They Came in Through the Bathroom Mirror
A Chicago housing project resident reports intruders breaking into her apartment through a medicine cabinet. Days later, she’s found dead.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Where to buy magnesium sulfate in China.
A Chicago housing project resident reports intruders breaking into her apartment through a medicine cabinet. Days later, she’s found dead.
Steve Bogira Chicago Reader Sep 1987 40min Permalink
A student fires three shots during a sixth period social studies class. “Then nothing happened, and that’s a problem.”
Five prostitutes disappear. Bodies turn up on a Long Island beach. On the women lost, and the families left behind.
Robert Kolker New York May 2011 25min Permalink
After the United States demanded the extradition of a drug lord, a bloodletting ensued.
Mattathias Schwartz New Yorker Dec 2011 30min Permalink
A report from the trial of Ivan Demjanjuk—a.k.a. “The Last Nazi”—who died on March 17.
Lawrence Douglas Harper's Mar 2012 Permalink
On the road with three high school show choirs and a dream.
William Powell Cincinnati Magazine Jul 2012 25min Permalink
The brains behind the uncannily accurate Des Moines Register poll.
Clare Malone FiveThirtyEight Jan 2016 15min Permalink
NSA-grade spyware is up for sale, and the world’s worst dictatorships are buying.
Amar Toor, Russell Brandom The Verge Jan 2015 20min Permalink
How do you handle an infestation when you live on the Upper East Side and bedbugs could hurt the value of your apartment? With discretion.
Marshall Sella New York May 2010 15min Permalink
The story that certified Gehry as a genius and the Guggenheim Bilbao as the building of the late 20th century.
Herbert Muschamp New York Times Magazine Sep 1997 20min Permalink
The story of a newscaster’s suicide.
Sally Quinn Washington Post Aug 1974 25min Permalink
“How do you catch someone up on your entire life?”
Ashley C. Ford Refinery29 Apr 2017 10min Permalink
The story of a Pacific Palisades con man named Jeffrey Lash.
Scott Johnson The Hollywood Reporter Sep 2017 25min Permalink
Kurdish revolutionaries helped the U.S. expel the Islamic State from its capital city. Will we soon abandon them?
Luke Mogelson New Yorker Oct 2017 35min Permalink
Dick Cavett, the “last great intellectual talk-show host,” at 81.
Alex Williams New York Times Aug 2018 10min Permalink
How the waters off of LA became a DDT dumping ground.
Rosanna Xia Los Angeles Times Oct 2020 30min Permalink
A 17,000-word exploration of the Sahara Desert, the hottest place on Earth.
William Langewiesche The Atlantic Nov 1991 1h10min Permalink
Our climate models could be missing something big.
Peter Brannen The Atlantic Feb 2021 Permalink
More than 60 years after Brown v. Board of Education, New York’s schools remain separate and unequal.
Nikole Hannah-Jones New York Times Magazine Jun 2016 15min Permalink
How P. Rajagopal, the founder of one of the world’s largest vegetarian restaurant chains, got away with murder.
Rollo Romig New York Times Magazine May 2014 20min Permalink
The first in-depth piece on Michele Bachmann.
G.R. Anderson Jr. Minneapolis City Pages Oct 2006 20min
A profile of Romney from his last presidential campaign, with a focus on how he evolved from professional consultant to professional candidate.
Ryan Lizza New Yorker Oct 2007 20min
On the calculated political career of Rick Perry, and what it means for his presidential bid.
Paul Burka Texas Monthly Feb 2010 30min
Notes from the Nevada stretch of the Ron Paul campaign trail last time around.
Tucker Carlson New Republic Dec 2007 10min
A look at Jon Hunstman, the former Utah governor and ambassador to China now running well behind in the polls, as he prepared to announce his candidacy.
Chris Jones Esquire Jun 2010 25min
An exhaustive profile of Gingrich, then a 41-year-old congressman balancing a new role on the national stage with the spotlight on his personal life that came with it.
David Osborne Mother Jones Nov 1984 25min
A profile of Rick Santorum published as he began a reelection campaign for the U.S. Senate, a race widely considered a stepping stone to a run for the White House. Santorum went on to lose.
