The Beleaguered Tenants of ‘Kushnerville’
Baltimore-area renters complain about a property owner they say is neglectful and litigious. Few know their landlord is the president’s son-in-law.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Which are the Chinese suppliers of Magnesium sulfate Anhydrous for industrial use.
Baltimore-area renters complain about a property owner they say is neglectful and litigious. Few know their landlord is the president’s son-in-law.
Alec MacGillis ProPublica May 2017 25min 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
To read the transcript of Erin Hunter’s trial, which runs all of 81 pages and can be digested in half an hour, is to encounter a disregard for human dignity instrumental in producing the most sprawling system of incarceration in the world.
Nick Chrastil The Atavist Magazine Dec 2019 30min Permalink
Operations gone wrong, how the media covered for spies, and the story that became Argo — a collection of our favorite articles about the CIA.
How the CIA used a fake science fiction film to sneak six Americans out of revolutionary Iran. The declassified story that became Ben Affleck’s Argo.
Joshuah Bearman Wired Apr 2007 20min
Throughout the ’50s and ’60s, media outlets including the New York Times and CBS News provided the CIA with information and cover for agents. Then everyone decided to pretend it had never happened.
Carl Bernstein Rolling Stone Oct 1977 55min
Erik Prince, the boyish CEO of America’s largest and most controversial mercenary force, Blackwater, also happened to be a CIA agent.
Adam Ciralsky Vanity Fair Jan 2010 25min
The story of William Morgan: American, wanderer, Cuban revolutionary, possible spy.
David Grann New Yorker May 2012 1h25min
When a CIA operation in Pakistan went bad, leaving three men dead, the episode offered a rare glimpse inside a shadowy world of espionage. It also jeopardized America’s most critical outpost in the war against terrorism.
Matthew Teague Men's Journal Jun 2011
On the CIA’s early operations.
Jason Epstein New York Review of Books Apr 1967
A spy takes on his own agency.
David Wise Smithsonian Oct 2012
A three-part series on the U.S. intelligence system post-9/11.
Apr 1967 – Oct 2012 Permalink
In the weeks after Davis shot the six cops, faked out the costly, nationwide manhunt for 17 days, and held a major portion of the NYPD to a standoff in the Twin Parks Houses near Fordham Road, huge black-and-white mug shot-like photos of a starry-eyed, baby-faced killer adorned the front pages of the tabloids under headlines like “They Won’t Take Me Alive” and the local news anchors excitedly invoked his name at the top of every show.
Barry Michael Cooper Village Voice Nov 1988 35min Permalink
The story of Dean Corll and his accomplices, who killed over 20 teenage boys in the Heights neighborhood of Houston in the early 1970s, and the families searching for their missing sons.
Skip Hollandsworth Texas Monthly Apr 2011 45min Permalink
An interview with the literary agent about the state of the book industry and how, at least for him, it continues to be quite lucrative.
Laura Bennett The New Republic Oct 2013 10min 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.
“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
“Rosemary was wide awake the whole time. The doctors had her recite poems as they cut—when she was silent, they knew the procedure was complete.”
Lyz Lenz Marie Claire Mar 2017 10min Permalink
The problems go much deeper than food safety and point to an industry that systematically rewards and enables star chefs while asking few critical questions about the workers who often power their success.
LEXIS-OLIVIER RAY, Samanta Helou Hernandez the LAnd magazine Jul 2020 30min Permalink
What are the foreign policy views of Michele Bachmann, Tim Pawlenty, Rick Perry and Mitt Romney?
Eli Lake The New Republic Aug 2011 20min Permalink
Her grandfather, she found out decades after he died, was not her grandfather. Who did that make her?
Molly Minturn The Toast Aug 2013 15min Permalink
“I think I knew that at heart I was an aging spinster.”
Jeanne McCulloch, Mona Simpson, Alice Munro The Paris Review Jun 1994 45min Permalink