The Cruelty and the Casualties
Inside Andrew Cuomo’s toxic workplace.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which is the biggest magnesium sulfate manufacturer.
Inside Andrew Cuomo’s toxic workplace.
Rebecca Traister New York Mar 2021 40min Permalink
Educating the TikTok generation.
Barrett Swanson Harper's May 2021 40min Permalink
“The supernatural stuff doesn’t get to me anymore. But here’s the movie that scared me the most in the last 12 or 13 years: The movie opens with a woman in late middle-age, sitting at a table and writing a story. And the story goes something like, then the branches creaked in the - and she stops, and she says to her husband: What are those things? I can’t think of them. They’re in the backyard, and they’re very tall, and birds land on the branches. And he says, why, Iris, those are trees. And she says, yes, how silly of me. And she writes the word, and the movie starts. That’s Iris Murdoch, and she’s suffering the onset of Alzheimer’s disease.”
Terry Gross NPR May 2013 30min Permalink
A profile of a serial sex offender:
This is a story about how hard it is to be good—or, rather, how hard it is to be good once you’ve been bad; how hard it is to be fixed once you’ve been broken; how hard it is to be straight once you’ve been bent. It is about a scary man who is trying very hard not to be scary anymore and yet who still manages to scare not only the people who have good reason to be afraid of him but even occasionally himself. It is about sex, and how little we know about its mysteries; about the human heart, and how futilely we have responded—with silence, with therapy, with the law and even with the sacred Constitution—to its dark challenge. It is about what happens when we, as a society, no longer trust our futile responses and admit that we have no idea what to do with a guy like Mitchell Gaff.
The plight of temporary workers in America.
Michael Grabell ProPublica Jun 2013 20min Permalink
A sober look at the Senator.
Michael Kelly GQ Feb 1990 35min Permalink
The misadventures of two hospital workers.
Denis Johnson Narrative Dec 1992 15min Permalink
Life in the French Foreign Legion.
William Langewiesche Vanity Fair Nov 2012 30min Permalink
On the increasingly dangerous situation for journalists in Syria.
James Traub Foreign Policy Jan 2014 15min Permalink
The Stanford Prison Experiment, revisited 40 years later.
Romesh Ratnesar Stanford Magazine Jul 2011 15min Permalink
A personal reconstruction.
Christopher Wall St. Ann's Review Sep 2009 45min Permalink
The sudden emergence of Bernie Sanders.
Margaret Talbot New Yorker Oct 2015 35min Permalink
A preview of the “nuclear option.”
Jeffrey Toobin New Yorker Mar 2005 15min Permalink
Spotify’s bid to remodel an industry.
Liz Pelly The Baffler Dec 2017 15min Permalink
In the wings of this great drama were the unseen. Hidden in the rainforest where the violence was staged, in the eerie aftermath of the tragedy, were three people whose stories cue political contexts in both the US and Guyana crucial to understanding how and why Jonestown may have happened.
Gaiutra Bahadur New York Review of Books Dec 2018 20min Permalink
Adapted by the author of “Black Hawk Down.”
Mark Bowden Insider Jul 2019 40min Permalink
A story of two births.
Leslie Jamison The Atlantic Aug 2019 30min Permalink
On the nature of coincidence.
Lisa Belkin New York Times Magazine Aug 2002 30min Permalink
Where will predictive text take us?
John Seabrook New Yorker Oct 2019 30min Permalink
Wendy Carlos’s music of the spheres.
Will Stephenson Harper's Sep 2020 15min Permalink
A week on the campaign trail in the coffin-shaped Immortality Bus with Zoltan Istvan, the presidential candidate for the Transhumanist Party.
On the battle over solar farms in the Mojave desert. An excerpt from Madrigal’s new book, Powering the Dream: The History and Promise of Green Technology.
Alexis Madrigal The Atlantic Mar 2011 15min Permalink
The melancholy comedy of the silent screen star.
Charles Simic The Daily Beast Apr 2015 10min Permalink
When the Feds sought the death penalty for four African-American drug dealers in Baltimore, the accused found a defense in the unlikeliest of places: the legal theories of white supremacists.
Kevin Carey Washington Monthly May 2008 25min Permalink
For the last two decades, the varied personalities behind the Vidocq Society—retired cops, sketch artists, FBI agents—have gathered in Philadelphia to tackled cold-case homicides over lunch. They claim to have solved more than half.
Adam Higginbotham The Telegraph Nov 2008 15min Permalink