: Yes, occasionally. HEMINGWAY: Then you read the Racing Form . . . . There you have the true art of fiction.
Ernest Hemingway, George Plimpton The Paris Review Apr 1958 35min Permalink
She was the daughter of movie mogul Harry Warner. He was 15 years younger and embezzled her money, landing himself in jail. In prison, he offered a young inmate named Richard Matt $100,000 to kill her.
Greg Krikorian L.A. Times Jan 1992 Permalink
A portrait of Speidi today, complete with crystals, tequila and a vacillation “between having no regrets and having many.”
Andrew Gruttadaro Complex Oct 2015 Permalink
Searching for a ghost of Meyer Lansky’s Cuba, a sex-show star who quietly disappeared from the island and was later immortalized in The Godfather Part II.
Mitch Moxley Roads & Kingdoms Dec 2015 Permalink
The mysterious death of a champion Irish setter.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Jan 2016 15min Permalink
Michael Brown beat the odds by graduating from high school before his death—odds that remain stacked against black students in St. Louis and the rest of the country.
Nikole Hannah-Jones ProPublica Dec 2014 20min Permalink
The dramatic liberties a much-heralded film takes with historical fact show how hard it is to get complexity onto the big screen.
Darryl Pinckney New York Review of Books Feb 2015 15min Permalink
The man 27-year-old Victoria Donda believed to be her father shot himself after being revealed as a former member of an Argentinean death squad. Immediately after, a human rights group came to her with information on her birth parents: murdered political prisoners.
Mei-Ling Hopgood Marie Claire Jun 2011 Permalink
A visit to the newly on-the-market Jamesburg Earth Station, a massive satellite receiver that played a key role in communications with space, and its neighbors in an adjacent trailer park.
Alexis Madrigal The Atlantic Feb 2012 25min Permalink
An acquaintance dies in Iraq and a writer investigates. “How did Michael come to inspire such loyalty? And how did he come to die on the floodplain of the Euphrates? I looked closer and saw they were the same.”
Thomas Lake Atlanta Magazine May 2009 35min Permalink
Anatomy of an international incident; how three idealistic young American hikers wandered across the Kurdistan-Iran border and ended up in Iranian prison charged with spying.
Joshua Hammer Outside May 2010 20min Permalink
By the time Noura Jackson’s conviction was overturned, she had spent nine years in prison. This type of prosecutorial error is almost never punished.
Emily Bazelon New York Times Magazine Aug 2017 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
Dead construction workers, a corrupt political family, and the “impossibly lucrative casino” on the island of Saipan where Chinese gamblers can game on U.S. soil.
Matthew Campbell Bloomberg Business Feb 2018 20min Permalink
On January 13th, 2018, the residents of Hawaii picked up their phones to find a warning: a missile would be hitting the islands imminently. Here’s what people do when they think they only have 38 minutes left to live.
Sean Flynn GQ Apr 2018 25min Permalink
Engineer and adventurer Richard Jenkins has made oceangoing robots that could revolutionize fishing, drilling, and environmental science. His aim: a thousand of them.
Ashlee Vance Bloomberg Business May 2018 15min Permalink
There was no doubt: Jeremy Gross had brutally murdered a convenience store clerk. All that was left to decide was his punishment. Death or life without parole? The story of a capital murder trial, as seen from the jury box.
Alex Kotlowitz New York Times Magazine Jul 2003 35min Permalink
When a longtime resident started stealing her neighbors’ Amazon packages, she entered a vortex of smart cameras, Nextdoor rants, and cellphone surveillance.
Lauren Smiley The Atlantic Nov 2019 35min Permalink
For 40 years, journalists chronicled the eccentric royal family of Oudh, deposed aristocrats who lived in a ruined palace in the Indian capital. It was a tragic, astonishing story. But was it true?
Ellen Barry New York Times Nov 2019 30min Permalink
As mass demonstrations against police brutality continue across the country, thousands gather in New York to demonstrate against generations of police brutality and racial injustice in America.
Tyler Tynes The Ringer Jun 2020 10min Permalink
A profile of the author at 84.
Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah New York Times Magazine Apr 2015 30min Permalink
One year after a 14-year-old basketball player was killed by a stray bullet on a playground court in Queens, his friends and family still don’t have answers—only enduring anguish and a familiar feeling of grief.
Kevin Armstrong Sports Illustrated Dec 2020 25min Permalink
The high-tech real estate startup boasts SoftBank backing, a $1.6 billion war chest, and plenty of skeptics. Now it’s cashing in on the pandemic real estate boom.
Patrick Sisson Marker Dec 2020 20min Permalink