Selling China by the Sleeve Dance
How a touring dance company battles the Chinese Communist Party.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_Best selling magnesium sulfate heptahydrate large granules company in China.
How a touring dance company battles the Chinese Communist Party.
Nicholas Hune-Brown Hazlitt Oct 2017 25min Permalink
China is securing sub-Saharan Africa’s natural resources at a staggering rate. With the buying spree comes contracts, workers, and of course, politics. (Part 1 of a 6 part series, rest here)
Richard Behar Fast Company Jun 2008 Permalink
How the social networks that popped up in Facebook’s absence—the site is not available behind the Great Firewall—are changing Chinese culture.
April Rabkin Fast Company Feb 2011 Permalink
As labels big and small attempt to gain traction in the world’s largest market, they’re learning that selling pop is never simple in the epicenter of piracy.
Ed Peto The Register Nov 2007 10min Permalink
The CIA’s declassified account of the two decades two young officers spent as captives after being shot down over China during the Korean War.
In a sea of skeptics, this physician was one of fibromyalgia patients’ few true allies. Or was he?
Eric Boodman STAT Oct 2021 30min Permalink
How Craigslist dealers do business in New York City.
David Shapiro, Joe Coscarelli Village Voice Apr 2011 15min Permalink
Decades ago, two parents sued a drug company over their newborn’s deformity—and changed courtroom science forever.
Peter Andrey Smith Undark Feb 2020 30min Permalink
Inside China’s vast new experiment in social ranking.
Mara Hvistendahl Wired Dec 2017 25min Permalink
Forty-five days of avoiding the coronavirus.
Peter Hessler New Yorker Mar 2020 30min Permalink
How Chicago is key to a business moving tons of drugs for billions of dollars.
Jason McGahan Chicago Oct 2013 Permalink
The paper reports on a battle of its own.
Nicole Perlroth New York Times Jan 2013 10min Permalink
How an autocratic CEO made the company billions, alienating almost everyone else in the process.
Caleb Hannan Businessweek Jan 2013 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
How the China National Tobacco Corp., which manufactures 2.5 trillion cigarettes per year, came to make more money than Apple.
Andrew Martin Businessweek Dec 2014 15min Permalink
Fentanyl is quickly becoming America’s deadliest drug. But law enforcement couldn’t trace it to its source—until one teenager overdosed in North Dakota.
Alex W. Palmer New York Times Magazine Oct 2019 50min Permalink
“None of this should have ever happened. It makes absolutely no sense at all. It’s truly crazy.”
Matt Stopera Buzzfeed Mar 2015 20min Permalink
Bentonville, Arkansas, is home to Walmart’s headquarters. It’s also a town in which the Walton Family Foundation works like a parallel state, creating a kind of twenty-first-century company town.
Stephanie Farmer Jacobin Mar 2021 25min Permalink
Sean Quinn was once a billionaire folk hero, but then things turned very dark in the borderlands.
“We’re trying really hard to make things better,” said one former Apple executive. “But most people would still be really disturbed if they saw where their iPhone comes from.”
Previously: “Apple, America and a Squeezed Middle Class”
Charles Duhigg, David Barboza New York Times Jan 2012 15min Permalink
China is neither a Marxist fundamentalist regime nor a universally-surveilled open-air prison, in which one is free to do nothing but worship the party and carry out its edicts. That is however the impression created by quite a bit of the media. I think that’s not the fault of individual journalists, instead more structural explanations are at work. News bureaus are highly concentrated in Beijing, due in part to natural corporate consolidation, but mostly because the government maintains a strict cap on foreign journalist visas. As a result, the bulk of journalists are based in the part of China that has the most politics and the least sense of growth. Everything here is doom and gloom, a fact well conveyed to the outside world.
Sexual harassment. Hate speech. Employee walkouts. The Silicon Valley giant is trapped in a war against itself. And there’s no end in sight.
Nitasha Tiku Wired Aug 2019 50min Permalink
A profile of Roseanne Barr and her multiple personalities.
Mike Sager Esquire Aug 2001 25min Permalink
We stopped at a service station where there were old truck drivers, their vehicles festooned with red banners: “All-out war against the virus, weather hard times together.” The drivers wore their masks down around their chins as they smoked. I asked for water at the only open shop, and the assistant pulled his jacket up to cover his mouth before saying “over there.”
Lavender Au New York Review of Books Mar 2020 15min Permalink
Gaming the lottery seemed as good a retirement plan as any.
Jason Fagone Huffington Post Highline Feb 2018 40min Permalink