'What Kind of Childhood Is That?'
Their mom and dad were two of the 33,091 people to die of opioid overdoses in 2015. Now, three children in West Virginia must move forward amid an epidemic.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Best selling magnesium sulfate company in China.
Their mom and dad were two of the 33,091 people to die of opioid overdoses in 2015. Now, three children in West Virginia must move forward amid an epidemic.
Eli Saslow Washington Post Dec 2016 15min Permalink
Nearly 4 years ago, a 12-year-old boy was murdered in a small town in upstate New York. The suspects are well known, but nobody has been convicted of the crime.
Jordan Ritter Conn Grantland Jul 2015 25min Permalink
Mark Hogancamp nearly died after being jumped by five men in 2000. After waking from a coma with no memories, he developed an extraordinary coping device: he built a miniature town in his garden where he gets his revenge.
Jon Ronson The Guardian Oct 2015 10min Permalink
In 1993 a black teenager in London was randomly stabbed to death by a gang of white youths. Twenty years later, they would be at the center of the trial of the decade.
Michael Thevis was a pioneer in the 1970s porn world, making millions off his coin-operated peep-show machines. He built his family one of the most ornate mansions in Atlanta before it all came crashing down amidst bombings, murders, and a prison break.
Jeff Maysh The Daily Beast Jun 2017 35min Permalink
A case in Baltimore — in which two men were convicted of the same murder and cleared by DNA 20 years later — shows how far prosecutors will go to preserve a conviction.
Megan Rose ProPublica Sep 2017 30min Permalink
In 1921, a teenager died alone in Kentucky and was buried without a name. A century later, a team of sleuths set out to find his identity.
Alina Simone The Atavist Magazine Sep 2017 1h Permalink
In 2010, an art dealer claimed he hid a chest of gold and jewels in the Rockies. At least four people have died looking for it.
David Kushner Wired Jul 2018 25min Permalink
The author grew up drinking and bathing in the toxic waters around a military base in North Carolina. Thirty years later, she returns to investigate.
Lori Lou Freshwater Pacific Standard Aug 2018 10min Permalink
Andrew Goldstein’s crime set in motion a dramatic shift in how we care for the violent mentally ill. Including for himself—when he’s released this month.
John J. Lennon, Bill Keller The Marshall Project Sep 2018 15min Permalink
Put a few termites into a petri dish and they wander around aimlessly; put in forty and they start stampeding around the dish’s perimeter like a herd. But put enough termites together, in the right conditions, and they will build you a cathedral.
Amia Srinivasan New Yorker Sep 2018 20min Permalink
On the history of the Bund, an armed, socialist anti-Zionist group that was once the most popular Jewish party in Poland until they were murdered in the Holocaust.
Molly Crabapple NY Review of Books Oct 2018 20min Permalink
When a day hike in Rocky Mountain National Park ended in a grisly death, Investigative Services Branch veteran Beth Shott hit the trail, where she began unraveling a harrowing case.
Rachel Monroe Outside Oct 2018 25min Permalink
Rodrigo Rosenberg, a highly respected corporate attorney in Guatemala, began, in the spring of 2009, to prophesy his own murder. The unraveling of a political conspiracy.
David Grann New Yorker Jan 2012 55min Permalink
Dozens of convicted criminals have been hired as cops in Alaska communities. Often, they are the only applicants. In Stebbins, every cop has a criminal record, including the chief.
Kyle Hopkins Anchorage Daily News Jul 2019 20min Permalink
You’ve never heard of her, but somewhere in America, a top-secret investigator known as the Savant is infiltrating online hate groups to take down the most violent men in the country.
Andrea Stanley Cosmopolitan Aug 2019 15min Permalink
On life as a police patrolman.
Originally published in 1997 under a pen name in The New Yorker. Appears now for the first time under the author’s known identity.
Edward Conlon The Sun Magazine Nov 1997 35min Permalink
The author and Kamaran Najm co-founded a photo agency in Iraq and teamed up to document a new era in Kurdistan, a region with a long history of suffering. Then Kamaran was captured by ISIS.
Sebastian Meyer Guernica Mar 2020 25min Permalink
For 10 years, Libre—an arm of the Koch family’s Americans for Prosperity—has been working to foster conservatism in Hispanic communities. Now, the group is going all-in on Georgia’s Senate runoffs.
Marcela Valdes New York Times Magazine Nov 2020 20min Permalink
The rising Democratic star was found in a Miami Beach hotel with a male sex worker and suspected drugs. To keep their marriage together, he and his wife, R. Jai, had to embrace a new dynamic of “radical honesty” in their relationship.
Wesley Lowery GQ Jan 2021 Permalink
In Hobbs, New Mexico, the high school closed and football was cancelled, while just across the state line in Texas, students seemed to be living nearly normal lives. Here’s how pandemic school closures exact their emotional toll on young people.
Alec MacGillis ProPublica Mar 2021 Permalink
Terrorists boarded two planes in Boston and flew them into the World Trade Center. Massachusetts zeroed in on its top airport official, who has never quite recovered.
Ellen Barry New York Times Sep 2021 10min Permalink
Paul was in his 80s when someone called to say she was his daughter, conceived in a fertility clinic with his sperm. The only problem? He’d never donated any.
Jenny Kleeman Guardian Sep 2021 25min Permalink
“In the recent history of American music, there’s no figure parallel to Lehrer in his effortless ascent to fame, his trajectory into the heart of the culture — and then his quiet, amiable, inexplicable departure.”
Ben Smith, Anita Badejo Buzzfeed Apr 2014 20min Permalink
Rape in the U.S. military, the history of marital advice columns and the highest-paid female executive in America — the week's top stories on Longform.
Sex, lies and fraud alleged at West Virginia University.
Tony Dokoupil, Nona Willis Aronowitz NBC News Sep 2014 10min
Marital advice columns from the past.
Rebecca Onion Aeon Sep 2014 15min
An oral history of the Tinderverse.
Kiera Feldman Playboy Sep 2014 30min
In the U.S. military, more than half of rape victims are men.
Nathaniel Penn GQ Sep 2014
A profile of the highest-paid female executive in America, who was born male
Lisa Miller New York Sep 2014 25min
Sep 2014 Permalink