A Macedonian Tennis Racket
How a 20-year-old from the land of fake news tricked Martina Navratilova, Serena Williams, and the BBC.
How a 20-year-old from the land of fake news tricked Martina Navratilova, Serena Williams, and the BBC.
Ben Rothenberg Slate Feb 2018 20min Permalink
A profile of the radio legend who helped launch the career of Ira Glass and many more.
Mark Oppenheimer Slate Jan 2018 25min Permalink
The rise and fall of the “most far-flung, most organized, and most brazen example of homosexual extortion in the nation’s history.”
William McGowan Slate Jul 2012 30min Permalink
Inside the campaign to canonize the fire department chaplain who died on September 11.
Ruth Graham Slate Sep 2017 15min Permalink
On the mysterious disappearance of a beloved coding legend (and his code) with stops along the way for a short history of programming languages, an ethnography of code-based communities, and an inquiry into what it means to “die young without artifact.”
Annie Lowrey Slate Mar 2012 30min Permalink
Three killings, three young accused killers, and the two homicide detectives that link them.
Marc Bookman Slate May 2017 20min Permalink
A near future with racial voting restrictions and questionnaires.
Kashana Cauley Slate Feb 2017 15min Permalink
The American medical experiment in Guatemala that left hundreds with STDs.
Sushma Subramanian Slate Feb 2017 25min Permalink
A mysterious cache of documents could prove that a man serving a life sentence for homicide was framed by corrupt Alabama authorities—if the documents, and the man, can be believed.
Leon Neyfakh Slate Feb 2017 50min Permalink
After two people are found dead in Yellowstone National Park, a team of investigators tracks down the unlikely culprit: a grizzly bear.
Jessica Grose Slate Apr 2012 40min Permalink
Colossal corruption. Political chaos. The worst recession in its history. How a once-booming nation fell.
Franklin Foer Slate Aug 2016 25min Permalink
How a sexual assault case in Idaho involving refugee children morphed into an anti-refugee frenzy.
Michelle Goldberg Slate Jul 2016 20min Permalink
Trump’s key adviser is a lobbyist known for reinventing tyrants.
Franklin Foer Slate May 2016 20min Permalink
What it’s like to write about a candidate who hates you.
Seth Stevenson Slate Mar 2016 10min Permalink
The unexpected history of a name.
Jody Rosen Slate Mar 2016 15min Permalink
How a detachment of U.S. Army soldiers smoked out the original Ku Klux Klan.
Matthew Pearl Slate Mar 2016 3h5min Permalink
Melissa Cook is carrying triplets for a man she has never met, conceived with an egg that isn't hers. He only wants two of them, but won't let her keep the third. So she is suing, in the hopes that the court will arrive at a new meaning of parenthood.
Michelle Goldberg Slate Feb 2016 20min Permalink
“There are critics who see their job as to be on the side of the artist, or in a state of imaginative sympathy or alliance with the artist. I think it's important for a critic to be populist in the sense that we’re on the side of the public. I think one of the reasons is, frankly, capitalism. Whether you’re talking about restaurants or you’re talking about movies, you’re talking about large-scale commercial enterprises that are trying to sell themselves and market themselves and publicize themselves. A critic is, in a way, offering consumer advice.”
Isaac Chotiner Slate Feb 2016 15min Permalink
The humans behind the algorithm.
Will Oremus Slate Jan 2015 25min Permalink
On the false narratives of anorexia.
Katy Waldman Slate Dec 2015 30min Permalink
He created the template for contemporary hit-making, made Ace of Base the biggest group in the world, and mentored the most successful songwriter since the Beatles. Why have you never heard of Denniz Pop? Excerpted from The Song Machine: Inside the Hit Factory.
John Seabrook Slate Oct 2015 1h Permalink
We think of the character as lithe and slim as the actors who’ve played him. But Shakespeare might not have intended him to be that way.
Isaac Butler Slate Sep 2015 10min Permalink
The tale of the first conviction overturned on faulty arson science.
Jeremy Stahl Slate Aug 2015 1h10min Permalink
To reduce recidivism, a program brings criminals face to face with their victims. The results aren’t always what you’d expect.
Mark Obbie Slate Jul 2015 55min Permalink
A trip to the writers’ room of The Onion spinoff, which started as a BuzzFeed parody but has morphed into something else: “the institutional voice of the Internet.”