The Iconoclast
He wants to save classics from whiteness. Can the field survive?
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_where to buy magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
He wants to save classics from whiteness. Can the field survive?
Rachel Poser New York Times Magazine Feb 2021 30min Permalink
A Canadian man won’t touch money, except to destroy it.
Tori Marian Capital Daily Jul 2021 40min Permalink
Qaddafi’s son is alive. And he wants to take Libya back.
Robert Worth The New York Times Magazine Jul 2021 30min Permalink
How cars have become weapons at protests, and why it is likely to continue.
Jess Bidgood Boston Globe Oct 2021 Permalink
"I think what Kanye West is going to mean is something similar to what Steve Jobs means. I am undoubtedly, you know, Steve of Internet, downtown, fashion, culture. Period. By a long jump. I honestly feel that because Steve has passed, you know, it’s like when Biggie passed and Jay-Z was allowed to become Jay-Z."
Jon Caramanica New York Times Jun 2013 20min Permalink
Forty-five years ago, Buzz Aldrin became the second man to walk on the moon. It made him one of the most famous people in the world. And it has haunted the rest of his life.
Jeanne Marie Laskas GQ Dec 2014 25min Permalink
Gregg Bemis is an 87-year-old retired venture capitalist who owns the salvage rights to the Lusitania. He’s determined to prove an alternate theory as to why the ship was attacked in 1915. Unfortunately, the Irish government isn’t so into his plan.
Richard B. Stolley Fortune May 2015 15min Permalink
“We take it that all young writers overestimate their work. It’s impossible not to—I mean if you recognized what shit you were writing, you wouldn’t write it. You have to believe in your stuff—every day has to be the new day on which the new poem may be it.”
John Berryman, Peter A. Stitt The Paris Review Dec 1972 40min Permalink
There’s no telling how many guns there are in America—and when one gets used in a crime, no way for the cops to connect it to its owner. The only place the police can turn for help is a Kafkaesque agency in West Virginia, where, thanks to the gun lobby, computers are illegal and detective work is absurdly antiquated. On purpose.
Jeanne Marie Laskas GQ Aug 2016 25min Permalink
The author on his reverence for water.
The journey of a river from source to mouth resembles our own journey from birth to death, an analogy oft remarked, and yet the beginnings and endings of rivers are as fictional as those we impose on stories. There are headwaters to headwaters and no river ever really ends.
Donovan Hohn Lapham's Quarterly Jun 2018 20min Permalink
“Miles Davis was a deeply competitive artist, and the idea that he was losing audiences to white rock musicians with inferior skills—and, worse, had to open for them at concerts—inspired him to beat them at their own game. But he did so very much on his own terms.”
Adam Shatz NY Review of Books Sep 2016 15min Permalink
“Some companies are beginning to allow women to take their management-training courses. A woman sitting in on an executive conference is less of a shock to the male than she was only a few years ago. A few big companies–R.C.A., the Home Life Insurance Co., and the New York Central, for example–have even ushered women into the board room.”
Katharine Hamill Fortune Jan 1956 20min Permalink
Scott Catt was a single dad trying to make ends meet, so he started robbing banks. Then he needed accomplices, so he asked his kids.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly May 2014 20min Permalink
Did A.Q. Khan sell nuclear secrets on the black market? The fame had unbalanced him. He was subjected to a degree of public acclaim rarely seen in the West—an extreme close to idol worship, which made him hungry for more. Money seems never to have been his obsession, but it did play a role.
William Langewiesche The Atlantic Jan 2006 55min Permalink
In 16 months, he has broken into more than a thousand homes up and down the San Fernando Valley. According to the police, his haul is worth anywhere from $16 million to $40 million. And yet because he has cultivated so many aliases, law-enforcement officials have been hard-pressed to learn his real name—Ignacio Peña Del Río—much less comprehend his unlikely background.
Luke O'Brien Details May 2010 15min Permalink
After years of avoiding the uncomfortable truths about how his gadgets are made, a Mac fanboy travels to Foxconn to see for himself.
Update 3/16/12: This American Life retracted this story today after it was revealed to have “contained significant fabrications.”
Mike Daisey This American Life Jan 2012 30min Permalink
"I was a member of a fraternity that asked pledges, in order to become a brother, to: swim in a kiddie pool of vomit, urine, fecal matter, semen and rotten food products; eat omelets made of vomit; chug cups of vinegar, which in one case caused a pledge to vomit blood; drink beer poured down fellow pledges' ass cracks... among other abuses."
Janet Reitman Rolling Stone Mar 2012 35min Permalink
Baba Ramdev renounced the material world twenty-three years ago to become a Hindu ascetic. Now he’s on TV selling toothpaste, instant noodles, and toilet cleaners and the company he is believed to control is poised to become the biggest consumer goods seller in India.
Ben Crair Bloomberg Business Mar 2018 15min Permalink
There is an alternate definition for meat, one that simply means the thing inside of the thing—i.e., the meat of a coconut or the meat of a problem. My inquiry aimed to understand the living, the dead, and the part in the middle as well, the thing inside of the thing. I’m trying to tell you why I had finally resolved to taste whale.
Wyatt Williams Harper's Aug 2021 25min Permalink
Dov Charney’s struggle to keep control of American Apparel.
Susan Berfield Businessweek Jul 2014 15min Permalink
From Word to smartphones.
Gideon Lewis-Kraus Wired Jul 2014 10min Permalink
How seven Italian scientists came to be convicted of manslaughter following a catastrophic quake.
David Wolman Matter Aug 2014 20min Permalink
A high school baseball team responds to a loss.
Chris Ballard Sports Illustrated Oct 2012 30min Permalink
Richard Simmons at 64, sweatin’ to the oldies (and country and disco) thrice weekly.
David Davis SB Nation Nov 2012 15min Permalink
After offending Richard Marx, the author meets him to hash things out.
Edward McClelland The Morning News Jan 2013 15min Permalink