Kid Cannabis
The rise and fall of a chubby Idaho pizza delivery boy turned weed kingpin.
The rise and fall of a chubby Idaho pizza delivery boy turned weed kingpin.
Mark Binelli Rolling Stone Oct 2005 20min Permalink
An estimated 70,000 transgender youth lack secure housing. This is what life on the streets is like for six of them.
Laura Rena Murray Rolling Stone Sep 2017 20min Permalink
A thirty-year-old Tom Petty on the brink of Damn the Torpedoes.
Mikal Gilmore Rolling Stone Feb 1980 15min Permalink
Inside the singular world of Longmont Potion Castle.
Colin St. John Rolling Stone Jul 2016 10min Permalink
“I learned about sex in a Laundromat. The setting wasn’t my idea. It was my mother’s who had brought me along on washday to break the news.”
Cameron Crowe Rolling Stone Oct 1975 10min Permalink
Ricky Rodriguez was born in the role of the messiah. His father was David Berg, the leader of the polygamous/incestuous cult The Children of God, which published a book documenting his early life:
In 1982 a shop in Spain printed several thousand copies of a book that was then distributed to group members around the world. Bound in faux leather, illustrated with hundreds of photographs, the 762-page tome meticulously chronicled Ricky's young life and was intended as a child-rearing manual for families. Its title, The Story of Davidito, was stamped in gold. With its combination of earnest prose and unabashed child pornography, it is perhaps the most disturbing book ever published in the name of religion.
Eventually, he left the cult and found work as an electrician. But revenge called him back.
Peter Wilkinson Rolling Stone Jul 2005 Permalink
He hacked a hospital to protest their treatment of a sick child. Now he’s facing 15 years.
David Kushner Rolling Stone Jun 2017 25min Permalink
In the ’50s and ’60s, the Reverend Will Campbell marched with MLK Jr. and worked to desegregate the University of Mississippi. Later, broke, he took a job as Waylon Jennings’ roadie and occasional spiritual guru. Afterward, his ministry grew even stranger and more itinerant.
Lawrence Wright Rolling Stone Dec 1990 Permalink
An anatomy of a failure.
Benjamin Wallace-Wells Rolling Stone Dec 2007 1h Permalink
A 16-year-old journalist goes on tour with a band on top. The article that inspired Almost Famous.
Cameron Crowe Rolling Stone Dec 1973 20min Permalink
”In West Antarctica, scientists have discovered the engine of catastrophe.”
Jeff Goodell Rolling Stone May 2017 20min Permalink
On the road with the comic after a bitter divorce.
Stephen Rodrick Rolling Stone May 2017 25min Permalink
On the underground doctors unleashing the healing powers of hallucinogens.
Mac McClelland Rolling Stone Mar 2017 35min Permalink
A profile of America’s new education secretary.
Janet Reitman Rolling Stone Mar 2017 25min Permalink
Ahmed Naji’s novel was not overtly political, but the “protagonist performs cunnilingus, rolls hash joints and gulps from bottles of vodka” which led a lawyer to press charges against him for causing a fluctuation in his blood pressure when the novel was excerpted in a Cairo newspaper, even though it had been approved by censors.
Jonathan Guyer Rolling Stone Feb 2017 20min Permalink
The American students hopped across the border for a night of partying in Matamoros. One didn’t return and was found later in a shack with 14 other corpses.
Guy Garcia Rolling Stone Jun 1989 15min Permalink
The Vice President’s days in Indiana.
Stephen Rodrick Rolling Stone Jan 2017 25min Permalink
“We have a lot in common. We go to the same shrink.”
Carrie Fisher, Madonna Rolling Stone Jun 1991 40min Permalink
How the Robin Hood of gamblers got ensnared in a money laundering scheme led by former football players.
David Amsden Rolling Stone Nov 2016 30min Permalink
He stole over $1 million in chips – then checked himself into casino’s hotel to live like a king.
Keith Romer Rolling Stone Nov 2016 20min Permalink
"His friends remembered when Richard became famous. It was the year the hippies came to San Francisco. Richard had published one novel, A Confederate General from Big Sur, but it had sold miserably 743 copies and his publisher, Grove Press, had dropped its option on Trout Fishing in America."
Lawrence Wright Rolling Stone Apr 1985 30min Permalink
Stuart Redus and Fernando Torres were left for dead.
Seth Harp Rolling Stone Aug 2016 25min Permalink
How a group of Queens high schoolers changed music forever while barely managing to remain on speaking terms.
Mikal Gilmore Rolling Stone May 2016 30min Permalink
A profile of Andy Kaufman.
David Hirshey Rolling Stone Apr 1981 30min Permalink
“One afternoon about three days ago the Editorial Enforcement Detail from the Rolling Stone office showed up at my door, with no warning, and loaded about 40 pounds of supplies into the room: two cases of Mexican beer, four quarts of gin, a dozen grapefruits, and enough speed to alter the outcome of six Super Bowls. There was also a big Selectric typewriter, two reams of paper, a face-cord of oak firewood and three tape recorders – in case the situation got so desperate that I might finally have to resort to verbal composition.”
Hunter S. Thompson Rolling Stone Jul 1973 1h Permalink