The Torture Colony
A utopian German settlement in Chile had already turned darkly cultish by the time it became a secret torture site for enemies of the Pinochet regime.
A utopian German settlement in Chile had already turned darkly cultish by the time it became a secret torture site for enemies of the Pinochet regime.
Bruce Falconer The American Scholar Sep 2008 40min Permalink
A driver and passenger engage in uneasy political and social discourse.
"Darshan could all too easily picture Malik at prayer while on the job. He saw every detail--head bowed, eyed shut, both hands clutching the wheel as a laundry list of requests was whispered towards heaven: a new carburetor for the engine, a new dress for the wife, new sneakers for the children. Each and every petty need enunciated like a brave but modest child, the requests a thing of beauty in their humility, a delicate song of worship and desire that would only come to an end when Malik veered slightly into the opposing lane and plowed directly into the headlights of an oncoming sixteen-wheeler."
Craig Fishbane Bartleby Snopes Apr 2014 10min Permalink
An actor, fresh from prison, attempts to reconnect with his son in 1950s California.
"And he had believed it. Everyone had. Since the day he’d been cast as Lev, Alexi had been aware that he was getting away with something—though, he reasoned, he’d never explicitly lied about anything. He just never told the complete truth. He may have, when asked about his American accent, mentioned the pronunciation workbooks stacked on his family’s kitchen table, as if he, and not just his parents, had pored over them nightly. He may have once, a little drunk at a party, pretended to forget the English words for the pigs in a blanket being passed around. He may have, that night and possibly a few others, begun sentences with, In my country . . . He may have, when asked by the film’s very openly communist director one night over steaks at Musso’s what he thought about Truman, parroted back what he’d overheard at the writers’ table, that he was narrow-minded and ruthless, his doctrine a farce and an affront to civil liberties. He may have, at Stella and Jack’s invitation, attended a number of meetings in their Hancock Park living room, where there may have been some pretty detailed discussions about following their Soviet comrades down whatever path they took. He may have, on one of those evenings, filled out one of the Party membership forms being passed around, simply because everyone else was."
Molly Antopol Joyland Jan 2014 40min Permalink
On Silvio Berlusconi’s hedonism.
Berlusconi is Italy’s waning Hugh Hefner, alternately reviled and admired for his loyalty to his own appetites—except that he’s supposed to be running the country.
Ariel Levy New Yorker May 2011 40min Permalink
A senator and his wife deal with the aftermath of a sex scandal.
"He opened the car door and pushed his way out into the sea of shouting reporters. Batting away microphones, he made his way up the front walkway and mounted the steps to the porch. The door was locked. Steve patted his empty pockets; his keys were in his suitcase in the trunk of the car. He rang the doorbell and waited with his hands folded in front of him. Then he took out his phone and dialed Maureen. 'I’m locked out,' he said when she picked up."
Molly Patterson Barrelhouse Nov 2013 20min Permalink
Tracking down a Congolese war criminal.
Mac McClelland Mother Jones Sep 2011 25min Permalink
A Ugandan bill that would threaten homosexuals with imprisonment, or in some cases death, has its roots in the shadowy American evangelical group known as The Family.
Jeff Sharlet Harper's Aug 2010 40min Permalink
The story of one Tibetan’s protest.
Jeffrey Bartholet National Geographic Nov 2012 20min Permalink
In Colorado and beyond, a negotiated surrender in the war on drugs.
Benjamin Wallace-Wells New York Nov 2012 30min Permalink
How a team of 40 engineers helped reelect Barack Obama.
Alexis Madrigal The Atlantic Nov 2012 30min Permalink
Memoir of a Latter-day campaign correspondent.
McKay Coppins Buzzfeed Nov 2012 15min Permalink
As immigration turns red states blue, how can Republicans transform their platform?
Ryan Lizza New Yorker Nov 2012 25min Permalink
How America used to vote.
Jill Lepore New Yorker Oct 2008 15min Permalink
On Politico’s brand of insider journalism.
Alex Pareene The Baffler Nov 2012 25min Permalink
A delightfully strange and humorous imagining of Mitt Romney's thoughts during a massage.
"Something curdled inside him—he didn’t deserve this dig. Yes, he’d been busy lately, insanely busy, especially with those foreign-policy dopes, but he’d tried to remain attentive to his lady. He’d arranged this nice weekend for them. He’d canceled events, he’d canceled events that were scheduled months ago. Suddenly, he was impatient to get away from her, to find the remote and check on the day’s news. He hadn’t turned on the set since lunchtime yesterday, a gesture he’d hoped that she’d notice and appreciate, mostly because it came so hard to him."
Walter Kirn New York Jan 2009 Permalink
On the gay community’s political progress.
Alex Ross New Yorker Nov 2012 30min Permalink
“His seeming ease belies the anxiety and emotion that advisers say he brings to his historic position: pride in what he has accomplished, determination to acquit himself well and intense frustration.”
Jodi Kantor New York Times Oct 2012 10min Permalink
A profile of George McGovern.
Michael Leahy Washington Post Feb 2005 Permalink
On the Clintons’ political future.
John Heilmann New York Oct 2012 25min Permalink
Future historians review the fantastic legacy of John Adams: Lincoln Michel's contribution to Melville House's forty-four stories about out forty-four Presidents.
"John Adams appears to have originally been conceived as a familiar or minion of George Washington, the first of the hundred tyrants that are said to have ruled the country until its infamous, self-inflicted demise."
Lincoln Michel Jan 2012 Permalink
A profile of Montana Senator Jon Tester.
Chris Jones Esquire Oct 2012 20min Permalink
How Barack Obama decided to green-light the operation that killed Osama bin Laden.
Mark Bowden Vanity Fair Oct 2012 40min Permalink
Reddit founder Alexis Ohanian launches an ambitious campaign.
John Herrman Buzzfeed Oct 2012 15min Permalink
Meet Kareem Ahmed, the President’s reclusive bankroller.
Eric Lach Talking Points Memo Oct 2012 20min Permalink
Why the flood of money in this election is just the beginning.
James Bennet The Atlantic Oct 2012 35min Permalink