Selling China by the Sleeve Dance
How a touring dance company battles the Chinese Communist Party.
Showing 25 articles matching fk33.cc_The best selling magnesium sulfate trihydrate company.
How a touring dance company battles the Chinese Communist Party.
Nicholas Hune-Brown Hazlitt Oct 2017 25min Permalink
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
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
On the importance of the jingle business.
Jessica Hopper Buzzfeed Nov 2013 15min Permalink
A tale of British gangsters who were determined to be famous.
Duncan Campbell The Guardian Sep 2015 25min Permalink
Inside the abusive practices of magazine-subscription sub-contractors.
Darlena Cunha The Atlantic Apr 2015 20min Permalink
How Craigslist dealers do business in New York City.
David Shapiro, Joe Coscarelli Village Voice Apr 2011 15min Permalink
Lenny makes $5,000 a week selling coke. It was easy to get into the business after finishing prep school. Getting out and going legit after his final score is proving much more difficult.
David Amsden New York Apr 2006 25min Permalink
Is Vemma an energy drink, the new Amway or a pyramid scheme taking advantage of college kids? Maybe all three.
Caleb Hannan Rolling Stone Oct 2014 20min Permalink
How Chicago is key to a business moving tons of drugs for billions of dollars.
Jason McGahan Chicago Oct 2013 Permalink
The shoot-first-and-ask-questions-later culture of the 101st Airborne Division, an execution of captured Iraqi prisoners, and how far up the chain of command responsibility lies.
Raffi Khatchadourian New Yorker Aug 2009 1h Permalink
Making sense of the CEO’s very public tour of America, which feels like a political campaign minus the politics.
Nitasha Tiku Buzzfeed Apr 2017 20min 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
How an autocratic CEO made the company billions, alienating almost everyone else in the process.
Caleb Hannan Businessweek Jan 2013 15min Permalink
How Shane Smith built Vice.
Reeves Wiedeman New York Jun 2018 30min Permalink
Embedded with G4S, the world’s largest private army.
William Langewiesche Vanity Fair Apr 2014 40min Permalink
What happened at OneTaste?
Ellen Huet Bloomberg Business Jun 2018 20min Permalink
The city of New York is suing a Long Island woman for making NYPD T-shirts. But is it really about money or controlling the brand?
Kaitlyn Tiffany The Goods May 2019 10min Permalink
The ads are everywhere. You can learn to serve like Serena Williams or write like Margaret Atwood. But what MasterClass really delivers is something altogether different.
Carina Chocano The Atlantic Aug 2020 30min Permalink
A trip to Carbohydrate Camelot.
David H. Freedman Marker May 2020 15min 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
The rise and fall of former McDonald’s CEO Don Thompson.
Ben Austen Chicago Mar 2015 20min Permalink
A con man ruining lives from behind bars. A woman who took on her health insurance company and won huge. A producer who lost everything on an epic coke binge. Those stories and more are included in Best Alternative Longform Journalism, a new anthology of great writing from alt-weeklies, which is available free and only through Longform.
Featuring: Gus Garcia-Roberts (Miami New Times), Sharyn Jackson (Santa Fe Reporter), Caleb Hannan (Seattle Weekly), Alan Prendergast (Westword) and many more.
Published by Association of Alternative Newsmedia.
Download Best Alternative Longform Journalism for free:
• ePub
• mobi (Kindle)
• pdf
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Sean Quinn was once a billionaire folk hero, but then things turned very dark in the borderlands.
On Tse Chi Lop, “the Jeff Bezos of the drug trade” and ringleader of a $21-billion crime syndicate.
Stephen Marche Toronto Life Nov 2021 Permalink