Hell for Elon Musk Is a Midsize Sedan
The future of Tesla.
The future of Tesla.
Tom Randall, Josh Eidelson, Dana Hull, John Lippert Bloomberg Businessweek Jul 2018 20min Permalink
Mike Picarella wanted to protect a co-worker from humiliating sexual harassment. He didn’t expect his own life to be destroyed in the process.
David Dayen Highline Jul 2018 40min Permalink
“Electorates turned with special venom against parties offering what was in effect a milder version of the economic consensus: free-market capitalism with a softer edge. It’s as if the voters are saying to those parties: what actually are you for?”
John Lanchester London Review of Books Jun 2018 20min Permalink
The bizarre corruption scandal at Bilfinger International.
Rafael Buschmann, Jürgen Dahlkamp, Gunther Latsch, Jörg Schmitt Der Spiegel English Jun 2018 25min Permalink
A history of modern capitalism from the perspective of the straw.
Alexis C. Madrigal The Atlantic Jun 2018 15min Permalink
How the 130-year-old game company bounced back with the Switch.
Felix Gillette Bloomberg Business Jun 2018 15min Permalink
“Jeffrey Levitt stole and misappropriated a grand total of fourteen million, six hundred ninety-nine thousand, nine hundred forty-seven dollars and fifty-eight cents. He stole all that. It was the largest single white-collar crime in Maryland history, almost bringing down the state’s entire savings and loan industry.” And it still wasn’t enough.
Tony Kornheiser Washington Post Oct 1986 25min Permalink
How Shane Smith built Vice.
Reeves Wiedeman New York Jun 2018 30min Permalink
How one of New York’s major trash haulers does business.
Kiera Feldman ProPublica Jun 2018 30min Permalink
The anti-trust saga of Microsoft and Netscape.
Victor Luckerson The Ringer May 2018 30min Permalink
Doug Schifter waged a one-man campaign to stop Uber from putting his fellow black-car drivers out of business. Then he decided to take his own life.
Jessica Bruder New York May 2018 20min Permalink
The rise of an amazing optical corporation and the future of our eyes.
Sam Knight The Guardian May 2018 35min Permalink
Bill Benter did the impossible: He wrote an algorithm that couldn’t lose at the track. Close to a billion dollars later, he tells his story for the first time.
Kit Chellel Bloomberg Business May 2018 25min Permalink
Mark Karpelès ran the largest Bitcoin exchange in the world until a heist made it insolvent, ultimately landing him in solitary confinement in Japanese prison.
Jen Wieczner Fortune Apr 2018 Permalink
“All human relations are a matter of record, ready to be revealed by a clever algorithm. Everyone is a spidergram now.”
Peter Waldman, Lizette Chapman, Jordan Robertson Businessweek Apr 2018 20min Permalink
How Jerry Falwell Jr. transformed Liberty University, one of the religious right’s most powerful institutions, into a wildly lucrative online empire.
Alec MacGillis ProPublica Apr 2018 30min Permalink
North Carolina’s Alexander County is a Southern Baptist stronghold. It’s also home to Mitchell Gold, an outspoken gay rights activist and the CEO of one of the region’s largest employers.
Tiffany Stanley Washington Post Apr 2018 35min Permalink
One in three families can’t afford diapers. Why are they so expensive?
KATHLEEN McGRORY Tampa Bay Times Mar 2018 15min Permalink
As it scrambled to compete, the tech company cut tens of thousands of U.S. workers, hitting its most senior employees hardest and flouting rules against age bias.
Peter Gosselin, Ariana Tobin ProPublica Mar 2018 35min Permalink
On PredictIt, a site that allows you to bet on politics, and the people who are getting rich off it.
David Hill The Ringer Mar 2018 20min Permalink
Baba Ramdev renounced the material world twenty-three years ago to become a Hindu ascetic. Now he’s on TV selling toothpaste, instant noodles, and toilet cleaners and the company he is believed to control is poised to become the biggest consumer goods seller in India.
Ben Crair Bloomberg Business Mar 2018 15min Permalink
The true believers won’t stop until they’ve remade the world.
Paul Ford Businessweek Mar 2018 10min Permalink
Malls were supposed to die. Instead they’re just being reimagined (again).
Alexandra Lange Curbed Feb 2018 10min Permalink
Taurus sold almost a million handguns that can potentially fire without anyone pulling the trigger. The government won’t fix the problem. The NRA is silent.
Michael Smith, Polly Mosendz Businessweek Feb 2018 15min Permalink
In a time when no one agrees on anything, some vague consensus can be found around the idea that more American manufacturing would be good. Rarely does someone say publicly, “Actually, I think there should be less American manufacturing.” (Although it happens.)
Meredith Haggerty Racked Feb 2018 30min Permalink