ESSAYS, COLUMNS, FEATURES AND STORIES
- Lindsay Adler, “Teen Girl Posed for 8 Years as Married Man to Write About Baseball and Harass Women” (Deadspin, 2017, 3266 Words)
- Hanif Abdurraqib, “We're More Ghosts Than People” (The Paris Review, 2023, 3922 words)
- Hanif Abdurraqib, “On Summer Crushing” (The Paris Review, 2019, 1958 words)
- Elizabeth Alexander, “The Trayvon Generation” (The New Yorker, 2020, 1700 words)
- Erin Allday, “Last Men Standing” (SF Chronicle, 13977 words)
- Holly Anderson, “Life’s Rich Pageant: Meet a Florida Man” (Grantland, 4545 words)
- Nawal Arjini, “How to Be Critical of the Things You Love: A Conversation with Hanif Abdurraqib” (The Nation, 2019, 2150 words)
- Jacob Bacharach, “We Don’t Have Time for Nihilism” (Jacobin, 2018, 1000 words)
- Jacob Bacharach, “Sometimes Inclusion is Going to be a Bit Embarassing” (The Outline, 2019, 1400 words)
- Aaron Bady, “Libertarian Fairy Tales: The Bundy Militia’s Revisionist History” (PSMag, 2549 words)
- Aaron Bady, “To Be a Consumer of Culture Means Living in a Hostage Situation” (Slate, 2023, 3100 words)
- Aaron Bady and Mike Konczal, “From Master Plan to No Plan” (Dissent, 4465 words)
- Andy Baio, “Never Trust a Corporation to do a Library’s Job” (Medium, 1366 words)
- Erik Baker, “Daniel in the Lion’s Den” (The Baffler, 2023, 2100 words)
- Katie Baker, “Love Letters” (Grantland, 3945 words)
- Katie Baker, “The Letter the Stanford Victim Read Aloud to Her Attacker” (Buzzfeed, 7566 words)
- Katie Baker, “What Do We Do With These Men?” (New York Times, 2018, 1600 words)
- David Banks and Britney Gil, “Bad Metaphors: Community” (Real Life, 2019, 2400 words)
- Jesse Barron, “The Babysitters Club” (Real Life, 3037 words)
- Amos Barshad, “Yankees Suck! Yankees Suck!” (Grantland, 7335 words)
- Ben Baskin, “The Final Days of Eli (or Not?)” (Sports Illustrated, 5740 words)
- Peter Beinart, “Torture is Who We Are” (The Atlantic, 3820 words)
- Burkhard Bilger, “Where Germans Make Peace with Their Dead” (The New Yorker, 8647 words)
- Nick Bilton, “How Elizabeth Holmes’s House of Cards Came Tumbling Down” (Vanity Fair, 5119 words)
- Willy Blackmore, “Career Waiters” (Popula, 2018, 1300 words)
- Heidi Blake and John Templon, "The Tennis Racket" (Buzzfeed, 9000 words)
- Laura Bliss, “The Automotive Liberation of Paris” (CityLab, 2018, 1050 words)
- Ben Blum, “The Lifespan of a Lie” (Medium, 2018, 7,628 words)
- Marina Bolotnikova, "America's Car Crash Epidemic" (Vox, 2021, 3300 words)
- Tom Borden, “Chapecoense: Eternal Champions” (ESPN, 2017, 9062 words)
- Jamelle Bouie, “Why Don’t Young People Vote? This System Doesn’t Want Them To” (Slate, 2018, 1400 words)
- Jamelle Bouie, “Minority Rule Does Not Have to Be Here Forever” (Slate, 2018, 2000 words)
- Jamelle Bouie, “The Enlightenment’s Dark Side” (Slate, 2018, 2200 words)
- danah boyd, “Hacking the Attention Economy” (Data Society, 1997 words)
- Taylor Branch, “The Shame of College Sports” (The Atlantic, 14615 words)
- Matt Brennan, “How The Good Place Became TV's Best Portrait of Friendship,” (Paste, 2018, 1500 words)
- Jimmy Breslin, “Digging JFK's Grave was his Honor” (New York Herald Tribune, 1963, 1200 words)
- Steven Brill, “Is America Any Safer?” (The Atlantic, 2016, 18294 Words)
- Leila Brillson, “The Fury of Sinead O’Connor” (Welcome to Hell World, 2023, 1600 words)
- Jonah Engel Bromwich, “The Raisin Situation” (The New York Times, 2019, 3,844 words)
- Julie K. Brown, “Perversion of Justice” (Miami Herald, November 28, 2018, 18,700 words)
