The Story Behind Why AOL CEO Tim Armstrong Fired an Employee in Front of 1,000 Coworkers
It mostly had to do with Patch, the executive’s hyperlocal and unprofitable baby.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_What is the price of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
It mostly had to do with Patch, the executive’s hyperlocal and unprofitable baby.
Nicholas Carlson Business Insider Nov 2013 1h45min Permalink
How two couples found a way to play the preschool system for profit.
Claire Martin Los Angeles Magazine Sep 2016 20min Permalink
Trump’s Commerce pick and a government by, and for, the super-rich.
Max Abelson Bloomberg Businessweek Jan 2017 10min Permalink
Israel Keyes confessed to multiple murders, but committed suicide before revealing all the details.
Sharon Cohen, Rachel D'Oro AP Jan 2013 10min Permalink
Why America, and every other street in Massachusetts, runs (or will eventually run) on Dunkin’.
Neil Swidey Boston Globe Sep 2014 20min Permalink
As the birds decline, one Icelandic island keeps throwing a rowdy, boozy puffin festival.
Brian Kevin Audubon Nov 2015 15min Permalink
A sociologist’s controversial first book and the debate over who gets to speak for whom.
Gideon Lewis-Kraus New York Times Magazine Jan 2016 25min Permalink
On his legacy, his impact on California, and why “saints should be judged guilty until proven innocent.”
Caitlin Flanagan The Atlantic Jul 2011 20min Permalink
USB sticks bearing digital video are the new radio.
Andy Greenberg Wired Mar 2015 25min Permalink
Jack Nicholson interviewed at 73.
Jack Nicholson, Louise Gannon The Daily Mail Jan 2011 10min Permalink
A young dealer goes on the lam after selling multiple masterpieces to several buyers simultaneously.
Oliver Franklin-Wallis GQ Apr 2020 30min Permalink
“His life with the virus would be his witness, his public testimony. Performance as life, and life as performance.”
Charles P. Pierce GQ Feb 1993 25min Permalink
Troughout his life, Hernández has been known as one thing: a soccer player. But last year, that identifier stopped being enough.
Mirin Fader The Ringer Oct 2021 Permalink
In 1952, Abe Feller, the U.N.’s first General Counsel, jumped to his death. More than 50 years later, his great nephew tries to figure out why.
Peter Birkenhead The Big Roundtable Jun 2015 35min Permalink
What has Ted Haggard, who left the New Life megachurch after admitting he purchased crystal meth and sexual favors from a male escort, been doing in the four years since? Selling insurance door to door and then… founding a new church and returning to the pulpit.
Kevin Roose GQ Feb 2011 20min Permalink
The original new journalist on his start at the Times, his daily writing routine, and why he’s always taken notes on shirt boards.
Gay Talese, Katie Roiphe The Paris Review Jun 2009 50min Permalink
It started with a vague tip-off: a tug boat approaching the UK could be transporting cocaine. What followed was a race against the clock to find £500m in narcotics
Greg Williams Wired (UK) Dec 2016 25min Permalink
The criminologist/lawyer who created Perry Mason unravels the Boston Strangler case, in which eleven women were murdered by an assailant they willingly let into their homes.
Erle Stanley Gardner The Atlantic May 1964 25min Permalink
When the business icon died in a fire last week, questions abounded. The answers seem rooted in a Covid-period spiral, where he turned to drugs and shunned old friends.
Angel Au-Yeung, David Jeans Forbes Dec 2020 Permalink
Patients say the “Rock Doc” helped them like no one else could. Federal prosecutors say his “help” often amounted to dealing drugs for sex.
Olga Khazan The Atlantic Jan 2021 30min Permalink
Megan Lundstrom understands more than most the conditions that force women into dangerous situations—she also has the key to help them escape.
John H. Tucker Elle Aug 2021 20min Permalink
Most of the men were in their 60s and 70s, with heart conditions, diabetes, and replacement hips. They made off with millions in cash and jewels, only to give themselves up by not understanding how technology works.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Mar 2016 30min Permalink
Will Lacey was just a baby when doctors diagnosed a rare form of cancer and told his family there was only one end. Nobody then could imagine the journey ahead, from hospital rooms to board rooms, research labs to government offices, a furious race between hope and death.
Billy Baker Boston Globe Dec 2016 50min Permalink
The house at 114 Lake Avenue in Bristol, CT that kept calling Aaron Hernandez, a NFL star by 20, back to “a volatile underworld of guns, drugs, and violence.”
Bob Hohler Boston Globe Aug 2013 10min Permalink
The authors spend time in Concord, Mass., with people who impersonate Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Louisa May Alcott and Nathaniel Hawthorne.
Eric Pomerance, Laurie Gwen Shapiro Los Angeles Review of Books Oct 2013 35min Permalink