That 70's Look
An interview with cinematographer Harris Savides on the enduring appeal of the visual style of films shot in the 1970s.
An interview with cinematographer Harris Savides on the enduring appeal of the visual style of films shot in the 1970s.
David Schwartz Moving Image Mar 2010 20min Permalink
The forgotten life of Eva Tanguay, perhaps America’s first rock star.
Jody Rosen Slate Dec 2009 15min Permalink
An interview with Lawrence Schiller, himself one of the great interviewers of his time, whose research fueled Norman Mailer’s Executioner’s Song.
Lawrence Schiller, Suzanne Snider The Believer May 2010 25min Permalink
What the great romantic novels of history can tell us about “seduction theory” and the cult of the pickup artist.
Best Article Arts History Music
Vignettes of the residents of South Elliot Place.
Stacy Abramson New York Times Jul 2010 Permalink
A writer for Conan O’Brien on how The Tonight Show really ended and on how his boss got screwed.
Todd Levin GQ Jul 2010 20min Permalink
The few who got to view Jerry Lewis’s notorious The Day the Clown the Cried, set at Auschwitz, piece together memories of their surreal personal screenings.
Bruce Handy Spy May 1992 Permalink
Bill Murray grants a rare interview and appears to admit, among other things, that he occasionally approaches strangers from behind on the streets of NYC, puts his hands over their eyes, and says “guess who.”
Bill Murray, Dan Fierman GQ Jul 2010 15min Permalink
In March of 1991, Vanilla Ice had the #1 album in the country (To the Extreme), a movie about to be released (TMNT II: The Secret of the Ooze), and a dogged belief that his 15 minutes weren’t about to end.
Linda Sanders EW Mar 1991 10min Permalink
In January 1966–the same month In Cold Blood was first published–Truman Capote sat down with George Plimpton to discuss the new art form he liked to call “creative journalism.”
George Plimpton, Truman Capote New York Times Jan 1966 35min Permalink
A interview with David Mitchell, author of the recent The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet and Cloud Atlas, on stretching a fictional universe across multiple novels and centuries of real history.
Wyatt Mason New York Times Jul 2010 Permalink
In the 1950s, L.S.D. became a Beverly Hills’ therapy fad, and it profoundly changed idols like Cary Grant.
Judy Balaban, Cary Beauchamp Vanity Fair Jul 2010 25min Permalink
Race relations at the gigantic and soul-crushing Smithfield slaughterhouse, where annual turnover is 100 percent: 5,000 people are hired, 5,000 quit.
Charlie LeDuff New York Times Jun 2000 25min Permalink
The man who keeps finding famous fingerprints on uncelebrated works of art.
David Grann New Yorker Apr 2011 1h5min Permalink
An interview with New Yorker critic Alex Ross about his book The Rest is Noise and why there’s really no such thing as “classical music.”
Alex Abramovich Stop Smiling Mar 2009 10min Permalink
A 1988 profile of Bill Murray, then at the peak of his box office power and living in a secluded farmhouse in the Hudson River Valley.
Saad Mohseni, Afghanistan’s first media mogul and a business partner of Rupert Murdoch, produces everything from nightly news broadcasts to the controversial Afghan version of American Idol.
Ken Auletta New Yorker Jun 2010 35min Permalink
The story of the most popular music video of all time, including memories of a then-25-year-old Michael Jackson on and off the set. Director John Landis: “I dealt with Michael as I would have a really gifted child.”
Nancy Griffin Vanity Fair Jun 2010 30min Permalink
How Warren Beatty seduced the studios into making the comedy Ishtar, which set the modern bar for cinematic debacles. (An excerpt from Peter Biskind’s Star.)
Peter Biskind Vanity Fair Feb 2010 35min Permalink
Clay Shirky, writing in 1999 on the Web eclipsing TV’s reach: “We will always have massive media, but the days of mass media are over, killed by the explosion of possibility and torn into a thousand niches.”
Clay Shirky Feed Apr 1999 10min Permalink
Is Mike Huckabee the GOP’s best hope in 2012? Mike Huckabee’s not so sure.
Ariel Levy New Yorker Jun 2010 35min Permalink
The boom in dystopian fiction aimed at young adults.
Laura Miller New Yorker Jun 2010 10min Permalink
An email dialogue between David Gates and Jonathan Lethem on writing fiction in the age of online experiences.
David Gates, Jonathan Lethem PEN America Jun 2010 15min Permalink
Why don’t TV weathermen believe in climate change?
Charles Homans Columbia Journalism Review Jan 2010 15min Permalink
Mysterious, man-made “natural flavor” explains why most fast food—indeed, most of the food Americans eat—tastes the way it does. An early excerpt from Fast Food Nation.
Eric Schlosser The Atlantic Jan 2001 20min Permalink