- Rembert Browne, “Going Down the Rabbit Hole With Nicki Minaj” (Grantland, 1795 words)
- Rembert Browne, “The Front Lines of Ferguson” (Grantland, 3491 words)
- Rembert Browne, “Colin Kaepernick Has a Job” (Bleacher Report, 2017, 9900 words)
- Elizabeth Bruenig, “What Do We Owe Her Now?” (Washington Post, 2018, 9,475 words)
- Susan Burton “Terry Gross and the Art of Opening Up” (New York Times, 2015, 4911 words)
- Oobah Butler, “I Made My Shed the Top-Rated Restaurant on TripAdvisor” (Vice UK, 2017, 2690 Words)
- Darryl Campbell, “The Humiliating History of the TSA” (The Verge, 2022, 6100 words)
- Elizabeth Carr, “Mental Health is Political” (New York Times, 2022, 2150 words)
- Many Len Catron, “To Fall in Love with Anyone, Do This” (New York Times, 2015, 1653 words)
- Michael Chabon, “My Son, the Prince of Fashion” (GQ, 2016, 5344 words)
- Emily Chang, “Oh My God, This Is So F—ed Up”: Inside Silicon Valley’s Secretive, Orgiastic Dark Side” (Vanity Fair, 2018, 4775 words)
- Lakeidra Chavis, Jodi S. Cohen, Jennifer Smith Richards, “The Quiet Rooms” (Chicago Tribune and ProPublica, 2019, 7,726 words)
- Danny Chau, “The Burning Desire for Hot Chicken” (The Ringer, 2016, 5250 words)
- Adrian Chen, “Unfollow” (The New Yorker, 10654 words)
- Adrian Chen, “The Agency” (8151 words)
- Adrien Chen, “Unmasking Violentacrez, The Biggest Troll on the Web” (Gawker, 4570 words)
- Michelle Chihara, “What We Talk About When We Talk About Finance” (LA Review of Books, 3610 words)
- David Chrisinger, “The Man Who Told America the Truth About D-Day” (The New York Times, 2019, 3350 words)
- Mary H K Choi, “My Foreign Mom” (Aeon, 2400 words)
- Ta-Nehisi Coates, “Letter to my Son” (The Atlantic, 8442 words)
- Ta-Nehisi Coates, “The Case for Reparations” (The Atlantic, 15836 words)
- Ta-Nehisi Coates, “The Paranoid Style of American Policing” (The Atlantic, 1092 words)
- Ta-Nehisi Coates, "Fear of a Black President" (The Atlantic, 9709 words)
- Pamela Colloff, “The Reckoning” (Texas Monthly, 12980 words)
- Pamela Colloff, "The Innocent Man" (Texas Monthly, 12673 words)
- Jason Concepcion, “What Whiplash Gets Wrong About Music School, and Right About Greatness” (Grantland, 982 words)
- Allie Contie, “I Accidentally Uncovered a Nationwide Scam on Airbnb” (Vice, 2019, 5750 words)
- Peter Coviello, “My Thoughts are Murder” (Avidly, 2016, 3274 words)
- Peter Coviello, “Where I Want to Be” (Hyped on Melancholy, 2019, 1550 words)
- Jack Crosbie, “You Can’t Expect a Company to Have Morals” (Discourse, 2023, 750 words)
- Sloane Crosley, “How to Start your Candy Cane Collection in 23 Easy Steps” (1795 words)
- Brent Cunningham, “Losing the News” (Pacific Standard, 2019, 6,333 words)
- Guy Patrick Cunningham, “Don’t Settle: The Journalist in the Shadow of the Commercial Web” (4581 words)
- Vinson Cunningham, “What Makes an Essay American?” (1902 words)
- Andy Cush, “Everything I Ever Thought I Knew About Street Sharks Was a Goddamn Lie” (Gawker, 362 words)
- The Cut, Editorial Staff, “Do You Know How to Behave? Are You Sure? How to text, tip, ghost, host, and generally exist in polite society today”
- Angella d’Avignon, “The Mortician and the Murderer (Topic, 2019, 3,783 words)
- Meghan Daum, “My Mis-spent Youth” (Longform, 5860 words)
- Meghan Daum, “Haterade” (The Believer, 2012, 5300 words)
- Madeleine Davies, “Becoming Ugly” (Jezebel, 2201 words)
- Claire Dederer, “What Do We Do With the Art of Monstrous Men?” (Paris Review, 2017, 5200 words)
