Tune In, Drop Out
Many young South Koreans were beginning to live in isolation years before the rest of the world joined them.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Where to buy magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules in China.
Many young South Koreans were beginning to live in isolation years before the rest of the world joined them.
Ann Babe Rest of World Jul 2020 15min Permalink
When model Kimberly Fattorini died after a night out in Hollywood, everyone assumed she’d accidentally overdosed. But there was more to the story.
K.J. Yossman Elle Nov 2020 Permalink
In the days after 9/11, Mark Stroman went on a revenge killing spree in Texas. Rais Bhuiyan survived and, a decade later, tried to stop Stroman’s execution.
Michael J. Mooney D Magazine Oct 2011 25min Permalink
In 1966, Anton LaVey introduced the world to the Church of Satan. The 1980s saw a “Satanic Panic” in the form of abuse charges brought against child-care workers and suburban parents. Today, the author joins a group of Satanists for afternoon tea at the church’s global headquarters in a “bland New York college town.”
Alex Mar The Believer Nov 2015 30min Permalink
From football fields in Texas to the real Ridgemont High, a collection of picks to help remember a time you might rather forget.
On the start of the high school football season in Odessa, Texas. An adaptation published alongside the release of Bissinger’s 1990 book of the same name, which led to the movie and the show.
Buzz Bissinger Sports Illustrated Sep 1990 25min
Her suicide made headlines around the world after classmates were indicted on felony charges related to bullying, but the real story wasn’t that simple.
Emily Bazelon Slate Jul 2010 15min
At age 22, the author went undercover at his old high school. An excerpt of the book that became the film.
Cameron Crowe Playboy Sep 1981 15min
Mr. Lindwall was the only high school teacher who understood him. Then Mr. Lindwall went to jail, and it was his turn to try to understand.
Robert Kurson Esquire Mar 2000
Sixteen years after graduating, an alumnus heads back to his old stomping grounds in Cleveland.
Devin Friedman GQ Nov 2006 30min
How two love-struck, type-A high school students almost got away with murder.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Dec 1996 40min
Navigating life as a brilliant teenage girl.
David Finkel Washington Post Jun 1993 30min
The profile of a 34-year-old woman named Charity Johnson who tricked people all over the country into believing she was still in high school.
Katie J.M. Baker Buzzfeed Sep 2014 20min
An essay on a fatal car crash in the author’s youth.
Michael Paterniti GQ Mar 2015 30min
The science behind why high school sucks.
Jennifer Senior New York Jan 2013 15min
Sep 1981 – Mar 2015 Permalink
While serving in WWII, Jerome Motto received regular correspondence from a woman he barely knew. These letters led to groundbreaking research on how to reach people at risk.
Jason Cherkis Huffington Post Highline Nov 2018 50min Permalink
How a U.S. law intended to reduce dependence on fossil fuels has unleashed an environmental disaster in Indonesia.
Abrahm Lustgarten ProPublica Nov 2018 35min Permalink
Police unions were born of resistance to discipline for brutality. Do they belong in the labor movement?
Maya Dukmasova Chicago Reader Jun 2020 20min Permalink
The polar icecaps are melting. Is it OK to have a child? Australia is on fire. Is it OK to have a child? My house is flooded, my crops have failed, my community is fleeing. Is it OK to have a child? It is, in a sense, an impossible question.
Meehan Crist London Review of Books Mar 2020 35min Permalink
Suzan Russaw is 70 years old. She lived in affordable Palo Alto housing for decades. Then, in 2013, she was forced to move into her car. On the new homeless of Silicon Valley.
Monica Potts The New Republic Dec 2015 15min Permalink
The story of Ota Benga, captured in the Congo, displayed at the World’s Fair, and brought to the Bronx Zoo in 1906.
Pamela Newkirk The Guardian Jun 2015 25min Permalink
When Clark Rockefeller snatched his daughter during a custody dispute, what the D.A. called “the longest con I’ve seen in my professional career” came unraveled, and the trail led to bones buried in a California backyard.