Mike Newall Philadelphia City Paper Sep 2005 25min
A primer on long-shot candidate Herman Cain, former pizza chain CEO and current Tea Party star.
Dave Weigel Slate Jan 2011
On the rapid rise of the New Jersey governor, who doubles as pundits’ favorite noncandidate.
Matt Bai New York Times Magazine Feb 2011
Nov 1984 – Feb 2011 Permalink
On the case of young Joseph Hall, who was convicted last month of murdering his dad.
Natasha Vargas-Cooper Buzzfeed Feb 2013 25min Permalink
A game called Spacewar is developed by early computer engineers in their spare time, improved in university comp-sci labs, and ultimately made available in coffeeshops for 10 cents per game.
Stewart Brand Rolling Stone Dec 1972 35min
Advice from 1982 on how and why one should buy a personal computer.
James Fallows The Atlantic Jul 1982
The Silcon Valley origin story.
A conversation with a 29-year-old Jobs.
David Sheff Playboy Feb 1985 1h
Ted Nelson’s Xanadu project was supposed to be the universal, democratic hypertext library that would help human life evolve into an entirely new form. Didn’t turn out that way.
A 42,000-word, three-continent spanning “hacker tourist” account of the laying of the (then) longest wire on earth, FLAG, fiber-optic link around the world.
Neal Stephenson Wired Dec 1996 2h45min
An early take on the dark side of cyberspace.
John Seabrook New Yorker Jun 1994 35min
The definitive story of a ubiquitous software. PowerPoint’s origins, its evolution, and its mind-boggling impact on corporate culture.
Ian Parker New Yorker May 2001 20min
Dec 1972 – May 2001 Permalink
Behind the scenes of Lost Highway
A profile of Marlon Brando, age 33, holed up in a hotel suite in Kyoto where he was filming Sayonara.
Truman Capote New Yorker Nov 1957 55min
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
A “fanatical Lynch fan from way back,” David Foster Wallace visits the set of Lost Highway, never actually talks to the director, and writes a profile.
David Foster Wallace Premiere Sep 1996 45min
Inside the five-year (and counting) production of the Ilya Khrzhanovsky film Dau.
Michael Idov GQ Nov 2011 15min
In Austin in 1973, politicos and hippies could get together and create violent, visionary horror films for $60,000. So they did. The story of how The Texas Chainsaw Massacre got made:
John Bloom Texas Monthly Nov 2004 50min
The battle to make The Godfather pitted director Francis Ford Coppola against producers including Robert Evans, and the production itself against the real-life mob.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Mar 2009 40min
An oral history of Goodfellas.
GQ Oct 2010 35min
How Warren Beatty seduced the studios into making the comedy Ishtar, which set the modern bar for cinematic debacles.
Peter Biskind Vanity Fair Feb 2012 35min
Nov 1957 – Feb 2012 Permalink
Compiled by Timothy Maddocks.
A jailhouse interview with Steve Washak, who made millions selling “natural male enhancement” pills.
Amy Wallace GQ Sep 2010 20min
On Ambien and the search for the next blockbuster insomnia drug.
Ian Parker New Yorker Dec 2013 45min
On the Adderall days of college.
Molly Young n+1 Jan 2008
New medicines can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars a year. Are they worth it? A look at how a pair of pharmaceutical companies set their prices.
Barry Werth Technology Review Oct 2013 20min
The pharmaceutical quest to give women a better sex life.
Daniel Berger New York Times Magazine May 2013 20min
During the last decade, more than 1,500 Americans died after accidentally taking too much of a drug renowned for its safety: acetaminophen, the active ingredient in Tylenol.
T. Christian Miller, Jeff Gerth ProPublica Sep 2013
Fifty years ago, birth-control pills gave women control of their bodies, while making it easy to forget their basic biology—until, in some cases, it’s too late.
Vanessa Grigoriadis New York Nov 2010 20min
The story of Christopher and Jeffrey George, the twin proprietors of a pain clinic empire.
Felix Gillette Businessweek Jun 2012 15min
Jan 2008 – Dec 2013 Permalink