Flying Upside Down
An engineering team races to create a next-generation computer.
The first installment of The Soul of a New Machine.
An engineering team races to create a next-generation computer.
The first installment of The Soul of a New Machine.
Tracy Kidder The Atlantic Jul 1981 35min Permalink
At a playground in North Wales, kids are mostly left alone to experiment with fire, jump from great heights and play in a creek. It’s designed to teach the value of taking risks, a lesson many American children have stopped learning.
Hanna Rosin The Atlantic Mar 2014 35min Permalink
On the campaign trail with Florida’s malleable ex-governor.
Molly Ball The Atlantic Mar 2014 25min Permalink
“Too much is being asked of the Delta.”
Alexis Madrigal The Atlantic Feb 2014 50min Permalink
A former student and high school coach travel to California to kidnap the coach’s daughter, an adult film actress.
Nic Pizzolatto The Atlantic Nov 2004 25min Permalink
A former student and high school coach travel to California to kidnap the coach's daughter, an adult film actress.
"I would watch her green eyes, the smile that always closed them. I remember her face lit by a Bunsen burner's quivering flame, laughter bursting from her like confetti. Once, I saw her slap Junior Wendell's hand away from her skirt, and I felt the confinement of a teenage girl. The way her mind was full of longings—a knot of emotions constantly rising to the surface, washing over her, carrying her through a harrowed suburban field, past the shopping mall and long acres of bluestem grass, into the back seats of cars, truckbeds."
Nic Pizzolatto The Atlantic Nov 2004 25min Permalink
On goalies, and in particular, really good Finnish ones.
Chris Koentges The Atlantic Feb 2014 30min Permalink
An investigation into America’s Greek system.
Caitlin Flanagan The Atlantic Feb 2014 55min Permalink
Unpacking the 76,897 micro-genres that make up the cinematic DNA.
Alexis Madrigal The Atlantic Jan 2014 20min Permalink
Arriving in China at 23, Sidney Rittenberg spent 35 years as a “friend, confidante, translator, and journalist” for the Communist Party’s top leaders. In this interview, he recalls both his friendship with Chairman Mao and the 16 years he spent in solitary confinement.
Matt Schiavenza The Atlantic Dec 2013 20min Permalink
How a 20-something made millions as an e-commerce hustler.
Taylor Clark The Atlantic Jan 2014 35min Permalink
“I’ve tried therapy, drugs, and booze. Here’s what helps.”
Scott Stossel The Atlantic Dec 2013 50min Permalink
“This is a story about how the future gets weird.”
Alexis Madrigal The Atlantic Dec 2013 15min Permalink
A Confederate soldier’s point of view on the Civil War.
George Cary Eggleston The Atlantic Jun–Dec 1874 40min Permalink
On Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu’s lust for blood-sport.
David Quammen The Atlantic Jul 2003 35min Permalink
Why one man made it his mission to kill 60 known sex offenders.
Lexi Pandell The Atlantic Dec 2013 25min Permalink
Lyndon Baines Johnson in retirement.
Leo Janos The Atlantic Jul 1973 Permalink
On using data to hire and fire.
Don Peck The Atlantic Nov 2013 35min Permalink
How our memories become contaminated by inaccuracies.
Erika Hayasaki The Atlantic Nov 2013 10min Permalink
A profile of cognitive scientist Douglas Hofstadter, who has spent the last 30 years trying to replicate the human mind.
James Somers The Atlantic Oct 2013 30min Permalink
How both the drugs and the music have evolved together.
P. Nash Jenkins The Atlantic Sep 2013 20min Permalink
A briefing on drone warfare.
Mark Bowden The Atlantic Aug 2013 40min Permalink
A rodeo rider squares off with a racist immigration official.
"He saw deputies in their serious hats coming through the restaurant from the kitchen, four white guys who looked like they meant business, serious, minds made up, and Nachee thought of a grandfather now from the other time, more than a hundred years ago, Nachitay, sitting in Mi Nidito with Victor’s grandfather from the same time, Victorio. Sometimes Nachee talked to Victor about those guys living the way they chose to. You hungry? Run off a mule, cut steaks and cook them over a fire. Before General Crook came along on his mule, the one Nachee’s grandfather from that other time was dying to eat. Bring them all here to sit with their rifles, Victorio, Cochise, Geronimo … those guys doing whatever they wanted. They never carried ID but every horse soldier in the Arizona Territory knew who they were."
Elmore Leonard The Atlantic Jul 2012 10min Permalink
How a serial killer and his teenage accomplice used listings for “the job of a lifetime” to lure their victims, all down-and-out single men, to the backwoods of Ohio.
Hanna Rosin The Atlantic Aug 2013 40min Permalink
Unpacking a false confession 20 years later.
Marc Bookman The Atlantic Aug 2013 25min Permalink