Mark Seal Vanity Fair Jan 2009 50min Permalink
He was an 18 year old Marine bound for Iraq. She was a high school senior in West Virginia. They grew intimate over IM. His dad also started contacting her. No one was who they claimed to be and it led to a murder.
Nadya Labi Wired Aug 2007 15min Permalink
An advertising copywriter adjusts to daily life in Paris, and works in a dysfunctional office.
Office culture in Paris held that it was each person's responsibility, upon arrival, to visit other people's desks and wish them good morning, and often kiss each person once on each cheek, depending on the parties' personal relationship, genders, and respective positions in the corporate hierarchy. Then you moved on to the next desk. Not everyone did it, but those who did not were noticed and remarked upon.
Rosecrans Baldwin GQ Apr 2012 15min Permalink
In defense of fiction.
Zadie Smith New York Review of Books Oct 2019 25min Permalink
The author teaches a college class about what it means to be white in America, but interrogating that question as a black woman in the real world is much harder to do.
Claudia Rankine New York Times Magazine Jul 2019 25min Permalink
On driving (and walking) in the Middle East – from Syria to Lebanon, across Saudi Arabia to Dammam, in a taxi through war-torn Beirut.
Nathan Deuel The Morning News Oct 2013 10min Permalink
The answer to the disparity in death rates has everything to do with the lived experience of being a black woman in America.
Linda Villarosa New York Times Magazine Apr 2018 40min Permalink
Collections Sponsored
A collection of picks about different eras of life in New York City, inspried by Twice Upon a Time: Listening to New York, the new, multilayered essay by acclaimed author Hari Kunzru. Buy it today from Atavist Books.
The lonesome death of Arnold Rothstein, notorious gambler, inspiration for a the character Meyer Wolfsheim in The Great Gatsby, alleged fixer of the 1916 World Series, opiate importation pioneer, mobster and Jew.
Nick Tosches Vanity Fair May 2005 40min
When New York was perpetually on fire.
Luc Sante New York Review of Books Nov 2003 15min
On police brutality in New York and the race riots of 1964.
James Baldwin The Nation Jul 1966
Watching the jazz singer in New York.
Elizabeth Hardwick New York Review of Books Mar 1976 15min
Jacob Riis, writing in 1899, on how a childhood spent in New York City’s tenements led a 15-year-old boy to be convicted of murder.
Jacob Riis The Atlantic Sep 1899 25min
A profile of Chloë Sevigny, 19-year-old It Girl.
Jay McInerney New Yorker Nov 1994
Memories of the old neighborhood, before everything changed.
Arthur Miller Holiday Mar 1955 25min
Sep 1899 – May 2005 Permalink
Bill Ferguson does not believe his son, Ryan, killed a popular newspaper editor. To prove it, he’s drained his savings, performed public re-enactments of the crime, and alienated almost everyone in his Missouri city.
Dugan Arnett The Kansas City Star Jul 2012 15min Permalink
Exposure to the internet did not make us into a nation of yeoman mind-farmers (unless you count Minecraft). That people in the billions would self-assemble, and that these assemblies could operate in their own best interests, was … optimistic.
On the rise of telemedicine in rural America, where the number of ER patients has surged by 60 percent in the past decade as the number of doctors and hospitals has declined by up to 15 percent.
Eli Saslow Washington Post Nov 2019 15min Permalink
In the not-so-distant future, all of our objects will talk to each other. They’ll make our coffee, find our keys, save our lives. The roadmap to a fully networked existence.
Bill Wasik Wired May 2013 Permalink
On January 1st, 2011, the U.S. estate tax will jump from zero to around 50%, which gives a lot of very rich elders (or perhaps more accurately, their heirs) millions of dollars in incentive to expedite death.
Cancer has taken his voice, but the unlikeliest movie star in Hollywood history still has a lot he wants to say.
Taffy Brodesser-Akner New York Times Magazine May 2020 30min Permalink