The Reluctant Memoirist
What it means when an investigative reporter’s undercover work is framed as a personal journey.
What it means when an investigative reporter’s undercover work is framed as a personal journey.
Suki Kim The New Republic Jun 2016 10min Permalink
The story of freelance journalist Anna Therese Day.
Gail Sheehy Jezebel Feb 2016 20min Permalink
The real story of a fabricator.
Doyle Murphy Riverfront Times Feb 2016 20min Permalink
Five Vietnamese-American journalists were killed on American soil between 1981 and 1990. The prime suspects? Members of the National United Front for the Liberation of Vietnam, a group of former military commanders from South Vietnam.
A.C. Thompson ProPublica Nov 2015 1h Permalink
While a Marine stationed in Afghanistan, Austin Tice decided he wanted to become a war photographer. He entered Syria and filed stories for McClatchy and the Washington Post. Then he disappeared.
Sonia Smith Texas Monthly Oct 2015 35min Permalink
Confessions of a presidential campaign reporter.
Michael Hastings GQ Oct 2008 20min Permalink
A journalist and documentarian charts over a decade of her relationship with Philip Roth.
Livia Manera Sambuy The Believer Jan 2015 20min Permalink
“I think you are asking me, in the most tactful way possible, about my own aggression and malice. What can I do but plead guilty? I don’t know whether journalists are more aggressive and malicious than people in other professions. We are certainly not a ‘helping profession.’ If we help anyone, it is ourselves, to what our subjects don’t realize they are letting us take. I am hardly the first writer to have noticed the not-niceness of journalists. Tocqueville wrote about the despicableness of American journalists in Democracy in America. In Henry James’s satiric novel The Reverberator, a wonderful rascally journalist named George M. Flack appears. I am only one of many contributors to this critique. I am also not the only journalist contributor. Tom Wolfe and Joan Didion, for instance, have written on the subject. Of course, being aware of your rascality doesn’t excuse it.”
Janet Malcolm, Katie Roiphe The Paris Review Apr 2011 35min Permalink
On driving (and walking) in the Middle East – from Syria to Lebanon, across Saudi Arabia to Dammam, in a taxi through war-torn Beirut.
Nathan Deuel The Morning News Oct 2013 10min Permalink
Is being a war correspondent worth the risk?
Ed Caesar British GQ Jul 2013 20min Permalink
A history of The New Yorker and its editors, from founder Harold Ross through Tina Brown.
William Stingone New York Public Library Jan 1996 15min Permalink
A profile of the eccentric Gene Weingarten, the only person to twice win the Pulitzer for feature writing.
Tom Bartlett Washingtonian Dec 2011 20min Permalink
Caitlin Curran was fired from WNYC for attending an Occupy Wall Street protest. The author explains why her boss was wrong.
Conor Friedersdorf The Atlantic Oct 2011 10min Permalink
Nine months after the AOL merger, here’s a progress report.
Joe Pompeo Capital New York Nov 2011 20min Permalink
Inside the complicated world of running The New York Times.
The story of three months spent training reporters in Saudi Arabia, where the press is far from free. “I suspected that behind the closed gates of Saudi society there was a social revolution in the making. With some guidance, I thought, these journalists could help inspire change.”
Lawrence Wright New Yorker Jan 2004 Permalink
A profile of Anas Aremeyaw, an investigative journalist in Ghana who’s willing to do anything–and pose as anyone–to get the story.
Nicholas Schmidle The Atlantic Nov 2010 10min Permalink
Michael Lewis goes undercover at Columbia.
Michael Lewis The New Republic Apr 1993 10min Permalink
In the last decade, newsrooms across the country have adopted a “do more with less” strategy. It’s a kamikaze mission.
Dean Starkman Columbia Journalism Review Sep 2010 15min Permalink
The New York Times reveals the deception of 27-year-old reporter Jayson Blair.
- New York Times May 2003 30min Permalink
The backstory of the publication of WikiLeaks’s Afghanistan logs.
On September 28, 1980, the Washington Post published a story by an ambitious young reporter about an 8-year-old boy addicted to heroin. The story won a Pulitzer. The boy didn’t exist.
William Green Washington Post Apr 1981 1h Permalink
The rise and fall of The Exile, Russia’s angriest English-language newspaper.
James Verini Vanity Fair Feb 2010 30min Permalink
How the National Enquirer became a 2010 Pulitzer contender without straying from its roots as a supermarket tabloid.
Alex Pappademas GQ May 2010 Permalink
A young journalist’s low-paid odyssey through publications from the Hong Kong iMail to Gawker adrift in the “nothing-based economy.”
Maureen Tkacik Columbia Journalism Review May 2010 30min Permalink