Raising Kane
An essay on Orson Welles’ (and/or Herman Mankiewicz’s) 1941 film Citizen Kane.
An essay on Orson Welles’ (and/or Herman Mankiewicz’s) 1941 film Citizen Kane.
Pauline Kael New Yorker Feb 1971 3h5min Permalink
An ex-spook takes on the Warren Commission.
William W. Turner Ramparts Jan 1968 45min Permalink
Traveling with President Clinton.
David Remnick New Yorker Sep 2006 1h20min Permalink
Tom Wolfe on the development of ”New Journalism,” an unconventional reporting style which he helped to pioneer.
I had the feeling, rightly or wrongly, that I was doing things no one had ever done before in journalism. I used to try to imagine the feeling readers must have had upon finding all this carrying on and cutting up in a Sunday supplement. I liked that idea. I had no sense of being a part of any normal journalistic or literary environment.
An annotated transcript:
MR. SEALE: [The marshals are carrying him through the door to the lockup.] I still want an immediate trial. You can’t call it a mistrial. I’m put in jail for four years for nothing? I want my coat.
Jason Epstein New York Review of Books Dec 1969 1h5min Permalink
A newly minted, 34-year-old White House budget director gets a little too candid with a reporter profiling him during Ronald Reagan’s first year in office. Among Stockman’s many admissions: “None of us really understands what’s going on with all these numbers.”
William Greider The Atlantic Dec 1981 50min Permalink
The writer and his girlfriend move to the Dominican Republic, joining the rapidly expanding community of expats who claim to have found paradise. They promptly get robbed at gunpoint. To cope, he investigates the country.
Porter Fox Nowhere Magazine Oct 2010 40min Permalink