Betting It All on 311
Three nights with 311 in the waning moments of free American life.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Best selling magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules company in China.
Three nights with 311 in the waning moments of free American life.
Marty Sartini Garner AV Club Apr 2020 15min Permalink
Six months of life and death in America.
Betsy Morais, Alexandria Neason Columbia Journalism Review Jun 2020 25min Permalink
Cryptomining in Europe’s most disputed state.
Alexander Clapp The Baffler Jul 2020 30min Permalink
The perils of voting in the modern age.
Victoria Collier Harper's Nov 2012 15min Permalink
And what it lost in the process.
Ed Yong The Atlantic Dec 2020 20min Permalink
Ghanaian sculptor El Anatsui is redefining Africa’s place in the global art scene.
Julian Lucas New Yorker Jan 2021 25min Permalink
Finding meaning in the climate fight.
Greg Jackson Harper's May 2021 20min Permalink
Searching for home at a cowboy poetry convention in Elko, Nevada.
Carvell Wallace MTV News Mar 2017 25min Permalink
In February, Jerusalem’s FC Beitar, the only soccer team in the Israeli Premier League to have never signed an Arab player, signed two Chechnyan Muslims, sparking national controversy and pitting the organization against their ultras fan club La Familia.
Amos Barshad Grantland Mar 2013 30min Permalink
Born with spina bifida, Noor al-Zahra Haider entered the media spotlight in 2005 after U.S. troops arranged her life-saving surgery in America. This is what happened when she returned to Iraq.
In the days following Martin Luther King, Jr.’s assassination, more than 100 cities experienced significant civil disturbance. In New York, everyone expected riots. What happened next.
Clay Risen The Morning News Jan 2009 10min Permalink
A rape case in which most of the evidence lies in the archives of Twitter and Instagram divides a football-crazed town of 18,400.
Juliet Macur, Nate Schweber New York Times Dec 2012 Permalink
Ex-members say it’s a cult preying on young creative women in New York. Its leader — a man who goes by International Scherick, compares himself to Jesus, and charges $200 minimum — says he’s empowering his clients to be successful in life and love.
Anna Merlan Jezebel May 2016 30min Permalink
In California, Jeff Lee is a business school student at Stanford with an almost unhealthy work ethic and a penchant for selfies. In Malaysia, he’s teaching women how to win beauty pageants.
A former Saint and Super Bowl champion, Will Smith, was shot and killed by another player named Cardell Hayes. Their fatal collision highlights the fine line between triumph and tragedy in football and life in New Orleans.
Sean Flynn GQ Oct 2016 20min Permalink
The impact of a life map and a stipend on those in the gang life in Richmond, CA.
Jason Motlagh The Guardian Jun 2016 30min Permalink
In 1939, acting on a tip and clues from The Iliad, archaeologists unearthed King Nestor’s palace on Pylos. Recently, another discovery in Pylos, the grave of an even earlier soldier, could change our entire understanding of how western civilization developed.
Jo Marchant Smithsonian Jan 2017 20min Permalink
A profile of the Atlanta star and creator, who also released a hit album in 2016 and is set to star in the next Star Wars.
Allison Samuels Wired Jan 2017 10min Permalink
“If I were a bitch, I’d be in love with Biff Truesdale. Biff is perfect. He’s friendly, good-looking, rich, famous, and in excellent physical condition. He almost never drools.”
Susan Orlean New Yorker Feb 1995 15min Permalink
In January 2009, a U.S. platoon came under rocket attack in Iraq. Two years later, how the event changed the soldiers’ lives.
Daniel Zwerdling, T. Christian Miller ProPublica Mar 2011 40min Permalink
No one knew how Suzanne Jovin ended up in a wealthy neighborhood away from Yale’s campus in New Haven, or why she was brutally stabbed on the sidewalk, apparently by someone she knew. The only suspect that police named was her thesis advisor.
Suzanna Andrews Vanity Fair Aug 1999 35min Permalink
On William H. McMasters, who ten days after being hired as Charles Ponzi’s publicist wrote a scathing exposé in The Boston Post that revealed the biggest fraud, at the time, in American history.
Cora Bullock Fraud Magazine Jul 2011 10min Permalink
She was the daughter of movie mogul Harry Warner. He was 15 years younger and embezzled her money, landing himself in jail. In prison, he offered a young inmate named Richard Matt $100,000 to kill her.
Greg Krikorian L.A. Times Jan 1992 Permalink
Shakiya Robertson thought she had found a way get her family a home. She moved in, fixed the place up, made all the payments. Then she, like thousands of others in Detroit, was told that the house she thought she had purchased wasn’t actually hers.
Allie Gross Metro Times Nov 2015 25min Permalink
A good trip on psilocybin might be just the ticket to relieve anxiety and depression, particularly in the terminally ill. But are we ready to dive back in to psychedelic research?
Michael Pollan New Yorker Feb 2015 40min Permalink