Meet the California Couple Who Uses More Water Than Every Home in Los Angeles Combined
Are megafarmers Lynda and Stewart Resnick visionary philanthropists or shrewd water barons?
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Where to buy magnesium sulfate in China.
Are megafarmers Lynda and Stewart Resnick visionary philanthropists or shrewd water barons?
Josh Harkinson Mother Jones Aug 2016 20min Permalink
The story of a home invasion, a torture session, and one lawyer who nearly killed another.
Jason Fagone Washingtonian Oct 2016 25min Permalink
“He kissed me directly on the lips. I thought, ‘Oh my God, gross.’”
Michael Barbaro, Megan Twohey New York Times May 2016 20min Permalink
An interview with the founding editor of the New York Review of Books, who died Monday.
Mark Danner New York Apr 2013 30min Permalink
Searching for the truth about a site known for busting myths.
Michelle Dean Wired Sep 2017 20min Permalink
“I always walk away from an interview — no matter how well it went — knowing that there’s so much that I don’t know about that person.”
David Marchese New York Jan 2018 25min Permalink
Immigrants from Africa and the iron gateways of mass deportation.
Ashoka Mukpo Popula Aug 2018 35min Permalink
Instead, they got scorched.
Maggie Bullock The Cut Oct 2018 20min Permalink
A slick-talking con artist turned an innocent brother and sister into his personal slaves.
Nick Pachelli San Francisco Magazine Oct 2018 20min Permalink
On the ethics of putting the internet’s spotlight on a neighborhood restaurant.
Kevin Alexander Thrillist Nov 2018 15min Permalink
He never saw it coming.
Matthew Campbell, Kae Inoue, Jie Ma, Ania Nussbaum Businessweek Jan 2018 25min Permalink
Was she the reason he was alive today?
Keren Blankfeld New York Times Dec 2019 15min Permalink
Why a Nova Scotia community is still searching for the killer of a beloved farmer thirty years later.
Lindsay Jones The Walrus Jun 2020 20min Permalink
During the pandemic, people from the author’s hometown got sucked into QAnon and the Q-adjacent “Save the Children” movement.
Aída Chávez The Intercept Sep 2020 15min Permalink
What I learned about rich people, conspiracy, “genius,” Ghislaine, stand-up comedy, and evil from 2,000 phone calls.
Leland Nally Mother Jones Oct 2020 40min Permalink
Why did I ever believe a teen girl could hold all the power?
Tavi Gevinson The Cut Feb 2021 15min Permalink
For nearly 200 years, San Francisco has been the last stop of petty thieves, con artists and killers. Iva Kroeger was all three.
Katie Dowd SFGate Nov 2021 Permalink
Inside the shadowy meetings between Chicago’s violent gang members and its elected officials.
Not available in full:
“Death Sentence” (Timothy Bolger • Long Island Press)
“A Design for Healing” (Melissa Harris • The Chicago Tribune)
“A Killing in Cordova: The Trial and Tribulations of Harry Ray Coleman” (Graham Hillard • Memphis Magazine)
“Taxpayers’ $8.4 million Spent on Doomed Project” (Mike Morris • Houston Chronicle)
Frozen fish from the supermarket often has excess ice — and consumers pay the price.
Inside New Jersey’s halfway houses.
After the 2001 terrorist attacks, California lawmakers sought a way to channel the patriotic fervor and use it to help victims, families and law enforcement. Their answer: Specialty memorial license plates emblazoned with the words, “We Will Never Forget.”
The anatomy of a sex abuse scandal at a Christian school in Oklahoma.
Kiera Feldman This Land 55min
Police force fails to protect the state’s most vulnerable residents.
A son’s secret brings a Southern Baptist minister to his knees.
How Earl Eugene Mawyer got a chance to be a hero.
On the “toxic legacy” of Anniston, Alabama.
At 24, Ray Wauson was thrilled to land a job as an armored-car guard. But he was entering an unregulated world in which the people guarding the cargo are often defenseless against the cargo itself.
How faulty data lowered Milwaukee’s crime rate.
City cameras track anyone, even Minneapolis Mayor Rybak.
On homeless sex offenders in metro Phoenix.
A year-long examination of the abuse investigations of unlicensed youth reform programs that operate in Florida and are overseen by the Florida Association of Christian Child Caring Agencies, a private, nonprofit group.
On being gay in the military, three years before Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell:
A vast majority of those interviewed had been interrogated at least once, and what they described was nearly the same. They said those under suspicion of homosexuality suffer bright lights in their eyes and sometimes handcuffs on their wrists, warnings that their parents will be informed or their hometown newspapers called, threats that their stripes will be torn off and they will pushed through the gates of the base before a jeering crowd.
Jane Gross New York Times Apr 1990 10min Permalink
A former first-string tackle considers the green zone as a war zone:
Just as football has evolved in accordance with the evolving business ethic of American society, so has it evolved in accordance with the changing strategic assumptions about war. The development (or rebirth) of the T-formation in football coincided almost exactly with the development of a new era of mobility and speed in warfare best exemplified in the Blitzkrieg tactics of the German armies in Europe in 1939-40. The T-formation soon overwhelmed the “Maginot Line” mentality of traditional football, based as it was on rigid lines and massive concentrations of defensive and offensive power.
Wilcomb E. Washburn The New Republic Jul 1977 10min Permalink
The Harvard Law professsor on billionaires, politics and Uber.
Nitasha Tiku Valleywag Jun 2014 15min Permalink
A profile of the writer behind “Deep Thoughts” on Saturday Night Live.
Dan Kois New York Times Magazine Jul 2013 10min Permalink
Grizzly Bear and the surprisingly crappy economics of indie rock stardom.
Nitsuh Abebe New York Oct 2012 25min Permalink
Tales of mayhem on the set of The Canyons.
Stephen Rodrick New York Times Magazine Jan 2013 25min Permalink