The First Time Texas Killed One of My Clients
An attorney pieces together a life cut short.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Who is the manufacturer of magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules.
An attorney pieces together a life cut short.
Burke M. Butler The Marshall Project Mar 2016 20min Permalink
Inside the boardroom as Uber’s press nightmare unfolded.
Eric Newcomer, Brad Stone Businessweek Jan 2018 15min Permalink
A look at the rapper’s decade-plus ordeal.
Jessica Brand, Ethan Brown In Justice Today Apr 2018 25min Permalink
Fox News has always been partisan. But has it become propaganda?
Jane Mayer New Yorker Mar 2019 30min Permalink
A surgeon tastes viral fame via Twitter and then things get really weird.
He spent years scrimping and saving. But without a will, where’s his money going?
Claire Martin Bloomberg Businessweek May 2019 20min Permalink
What happens when the chefs behind North America’s most hedonistic restaurant quit drinking.
Hannah Goldfield New Yorker May 2019 20min Permalink
What happened when Brooklyn’s oldest nursery school decided to become less old-fashioned? A riot among the one percent.
Jessica Pressler New York Jul 2019 35min Permalink
A jailhouse interview with Steve Washak, who made millions selling “natural male enhancement” pills.
Amy Wallace GQ Sep 2009 20min Permalink
They were exhausting, impossible, stingy, and cruel, just like at their day jobs.
Moe Tkacik Slate Jan 2021 15min Permalink
While political leaders trade threats, the pandemic has made Americans even more reliant on China’s manufacturers.
Peter Hessler New Yorker Mar 2021 35min Permalink
“The mythical image of Malick that has been built up over the last 30-odd years is, in essence, a creation of the same media corps with whom the filmmaker himself has continually chosen not to engage.”
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
With her new book, the model tries to escape the oppressions of the male gaze. So our writer is keeping some of her secrets.
Andrea Long Chu New York Times Magazine Nov 2021 30min Permalink
Last year, a 26-year-old American missionary set out to convert the world’s most isolated hunter-gatherer tribe. This is the untold story of John Chau’s mission and the tragedy that awaited him.
Doug Bock Clark GQ Aug 2019 40min Permalink
“If you think cam girls—those flirty naked characters that plague porn site pop-up ads—are raking in easy money, you’re right. If you think cam girls are bleakly stripping online out of desperation, you’re also right.”
Sam Biddle Gizmodo Sep 2012 20min Permalink
After nearly 15 years in a Peruvian prison, an American woman convicted of aiding a Marxist terrorist group finds parole in Lima full of contradictions.
He helped build an artists’ utopia. Now he faces trial for 36 deaths there.
Elizabeth Weil New York Times Magazine Dec 2018 45min Permalink
Picking up the pieces in Afghanistan.
We reprinted this article on Longform to help raise money for the Matthew Power Literary Reporting Award, which in our friend Matt's memory will fund promising young writers to bring forward unreported stories of importance from overlooked corners of the world. Please donate today.
Matthew Power Harper's Mar 2005 35min Permalink
“Fast food and hedge funds. That’s where we’re going.”
Eli Saslow Washington Post May 2016 15min Permalink
How a 24-year-old nurse discovered Vegas, high-stakes gambling, and serial bank robbery.
Jeff Maysh BBC Apr 2015 25min Permalink
He was the most powerful fish broker in New Bedford, America’s most valuable seafood port. The Russians who arrived looking to buy his operation were undercover agents and he told them everything.
Ben Goldfarb Mother Jones Mar 2017 15min Permalink