Great Magazine Articles
#1
Posted 2011-June-01, 11:19
Washington Post - Pearls Before Breakfast
One of the most famous and interesting magazine articles of the last decade, the Post put one of the world's greatest violinists, equipped with a multimillion-dollar Stradivarius, in a metro station during rush hour. If he played it for spare change, incognito, would anyone notice?
New Yorker - The Apostate
Don't be intimidated by how (ridiculously) long this new article is, it's great and describes not only the insane beliefs of the cult of Scientology but also the physical abuse, bigotry, child-labour, prisons and other insanity. Crazy, crazy stuff. I knew more than a bit about Scientology before, but a lot of the stuff in here really surprised me.
The New Yorker- The Mark of a Masterpiece
Essay about people using crime scene-esque technology to figure out the source of unknown paintings, ends up being a fantastic read.
Art of the Steal: On the trail of the world's most ingenious thief
"Gerald Blanchard could hack any bank, swipe any jewel. There was no security system he couldn't beat."
The Return of Superfly
"Frank Lucas, once the city's biggest, baddest heroin kingpin, the original O.G. in chinchilla, now seems like just a very likable guy. But don't be fooled."
The Falling Man
"In the picture, he departs from this earth like an arrow." Amazing 9/11 article.
How Companies and Brands get named
Hilarious article.
DFW Essays:
NYTMag - Federer as Religious Experience
The Atlantic - Host
Gourmet - Consider the Lobster
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#3
Posted 2011-June-01, 12:30
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#4
Posted 2011-June-03, 19:14
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What's Gerber doing in there?
The guy writes colorfully. Enjoyed that story. The Federer story was pretty good. Hard to believe that was almost 5 years ago. I think that Pearls Before Breakfast story was discussed in the WC.
#5
Posted 2011-June-04, 12:24
Some Rolling Stone (Probably NSFW language/drug use):
The Airplane Thief
The Stoner Arms Dealers: How Two American Kids Became Big-Time Weapons Traders
The Secret Sharer - The New Yorker
The story of whistle blower facing 35 years for bringing attention to waste and potentially illegal activity within the NSA.
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#6
Posted 2011-June-04, 14:28
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#7
Posted 2011-June-05, 10:21
Christinne Muschi/Reuters
Bernard Hopkins, 46, became the oldest fighter to capture a significant belt when he defeated Jean Pascal last month.
#8
Posted 2011-June-07, 16:51
Working on some Hunter S Thompson now.
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#10
Posted 2011-June-19, 07:05
#11
Posted 2011-June-19, 07:12
If something so simple can transform intensive care, what else can it do?
by Atul Gawande
If a new drug were as effective at saving lives as Peter Pronovost’s checklist, there would be a nationwide marketing campaign urging doctors to use it.
Just finished reading the book after seeing barmar's post last week. Highly recommend this.
#12
Posted 2011-June-19, 07:50
How American Health Care Killed My Father
After the needless death of his father, the author, a business executive, began a personal exploration of a health-care industry that for years has delivered poor service and irregular quality at astonishingly high cost. It is a system, he argues, that is not worth preserving in anything like its current form. And the health-care reform now being contemplated will not fix it. Here’s a radical solution to an agonizing problem.
By DAVID GOLDHILL
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These are the impersonal forces, I’ve come to believe, that explain why things have gone so badly wrong in health care, producing the national dilemma of runaway costs and poorly covered millions. The problems I’ve explored in the past year hardly count as breakthrough discoveries—health-care experts undoubtedly view all of them as old news. But some experts, it seems, have come to see many of these problems as inevitable in any health-care system—as conditions to be patched up, papered over, or worked around, but not problems to be solved.
#13
Posted 2011-June-21, 10:44
Three-Man Weave
"There are underdog stories...and there's what happened in North Dakota in 1988"
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#14
Posted 2011-June-24, 19:18
New Yorker - Trial by Fire
A story of a man convicted of killing his three children via arson. It may have been discussed in another thread about the death penalty, but it's a fascinating read.
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#15
Posted 2011-June-24, 19:23
jjbrr, on 2011-June-24, 19:18, said:
New Yorker - Trial by Fire
A story of a man convicted of killing his three children via arson. It may have been discussed in another thread about the death penalty, but it's a fascinating read.
This was a very interesting read. Not the least of which because Gov. Perry didn't pardon him or commute his death sentence to life in prison while people investigated further.
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#16
Posted 2011-June-24, 20:13
BunnyGo, on 2011-June-24, 19:23, said:
It really is amazing how his final appeals were handled (or not handled).
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#18
Posted 2016-August-25, 12:29
jjbrr, on 2016-August-25, 12:26, said:
I read this too, but other than the seemingly phony 10 year waitlist, is he really a fraud?
LOL at the foodie establishment licking this guy's boots.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#19
Posted 2016-August-25, 13:01