Wilt vs. Elgin: When Their World Was the Playground
On the lost pickup basketball games in D.C. between Wilt Chamberlain and Elgin Baylor, then both still in college, during the summer of 1957.
On the lost pickup basketball games in D.C. between Wilt Chamberlain and Elgin Baylor, then both still in college, during the summer of 1957.
Dave McKenna Grantland May 2012 30min Permalink
A profile of the youngest Black woman in Congress.
Kayla Webley Adler Elle Feb 2021 30min Permalink
It’s a sham known as “sewer service.” When process servers regularly fail to deliver summonses, it leads to to automatic evictions for unwitting tenants.
Josh Kaplan DCist Oct 2020 35min Permalink
How Washington society got scammed by one of its own.
Marisa M. Kashino Washingtonian Jan 2020 20min Permalink
A young lesbian poet's confused love.
Li Zhuang The Collapsar Jun 2018 20min Permalink
How the administration’s loyalists are quietly reshaping American governance, one civil servant at a time.
Evan Osnos New Yorker May 2018 Permalink
Projectionist provocateur Robin Bell lights up the night.
David Montgomery The Washington Post Magazine Oct 2017 15min Permalink
It turns out “Madame Giselle” wasn’t any of these things, couldn’t make her Chevy Chase, Maryland, neighbors rich, and may have been at the center of a massive scandal in Colombia.
Manuel Roig-Franzia Washington Post Sep 2017 20min Permalink
To be a second-grader contending with violence.
John Woodrow Cox Washington Post Apr 2017 20min Permalink
Chris Barry was born into Washington D.C. royalty. He died alone, essentially homeless, just a year after losing a race for his father’s former seat.
Harry Jaffe Washingtonian Jan 2017 20min Permalink
Chris Earnshaw began taking photographs of Washington, D.C. more than 40 years ago. By the time he paid a visit to a museum to tout his work, he had in his possession—in plastic bags and filing drawers—3,000 Polaroids of a city long gone.
Dan Zak Washington Post Jan 2016 40min Permalink
A story of a playoff at-bat, a franchise, and a spectator couple.
"Coco has watched every home game with her husband from these seats since the ballpark opened in 2008 while listening to the game play by play on 106.7 FM. She has endured horrible seasons, but 2009 when her beloved team lost 108 games, and 2010 when they lost 93 more, are distant memories. Now she feels like a winner. This is the playoffs. After marriage, and kids, and grandkids, after retirement and their dream trip to Dubrovnik, this is what she has been hoping for. It is the last of her major life events. Something to retell at family dinners. Remember the World Series of 2012?"
Susan Hope Lanier Hobart Apr 2014 Permalink
James Reston’s problematic proximity to the powerful.
Stephen Chapman New Republic Apr 1980 15min Permalink
The rise and fall and rise of Hill flack Kurt Bardella, and what it says about D.C. culture.
Mark Leibovich New York Times Magazine Jul 2013 25min Permalink
Confessions of a white-collar dope fiend.
Anonymous Washington City Paper Jan 1995 1h15min Permalink
The bureaucratic hell of enforcing legislation in Washington.
Haley Sweetland Edwards Washington Monthly Mar 2013 2h30min Permalink
A Pulitzer Prize-winning investigation of group homes for the retarded in Washington, D.C.
Katherine Boo Washington Post Mar 1999 40min Permalink
A profile.
Because business ebbs and flows with the seasons and the economy, Holmes, who lives in Upper Marlboro, has always kept a variety of sidelines, including a job driving a limousine for nine years to put his oldest daughter through a private high school and college. These days, at gigs, he hands out a stack of million-dollar "bills" printed with his image and his current enterprises: bandleader, commercial mortgage broker, hard money lender (slogan: "Hard Money with a Soft Touch").
Lauren Wilcox Washington Post Magazine Feb 2010 15min Permalink
A young black gentrifier gets lumped in with both groups, often depending on what she’s wearing and where she’s drinking. She is always aware of that fact.
Shani O. Hilton Washington City Paper Mar 2011 30min Permalink
Passengers get a free ride. Drivers get a passport to the HOV lane. Nobody pays, nobody talks. On “slugging,” the DIY commuter system in D.C. that’s being used by 10,000 people a day and taking thousands of cars off the road.
Emily Badger Pacific Standard Mar 2011 20min Permalink
In the aftermath of a mysterious murder, exploring a part of the story that has received little attention: the young man who lost his life.
Rend Smith Washington City Paper Feb 2011 Permalink
A veteran black Metro columnist, adrift in a rapidly shifting D.C., rankles an incoming generation of gentrificationists.
Rend Smith Washington City Paper Nov 2010 35min Permalink
This isn’t truck-on-truck violence. It’s the taxpaying owners of brick-and-mortar restaurants—along with a host of other powerful District players—who are waging the attack.
Tim Carman Washington City Paper Sep 2010 25min Permalink
[Part 2 of 2] The story behind this spring’s spate of retributive murders in Southwest D.C.
Paul Duggan Washington Post Jun 2010 15min Permalink
[Part 1 of 2] The story behind this spring’s spate of retributive murders in Southwest D.C.
Paul Duggan Washington Post Jun 2010 10min Permalink