- Benoit Denizet-Lewis, “Why Are More American Teenagers Than Ever Suffering From Severe Anxiety?” (NYT, 2018, 7800 Words)
- Hossein Derakhshan, “The Web We Have to Save” (Medium, 3633 words)
- Hossein Derakhshan, “Social Media is Killing Discourse Because It's Too Much Like TV” (Technology Review, 2016, 885 words)
- Caitlin Dewey, “Even in Real Life, There Were Screens Between Us” (New York Times, 1526 words)
- Helen DeWitt, “Diary of Being Stalked” (London Review of Books, 4153 words)
- Bronwen Dickey, “Climb Aboard, Ye Who Seek the Truth!” (Popular Mechanics, 5010 words)
- Renée DiResta, “The New Media Goliaths” (Noema, 2023, 3000 words)
- Jenny Diski, “Why didn’t you just do what you were told?” (London Review of Books, 6229 words)
- Chris Dixon, “What’s Next in Computing” (Medium, 2484 words)
- Cory Doctorow, “The Enshittification of TikTok” (Wired, 2023, 570 words)
- Dog, “Is it Time?” (Gawker, 440 words) (RIP - Available on archive.org)
- Charles Duhigg and Keith Bradsher, “How the US Lost Out on iPhone Work” (New York Times, 5125 words)
- Justin Elliott and Paul Kiel, “Inside TurboTax’s 20-Year Fight to Stop Americans From Filing their Taxes for Free” (ProPublica, 2019, 6900 words)
- Shonni Enelow, “The Great Recession” (Film Comment, 3371 words)
- Barbara Ehrenreich, “Divisions of Labor” (New York Times, 2078 words)
- Jason Fagone, “The Lottery Hackers” (Huffpo Highline, 2018, 11000 words)
- Jason Fagone, “What Bullets do to Bodies” (Huffpo Highline, 2017, 7800 words)
- Susan Faludi, “Facebook Feminism, Like It or Not” (The Baffler, 14164 words)
- Jason Farago, “It’s Time to Take Down the Mona Lisa” (New York Times, 2019, 1500 words)
- Henry Farrell, “A Brief Theory of Very Serious People” (1275 words)
- Ronan Farrow, “From Aggressive Overtures to Sexual Assault: Weinstein’s Accusers Tell Their Stories” (The New Yorker, 2017, 7900 words)
- Ronan Farrow, “The Black Cube Chronicles” (The New Yorker, 2019, 10,500 words)
- Timothy Faust, “The Transformative Potential of Single-Payer” (The Outline, 2019, 1950 words)
- Timothy Faust, “I Played 'The Boys Are Back in Town' on a Bar Jukebox Until I Got Kicked Out” (Vice, 2015, 1500 words)
- Ashley Feinberg, “The Creepiest Things You Can Do on Facebook” (Gizmodo, 2015, 800 words)
- Ashley Feinberg, “Is Donald Trump's Hair a $60,000 Weave? A Gawker Investigation” (Gawker, 3700 words)
- Ashley Feinberg, “Jack Dorsey Has No clue What He Wants” (Huffpost, 2019, 5200 words)
- Ashley Feinberg, “Pete Buttigieg's Campaign Says This Wikipedia User Is Not Pete. So Who Is It?” (Slate, 2019, 3500 words)
- Abbey Fenbert, “The Pitch Meeting for Wishbone” (The Toast, 1022 words)
- Helena Fitzgerald, “Late Nights Online” (Hazlitt, 2017, 4448 words)
- Helena Fitzgerald, “Bad Summer” (Griefbacon, 2019, 1500 words)
- Helena Fitzgerald, “Late Night” (Griefbacon, 2019, 1100 words)
- Helena Fitzgerald, “The Duolingo Owl” (Griefbacon, 2021, 2687 words)
- Emily Flake, “Young and Dumb Inside” (The New Yorker, 2017, 800 words)
- Carlin Flora, “Bad Friends” (Aeon, 2400 words)
- Paul Ford, “10 Timeframes” (Contents, 2608 words)
- FreeDarko, “The Day Never Ended” (FreeDarko, 13305 words)
- Amber A'Lee Frost, “The Necessity of Political Vulgarity” (Current Affairs, 2016, 2450 words)
- James Ross Gardner, "The Secret Life of Crows" (Seattle Met, May 2017, 3292 words)
- Helen Garner, “The Insults of Age” (2132 words)
- Jonothan Gatehouse, “America Dumbs Down” (2370 words)
