The Lost Genius of the Post Office
When the U.S. Postal Service was a hotbed for innovation.
When the U.S. Postal Service was a hotbed for innovation.
Kevin Kosar Politico Magazine Jun 2017 15min Permalink
The afterlife of 486 frames of Kodachrome II 8mm film shot by Dallas clothing manufacturer Abraham Zapruder.
Alex Pasternack Motherboard Nov 2012 20min Permalink
For 60 years, American drivers unknowingly poisoned themselves by pumping leaded gasoline into their tanks. Clair Patterson—a scientist who helped build the atomic bomb and discovered the true age of the Earth—took on a billion-dollar industry to save humanity from itself.
Lucas Reilly Mental Floss May 2017 45min Permalink
Ringling Bros and Barnum & Bailey Circus performs the last shows of its 146 year run.
Jessica Lussenhop BBC May 2017 20min Permalink
A personal history of house moving.
Jeannie Vanasco The Believer May 2017 10min Permalink
A conversation with 97-year-old Ben Ferencz.
Lesley Stahl 60 Minutes May 2017 10min Permalink
The underground culture of big waves and wild times in 1961 Malibu, and the gang of teenage boys who worshiped at the feet of the beach’s dark prince, surfing legend and grifter Miki Dora.
Sheila Weller Vanity Fair Aug 2006 25min Permalink
On how a childhood spent in New York City’s tenements led a 15-year-old boy to be convicted of murder.
Jacob Riis The Atlantic Sep 1899 25min Permalink
In Arctic Siberia, Russian scientists are trying to stave off catastrophic climate change—by resurrecting an Ice Age biome complete with lab-grown woolly mammoths.
Ross Andersen The Atlantic Mar 2017 40min Permalink
On the eve of the Civil War, a nightmare at sea turned into one of the greatest rescues in maritime history. More than a century later, a rookie treasure hunter went looking for the lost ship—and found a different kind of ruin.
David Wolman The Atavist Magazine Mar 2017 35min Permalink
Best Article Arts History Food
Mince pie was once more American than the apple variety. It was also blamed for “bad health, murderous dreams, the downfall of Prohibition, and the decline of the white race,” among other things. Then it disappeared.
Cliff Doerksen Chicago Reader Dec 2009 15min Permalink
After oil was discovered on their Oklahoma reservation, the Osage Nation became the richest people per capita in the world. Then they began to be murdered off mysteriously. In 1924 the nascent FBI sent a team of undercover agents, including a Native American, to the Osage reservation.
David Grann New Yorker Mar 2017 15min Permalink
A discovery in a Lithuanian forest brings a tale of survival back to life.
Matthew Shaer Smithsonian Magazine Mar 2017 20min Permalink
How Carl Foreman, while tangling with the House Un-American Activities Committee, turned a throwaway Western into an allegory for the Hollywood blacklist.
Glenn Frankel Vanity Fair Feb 2017 25min Permalink
Watching the most famous frames in history with Errol Morris.
Ron Rosenbaum Smithsonian Oct 2013 15min Permalink
Somewhere in the desert, buried under a mountain of sand and rock, is an ancient shipwreck. Maybe.
Alexander Nazaryan Newsweek Feb 2016 20min Permalink
"And far from the ivory towers of music academia, mostly on his blog, Elgar’s Enigma Theme Unmasked, Bob Padgett has emerged as perhaps the most prolific and dogged of all Enigma seekers. His solution, which has caught the attention of classical music scholars, lies at the bottom of a rabbit hole of anagrams, cryptography, the poet Longfellow, the composer Mendelssohn, the Shroud of Turin, and Jesus, all of which he believes he found hiding in plain sight in the music".
Daniel Estrin New Republic Feb 2017 15min Permalink
The mass deportation of the Siberian Kalmyk people by Stalin still reverberates.
Badma Biurchiev Open Democracy Dec 2016 15min Permalink
A Washington tribe expelled 306 of its members. They’re not going quietly.
Pirates could be found in nearly every Atlantic port city. But only particular locations became known as “pirate nests,” a pejorative term used by royalists and customs officials. Many of the most notorious pirates began their careers in these ports. Others established even deeper ties by settling in these cities and becoming respected members of the local elite. Instead of the snarling drunken fiends that parade through children’s books, these pirates spent their booty on pigs and chickens, hoping to live a more placid and financially secure life on land.
Mark G. Hanna Humanities Jan 2017 10min Permalink
Did our ancient cousins get a bad rap?
Jon Mooallem New York Times Magazine Jan 2017 35min Permalink
In 1939, acting on a tip and clues from The Iliad, archaeologists unearthed King Nestor’s palace on Pylos. Recently, another discovery in Pylos, the grave of an even earlier soldier, could change our entire understanding of how western civilization developed.
Jo Marchant Smithsonian Jan 2017 20min Permalink
How a poet and an architect rescued a nation’s riches.
Tony Perrottet Smithsonian Jan 2017 25min Permalink
Hannah Arendt attends the trial of Adolf Eichmann.
Hannah Arendt New Yorker Feb 1963 1h15min Permalink
When the prosecutor in a 1924 trial focused on the murder of a priest backed the suspect–and everything that followed.
Ken Armstrong The Marshall Project Dec 2016 25min Permalink