The Honey Launderers
On the biggest food fraud in U.S. history.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Good Quality Magnesium Sulfate in China.
On the biggest food fraud in U.S. history.
Investigating the spike in Afghan-on-American military murders.
Matthieu Aikins Mother Jones Oct 2013 25min Permalink
The capitalist evangelism of Sheryl Sandberg’s Lean In feminist manifesto.
Susan Faludi The Baffler Oct 2013 35min Permalink
Memories of her father and her time in Tennessee.
Rosanne Cash Oxford American Nov 2013 20min Permalink
Why Obama won’t rein in the NSA.
Ryan Lizza New Yorker Dec 2013 50min Permalink
How a substandard abortion provider stays in business.
Eyal Press New Yorker Feb 2014 40min Permalink
Is the anonymous, reclusive inventor of Bitcoin this 64-year-old man in Los Angeles?
Leah McGrath Goodman Newsweek Mar 2014 Permalink
On (not) getting by in the gig economy.
Sarah Kessler Fast Company Mar 2014 35min Permalink
An investigation into serial killings in a small North Carolina city.
Robert Draper GQ Jun 2010 20min Permalink
Noel Morris’s place in history? Noel Morris was my older brother, who had dropped out of MIT and spent most of his waking hours holed up in an apartment working at a computer terminal. This was in the ‘60s, long before there was anything close to a home computer. The name Tom Van Vleck was not unfamiliar. He was a friend of my brother’s who worked with him at MIT in those days. I called him.
Errol Morris New York Times Jun 2011 1h25min Permalink
Inside the most sensational murder in the history of study abroad.
Nathaniel Rich Rolling Stone Jun 2011 30min Permalink
Part one of a planned nine-part serialized biography of Harrison Gray Otis, the “inventor of modern Los Angeles.”
Future installments will include Otis’s interlude as “emperor of the Pribilofs,” his military atrocities in the Philippines, his bitter legal battles with the Theosophists, the Otis-Chandler empire in the Mexicali Valley, the Times bombing in 1910, the notorious discovery of fellatio in Long Beach, and Otis’s quixotic plan for world government.
The call to the sheriff's office came on Nov. 18, 2010, just before noon. The townhouse, deputies learned, had belonged to a woman named Kathryn Norris, and the 1987 silver Chevy Nova was registered to her, too. She had used a normal amount of electricity in July 2009 and much less in August and none after that. She had paid her mortgage in August and then stopped. Her head was on the floor and her feet were on the seat. The corpse, deputies wrote in their report, was wearing a dress.
Michael Kruse The St. Petersburg Times Jul 2011 10min Permalink
The story of the Abbottabad raid, in detail.
Nicholas Schmidle New Yorker Jan 2012 35min Permalink
Portrait of a Chinese-American family living in New York.
Sarah Kramer New York Times Sep 2011 15min Permalink
The story of eight young people who died in a New Orleans squat fire.
Danelle Morton Boston Review Jan 2012 30min Permalink
A Montana sheriff and a manhunt in the mountains.
Richard Ben Cramer Esquire Oct 1985 35min Permalink
In Chicago at the 130th National Funeral Directors Conference.
Max Rivlin-Nadler The Awl Jan 2012 10min Permalink
Hanging out in New Orleans.
Gentrification and its discontents in Paris, throughout the centuries.
Eric Hazan New Left Review Apr 2010 Permalink
An oral history of the Pacers/Pistons melee in 2004.
Jonathan Abrams Grantland Feb 2012 55min Permalink
Searching for the reclusive band’s studio in Düsseldorf.
Alexis Petridis The Guardian Jul 2003 10min Permalink
The city that fell in love with the mob.
David Grann The New Republic Jul 2000 30min Permalink
The enduring system of organized crime in Naples.
William Langewiesche Vanity Fair Apr 2012 35min Permalink
A profile from his days living as a mountain monk in Southern California.