Inside the National Suicide Hotline
Trying to prevent the next tragedy.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which is the biggest magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules manufacturer.
Trying to prevent the next tragedy.
Josh Sanburn Time Sep 2013 35min Permalink
On the neurobiology of flora.
Michael Pollan New Yorker Dec 2013 40min Permalink
The Sandy Hook killer’s father tells his story.
Andrew Solomon New Yorker Mar 2014 30min Permalink
In the early years of the Iraq war, the U.S. military developed a technology so secret that soldiers would refuse to acknowledge its existence, and reporters mentioning the gear were promptly escorted out of the country. That equipment—a radio-frequency jammer—was upgraded several times, and eventually robbed the Iraq insurgency of its most potent weapon, the remote-controlled bomb.
Noah Shachtman Wired Jun 2011 25min Permalink
How the mall was born.
Malcolm Gladwell New Yorker Mar 2004 25min Permalink
A daughter remembers her father’s glass eye.
Jeannie Vanasco The Believer Jun 2015 15min Permalink
On jazz and the hipster psychopath.
On the fleeting magic of volleyball.
Richard Kelly Kemick Maisonnueve Feb 2017 20min Permalink
Life in Nucla, Colorado.
Lois Beckett The Guardian Jul 2017 20min Permalink
The diaspora of Hurricane Katrina.
Katherine Boo New Yorker Nov 2005 20min Permalink
A profile of the professional wrestler.
Molly Langmuir Elle Apr 2021 25min Permalink
How franchises became the movie business.
Mark Harris Grantland Dec 2014 20min Permalink
How the truth still eludes the investigation of the killing of four boys in Joypur, which sparked a bloody riot and massive displacement.
Rahul Bhattacharya OPEN Magazine Jun 2016 1h5min Permalink
An Italian town plagued by mysterious fires turns to science, the church, and the law in a search for answers.
The Atavist Magazine Nov 2016 45min Permalink
The rise and (potential) fall of the electronics superstore.
Bryan Gruley, Jeffrey McCracken Businessweek Oct 2012 15min Permalink
Browsing the stacks with The Washington Post’s Michael Dirda.
John Lingan The Paris Review Nov 2012 Permalink
How the United States came to spend more on defense than all the other nations of the world combined.
Jill Lepore New Yorker Jan 2013 20min Permalink
The early life of “the onetime Black Panther, protégé of George Jackson, and sole member of the San Quentin Six convicted of murder.”
Chip Brown Esquire Jan 1988 35min Permalink
Using different email addresses and a lot of exclamation points, teenager Jonathan Lebed worked finance message boards in the morning before school and made nearly a million bucks. Then he made the head of the S.E.C. look like a fool.
Michael Lewis New York Times Magazine Feb 2001 35min
Sitting alone in his San Jose office, Michael Burry saw the subprime bubble before anyone else. So he convinced Wall Street to let him bet on it, even though few were betting on him (a story excerpted from The Big Short).
Michael Lewis Vanity Fair Apr 2010 45min
On Jim Clark and the culture of Silicon Valley before the dot-com crash (the story that lead to The New New Thing).
Michael Lewis New York Times Magazine Oct 1999 35min
Riots in Athens, the shadowy Vatopaidi monastery, and a quarter million dollars in debt for every citizen. Welcome to Greece.
Michael Lewis Vanity Fair Oct 2010 45min
The original article on Billy Beane and the Oakland A’s, published a month before the release of Moneyball.
Michael Lewis New York Times Magazine Mar 2003 35min
Oct 1999 – Oct 2010 Permalink
The Branch Davidians today, 20 years after the deadly standoff.
Alex Hannaford The Sunday Times Feb 2013 Permalink
A Southland Tales fanboy goes down the rabbit hole with the movie’s director.
Abraham Riesman Motherboard Jul 2013 25min Permalink
The people who go missing while crossing the U.S.-Mexico border, and the people who attempt to identify their remains.
Maria Sacchetti Boston Globe Jul 2014 25min Permalink
Meeting Christopher Thomas Knight, a.k.a. the North Pond Hermit, who lived alone in the Maine woods for nearly 30 years.
Michael Finkel GQ Aug 2014 30min Permalink
The “insane playfulness, deliberate infantilism, nutty haikus, naked stripteases, free-form chants and literary war dances of the beats” and their leader.
Seymour Krim Shake It For the World, Smartass Jun 1970 35min Permalink
How the feds flipped a corrupt American soccer official named Chuck Blazer and brought down the sport’s governing body.
Shaun Assael, Brett Forrest ESPN the Magazine Feb 2016 20min Permalink