The Boy Who Cried Cal
Kevin Hart wanted a scholarship to play Division I college football. It didn’t come. So he made one up–and called a press conference.
Kevin Hart wanted a scholarship to play Division I college football. It didn’t come. So he made one up–and called a press conference.
Tom Friend ESPN Jan 2009 35min Permalink
Inside the competitive, lucrative, swashbuckling world of DWI attorneys in Houston.
Mike Giglio Houston Press Nov 2009 20min Permalink
A Hollywood screenwriter finds out his identity’s been stolen when a hooker calls–from his private office–demanding to be paid for the sex they didn’t just have.
Josh Friedman Huck's Blog Jul 2010 15min Permalink
A series on the U.S. intelligence system.
Dana Priest, William M. Arkin Washington Post Jul 2010 55min Permalink
An interview with an ex-CIA agent who is a world expert on the history of car bombing.
Christopher Watt The Walrus Sep 2008 15min Permalink
A teenage love triangle turns tragic in Pinellas Park, Florida.
Lane DeGregory The St. Petersburg Times Jul 2010 15min Permalink
In January 1966–the same month In Cold Blood was first published–Truman Capote sat down with George Plimpton to discuss the new art form he liked to call “creative journalism.”
George Plimpton, Truman Capote New York Times Jan 1966 35min Permalink
Admiring evangelicals are helping David Berkowitz, the imprisoned serial killer who murdered six people in NYC during the summer of 1977, with an unusual image makeover.
Serge F. Kovaleski New York Times Jul 2010 Permalink
Nitrous balloon vendors clash in the parking lots of jam band festival across the Northeast.
John H. Tucker Village Voice Jul 2010 20min Permalink
The man who keeps finding famous fingerprints on uncelebrated works of art.
David Grann New Yorker Apr 2011 1h5min Permalink
After his wife disappears, Hans Reiser’s defense contacts a Wired writer who they believe can help explain the world of groundbreaking code, video games, and sci-fi that defines Reiser’s existence.
Joshua Davis Wired Jun 2007 20min Permalink
When New York built a prison designed to house two men in a single cell, it launched a new experiment in crime control. A look at life inside this prison and in the tiny town surrounding it.
Jennifer Gonnerman Village Voice May 1999 20min Permalink
When the Internet made plagiarism harder, Jordan Kavoosi saw a burgeoning market for original essays. But in his empire of fake papers, it’s the writers, not the students, who get the shaft.
Andy Mannix City Pages Jun 2010 10min Permalink
A conversation with NYU Law Professor Philip Alston on the legality of ‘targeted killings’ by drones, which have made headlines in Pakistan, but also have been deployed by the C.I.A. in countries like Yemen.
Scott Horton Harper's Jun 2010 10min Permalink
What’s Madoff like as a prisoner? According to his fellow inmates, he’s cheap (“You couldn’t get an ice-cream cone off him”), he’s unrepentant (“Fuck my victims”), and he’s eager to dole out financial advice.
Steve Fishman New York Jun 2010 20min Permalink
[Part 2 of 2] The story behind this spring’s spate of retributive murders in Southwest D.C.
Paul Duggan Washington Post Jun 2010 15min Permalink
[Part 1 of 2] The story behind this spring’s spate of retributive murders in Southwest D.C.
Paul Duggan Washington Post Jun 2010 10min Permalink
In the wake of 9/11, terrorist networks moved their recruitment and training efforts online, giving birth to Jihad-geeks like Irhabi_007.
Nadya Labi The Atlantic Jul 2006 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
How smallpox went from eradicated disease to the ideal weapon of bioterrorists.
Richard Preston New Yorker Jul 1999 50min Permalink
It took a desperate screenwriter to find Max Mermelstein, Miami’s former coke overlord, after twenty-five years in hiding.
Gus Garcia-Roberts LA Weekly May 2010 20min Permalink
In 2005, the prisoner who had set the U.S. penal system record for years in solitary confinement was moved to what’s called “the Alcatraz of the Rockies”—a jail in Colorado built just for him.
Alan Prendergast Westword Aug 2007 20min Permalink
In 2008, a Brooklyn cop grew gravely concerned about how the public was being served. So he began carrying a digital sound recorder, secretly recording his colleagues and superiors.
Graham Rayman Village Voice May 2010 25min Permalink
How did a pair of young rappers from Scotland, laughed off the stage for their accents, land a deal with Sony and start partying with Madonna? They pretended to be American.
Decca Aitkenhead The Guardian May 2008 20min Permalink
The second installment of the Gaile Owens story. A former churchgoing mother of two from suburban Memphis, Owens is the first woman to be given the death penalty in Tennessee in nearly 200 years.
Brantley Hargrove Nashville Scene Apr 2010 40min Permalink