The Next Jeremy Lin?
On high school basketball star Chris Tang and the pressures of being the “Great Yellow Hope.”
On high school basketball star Chris Tang and the pressures of being the “Great Yellow Hope.”
Jay Caspian Kang Grantland Dec 2012 25min Permalink
The many reasons Lost shouldn’t have happened.
Alan Sepinwall Grantland Nov 2012 20min Permalink
The relationship between Buffalo and its team.
Ben Austen Grantland Nov 2012 35min Permalink
Dunks, drugs, and disappointment: an oral history of the 1980s Houston Rockets.
Jonathan Abrams Grantland Nov 2012 55min Permalink
Catching up with the controversial radio host, who recently returned to the air after years away.
Michael Kruse Grantland Sep 2012 15min Permalink
The evolution of cheating in chess.
Dave McKenna Grantland Sep 2012 15min Permalink
Why people play violent video games.
Tom Bissell Grantland Jul 2012 15min Permalink
How Sherwin Shayegan pulled off a 3,000-mile, piggyback ride-fueled road trip.
Bryan Curtis Grantland Jul 2012 20min Permalink
An oral history of WFAN.
Alex French, Howie Kahn Grantland Jul 2012 1h5min Permalink
An interview with Pavement’s Bob Nastanovich on his career afterlife as a “a clocker and chart-caller” and occasional breeder at an Iowa race horse track.
Alex Pappademas, Bob Nastanovich Grantland Jun 2012 30min Permalink
The political fight over a new football stadium in Minnesota.
Steve Marsh Grantland May 2012 25min Permalink
A writer’s trip home to Hot Springs, Arkansas, and the racetrack inextricably linked with the histories of his family and his hometown.
David Hill Grantland Apr 2012 25min Permalink
An oral history of the Pacers/Pistons melee in 2004.
Jonathan Abrams Grantland Feb 2012 55min Permalink
On the “unfair significance” of Jeremy Lin.
Jay Caspian Kang Grantland Feb 2012 10min Permalink
How the game gets made.
Tom Bissell Grantland Jan 2012 30min Permalink
On the death of a high school basketball star in New York City.
Jonathan Abrams Grantland Nov 2011 20min Permalink
He rose from poverty to fame as a marathon champion at only 23. But was his fall from a balcony outside of Nairobi murder, accident, or suicide?
Anna Clark Grantland Oct 2011 15min Permalink
"At the end of the cycle of Morning Glory, I was hailed as the greatest songwriter since Lennon and McCartney," Gallagher recalls. "Now, I know that I'm not, and I knew I wasn't then. But the perception of everybody since that period has been, 'What the fuck happened to this guy? Wasn't he supposed to be the next fucking Beatles?' I never said that I was the greatest thing since Lennon and McCartney … well, actually, I'm lying. I probably did say that once or twice in interviews. But regardless, look at it this way: Let's say my career had gone backwards. Let say this new solo album had been my debut, and it was my last two records that sold 20 million copies instead of the first two records. Had this been the case, all the other albums leading up to those last two would be considered a fucking journey. They would be perceived as albums that represent the road to greatness. But just because it started off great doesn't make those other albums any less of a journey. I'll use an American football analogy since we're in America: Let's say you're behind with two minutes to go and you come back to tie the game. It almost feels like you've won. Right? But let's say you've been ahead the whole game and you allow the opponent to tie things up in the final two minutes. Then it feels like you've lost. But the fact of the matter is it's still a fucking tie. The only difference is perception. And the fact of the matter is that Oasis sold 55 million records. If people think we were never good after the '90s, that's irrelevant."
Chuck Klosterman Grantland Sep 2011 15min Permalink
On FIFA’s history of scandal.
Brian Phillips Grantland Aug 2011 15min Permalink
On the shift from the “triple-A video-game production cycle — the expensive development process, in other words, by which games like Halo, Grand Theft Auto, Uncharted, and BioShock are unleashed upon the world” towards the simpler pleasures of gaming on the iPad.
Tom Bissell Grantland Aug 2011 20min Permalink
A 1980 profile of Nolan Ryan by Tony Kornheiser from Inside Sports, annotated 30 years later by Michael MacCambridge and Kornheiser. The first story in Grantland’s Director’s Cut series, which “looks back at classic works of sports journalism and gives the writers, athletes, and other figures involved in making the articles an opportunity to reflect on their work and recall some deleted scenes.”
Michael MacCambridge, Tony Kornheiser Grantland Jul 2011 30min Permalink
“Radically brilliant. Absurdly ahead of its time. Ridiculously poorly planned.” An oral history of the National Sports Daily.
Alex French, Howie Kahn Grantland Jun 2011 55min Permalink
On LA Noire and the gaming paradoxes presented by pairing nuanced storytelling with a player’s free will.
Tom Bissell Grantland Jun 2011 25min Permalink
On witnessing an incredible junior college basketball game 23 years ago in North Dakota.
Chuck Klosterman Grantland Jun 2011 15min Permalink
On recommitting to the Knicks after “a decade of dysfunction and delusion.”
Katie Baker Grantland May 2011 25min Permalink