- Lindsey Gates-Markel, “In Celebration of Old-School Livejournal” (The Toast, 1824 words)
- Roxane Gay, “Why America Needs Internet Outrage” (Salon ,930 words)
- Roxane Gay, “The Careless Language of Sexual Violence” (The Rumpus, 2581 words)
- Roxane Gay, “Tiny House Hunters and the Shrinking American Dream” (Curbed, 2017, 1704 words)
- Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah, “If He Hollers Let Him Go” (9330 words)
- Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah, “A Most American Terrorist: The Making of Dylann Roof” (2018, GQ, 12315 words)
- Emily Giambalvo, “A Second Chance” ( The Washington Post, 2019, 6,032 words)
- Amelie Gilette, “The Zach Braff Challenge” (AV Club, multi-part series)
- Amelie Gilette, “Becoming a Lady” (The Believer, 550 words)
- Christopher Goffard, “Framed” (LA Times, 16262 words)
- Jonathan Gold, “Teaching in the Post-Truth Era” (Student Voices, 2081 words)
- Lizzy Goodman, “The Last Moment of the Last Great Rock Band” (Vulture, 2017, 3400 words)
- Jeremy Gordon, “Is Everything Wrestling?” (The New York Times, 1825 words)
- Michael Grabell and Howard Berkes, “Opting Out: Inside Corporate America’s Campaign to Ditch Workers’ Comp” (7069 words)
- David Graeber, “The Bully's Pulpit” (The Baffler, 2015, 4500 words)
- David Graeber, “On the Phenomenon of Bullshit Jobs” (Strike, 2013, 2000 words)
- Dino Grandoni, “Why Fireflies are Going Extinct, and What You Can Do About It” (Washington Post, 2023, 1400 words)
- David Grann, “A Murder, Foretold” (New Yorker, 2011, 14000 words)
- Megan Greenwell, “The Adults in the Room” (Deadspin, 2019, 2500 words) [archived]
- James Greig, “Everyone Needs to Grow Up” (Dazed, 2023, 1530 words)
- Shuja Haider, “Song for My Father” (Popula, 2019, 6600 words)
- Rahawa Haile, “Going it Alone” (Outside, 2017, 3700 words)
- Kathleen Hale, “Prey” (Hazlitt, 6126 words)
- Spencer Hall, “Broke” (Every Day Should Be Saturday, 3408 words)
- Spencer Hall, “When the Levee Breaks” (SB Nation, 2017, 2622 Words)
- Aaron Hamburger, “Sweetness Mattered” (Tin House, 2018, 3,575 words)
- Nikole Hannah-Jones “Choosing a School for my Daughter in a Segregated City” (10148 words)
- Malcolm Harris, “Lego Marx” (4255 words)
- Malcolm Harris, “What's So Bad about Politically Correct Art?” (Mother Jones, 2020, 4300 words)
- Malcolm Harris, “Why Are Kids So Sad?” (New York, 2022, 1600 words)
- Maggie Harrison, “Sports Illustrated Published Articles by Fake, AI-Generated Writers” (Futurism, 2023, 1900 words)
- Rob Harvilla, “Love is Not a Battlefield, and Neither is Jeni’s: An Afternoon Eating Ice Cream with Hanif Abdurraqib” (The Ringer, 2019, 3100 words)
- Caroline Haskins, “Airpods are a Tragedy” (Motherboard, 2019, 3000 words)
- Chris Hayes, “On the Internet We're Always Famous” (The New Yorker, 2021, 1860 words)
- CJ Hauser, “The Crane Wife” (Paris Review, 2019, 3600 words)
- Heather Havrilesky, “What Romance Really Means After 10 Years of Marriage” (2143 words)
- Emma Healey, “Disrupters, Disconnectionists, and Dicks” (2994 words)
- Justin Heckert, “For One Last Night, Make It a Blockbuster Night” (The Ringer, 2018, 9,282 words)
- Jeet Heer, “What Were Blogs?” (1200 words)
- Zoë Heller, “'Hot' Sex and Young Girls” (2813 words)
- Elizabeth Hellmuth Margulis, “One More Time” (2700 words)
- Carl Hendrick, “Learning Styles Don’t Exist” (Aeon, 2023, 6700 words)
- Amanda Hess, “Why Women Aren't Welcome on the Internet” (7382 words)
- David Hill, “The Union, