Shutter Madness
On photographer Garry Winogrand and the unedited archive of more than half a million exposures he left behind.
On photographer Garry Winogrand and the unedited archive of more than half a million exposures he left behind.
Jacob Mikanowski The Awl Jun 2013 15min Permalink
A profile of Spears at her nadir.
Vanessa Grigoriadis Rolling Stone Feb 2008 35min Permalink
Then there’s Mark Kostabi, the former New York gossip column fixture and self-professed “con artist” who everybody remembers but nobody talks about. Christie’s and Sotheby’s have no comment. Neither does the MoMA, the Guggenheim, or the Met, despite the curious fact that they all have Kostabis in their permanent collections. As for quotes from some highfalutin critics expounding on the semiotics of cone hats, cash registers, and the Sony Walkman in Kostabi’s work? Not a chance.
In 2001, a young Japanese woman walked into the North Dakota woods and froze to death. Had she come in search of the $1 million dollars buried nearby in the film Fargo?
Paul Berczeller The Guardian Jun 2003 15min Permalink
How to run a fashion empire.
Molly Young GQ Mar 2018 15min Permalink
On William Eggleston’s The Red Ceiling and an unsolved murder.
Will Stephenson Oxford American Mar 2018 20min Permalink
An interview with Maurice Sendak.
Emma Brockes, Maurice Sendak The Believer Nov 2012 20min Permalink
How the way we’re taught to look at female-centric TV, books and movies is ruining our ability to see good art.
Lili Loofbourow Virginia Quarterly Review Mar 2018 25min Permalink
A profile of director Guillermo del Toro.
Daniel Zalewski New Yorker Jan 2011 50min Permalink
Inside the disturbing “cult” of young acolytes that catapulted conductor James Levine’s career.
Malcolm Gay, Kay Lazar Boston Globe Mar 2018 Permalink
A feat of elegant design wowed elite architects and promised to bring education to poor children in Nigeria. Then it collapsed.
Allyn Gaestel The Atavist Magazine Feb 2018 30min Permalink
“A unicorn, a monster, a phoenix, a machine, a heavyweight fighter, an astronaut, a superhero, a thoroughbred, a home-run hitter, a waitress juggling ‘16 entrees, 42 starters, 16 desserts,’ a jazz virtuoso, LeBron James, Magellan, Snuffleupagus. The actress Laurie Metcalf has been compared to all of these things.”
Willa Paskin New York Times Magazine Feb 2018 15min Permalink
The creator of the California-based food chain kills his mother, sister and, finally, himself.
From Hollywood to Anaheim, he had opened a chain of fast-food rotisserie chicken restaurants that dazzled the food critics and turned customers into a cult. Poets wrote about his Zankou chicken. Musicians sang about his Zankou chicken. Now that he was dying, his dream of building an empire, 100 Zankous across the land, a Zankou in every major city, would be his four sons’ to pursue. In the days before, he had pulled them aside one by one -- Dikran, Steve, Ara, Vartkes -- and told them he had no regrets. He was 56 years old, that was true, but life had not cheated him. He did not tell them he had just one more piece of business left to do.
Mark Arax Los Angeles Apr 2008 40min Permalink
“There’s always room for another story. There’s always room for another tune.”
Choire Sicha Interview Sep 2015 15min Permalink
Why was Christopher Priest nearly written out of comics history?
Abraham Riesman Vulture Jan 2018 15min Permalink
Riding along with the El Paso congressman.
Eric Benson Texas Monthly Dec 2017 35min Permalink
Leïla Slimani’s best-seller explores the dark relationship of a mother and her babysitter.
Lauren Collins New Yorker Dec 2017 30min Permalink
Best Article Arts Business Media
A review of several books on Rupert Murdoch first criticizes the authors for not grasping the many sides of their subject, then offers a thesis of its own. He’s “not so much a man, or a cultural force, as a portrait of the modern world.”
John Lanchester London Review of Books Feb 2004 25min Permalink
Philip Seymour Hoffman’s widow on addiction, loss, and recovery.
Mimi O'Donnell Vogue Dec 2017 15min Permalink
Teaching Emily Dickinson at Santa Fe Community College in Gainesville, Florida.
William Bowers Oxford American Jan 2003 40min Permalink
The real question is this: can I love the art but hate the artist? Can you? When I say we, I mean I. I mean you.
Claire Dederer The Paris Review Nov 2017 20min Permalink
On Graham Greene, the master of “ethical ambivalence.”
Zadie Smith The Guardian Sep 2004 10min Permalink
On the sanitized wonderland that is Singapore.
William Gibson Wired Sep 1993 20min Permalink
The role of a writer in 2017.
Jonathan Franzen The Guardian Nov 2017 25min Permalink
When she died in 1952, author Margaret Wise Brown left the rights to Goodnight Moon to a nine-year-old neighbor named Albert Clarke. The book became a classic. Clarke, living entirely off the royalties, became a deadbeat.
Joshua Prager The Wall Street Journal Sep 2000 15min Permalink