Living Above the Store
Fuzzy memories of a house overlooking the Sunset Strip that played host to a generation of comics—including Sam Kinison, Andrew Dice Clay, and Robin Williams—launching dozens of careers and about as many drug problems.
Fuzzy memories of a house overlooking the Sunset Strip that played host to a generation of comics—including Sam Kinison, Andrew Dice Clay, and Robin Williams—launching dozens of careers and about as many drug problems.
David Peisner Buzzfeed Oct 2015 35min Permalink
“What we’re doing in writing is not all that different from what we’ve been doing all our lives, i.e., using our personalities as a way of coping with life.”
George Saunders New Yorker Oct 2015 15min Permalink
The troubling final years of Mickey Rooney’s life.
Gary Baum, Scott Feinberg The Hollywood Reporter Oct 2015 30min Permalink
He created the template for contemporary hit-making, made Ace of Base the biggest group in the world, and mentored the most successful songwriter since the Beatles. Why have you never heard of Denniz Pop? Excerpted from The Song Machine: Inside the Hit Factory.
John Seabrook Slate Oct 2015 1h Permalink
With three shows currently in production, Ryan Murphy, creator of Glee and American Horror Story, is one of the few show runners whose name commands an audience.
Lacey Rose The Hollywood Reporter Oct 2015 20min Permalink
Explaining a radical shift in the way some of New York’s best restaurants do business.
Ryan Sutton Eater Oct 2015 25min Permalink
‘‘That’s something I don’t think I could ever do,’’ she said. ‘‘Send my only girl to another random country to live with people she’d just met. It had to be God that paralyzed Monica Fenty’s emotions so that she’d say, ‘Yes, go.’ To this day, I don’t know how that happened. But thank God it did.’’
Miranda July T Magazine Oct 2015 10min Permalink
The Hollywood backroom machinations that got the biopic to movie screens.
Stephen Galloway The Hollywood Reporter Oct 2015 15min Permalink
A moment of racism at Harvard leads the writer to consider Huckleberry Finn.
Kenzaburo Oe The Literary Hub Oct 2015 15min Permalink
The men whose profitable (and self-serving) antics preserved what we know of the Brontë sisters.
Mark Bostridge Times Literary Supplement Oct 2015 15min Permalink
Who we think we are in 2015.
Wesley Morris New York Times Magazine Oct 2015 10min Permalink
On the sex lives of the castrati.
Colm Tóibín London Review of Books Oct 2015 20min Permalink
An oral history of Gucci Mane’s many rises and falls.
Benjamin Meadows-Ingram The Fader Oct 2015 55min Permalink
The producer of Big Star’s Third and piano player on ‘Wild Horses’ recounts a life of music in Memphis.
Jim Dickinson Oxford American Dec 2013 1h10min Permalink
The adventures and controversies of the avant-garde poet Kenneth Goldsmith, who believes plagiarism is an art form.
Alec Wilkinson New Yorker Sep 2015 25min Permalink
Hanging out with the Atomic Bombshells in Provincetown, Massachusetts.
Nicole Pasulka Hazlitt Sep 2015 15min Permalink
Attending a meeting of the Continental Drift Club in Berlin.
Patti Smith The Guardian Sep 2015 15min Permalink
Practicing photography in Switzerland.
Teju Cole New York Times Magazine Sep 2015 20min Permalink
Hemingway was in love with two women at once. He found the experience wrenching.
A.E. Hotchner Smithsonian Magazine Sep 2015 20min Permalink
He had the mind of a scholar, but he always insisted he didn’t want to be one.
Jay Parini Chronicle of Higher Education Sep 2015 15min Permalink
The battle between 1975’s biggest shows.
Michael Riedel Vanity Fair Sep 2015 20min Permalink
We think of the character as lithe and slim as the actors who’ve played him. But Shakespeare might not have intended him to be that way.
Isaac Butler Slate Sep 2015 10min Permalink
Talking to Lee Daniels about Empire, Hollywood, and survival.
Zach Baron GQ Sep 2015 15min Permalink
“Over the years, it’s been hard to get male movie stars to be in a movie if a woman’s the lead, where a great, great movie star, a woman, will be in a movie where the man’s the lead. So there’s just not parity there, we’re not on equal footing.”
Amy Larocca New York Sep 2015 25min Permalink
In which Eliot analyzes Henry James, Virginia Woolf, and D.H. Lawrence.
T.S. Eliot The Times Literary Supplement Aug 2015 10min Permalink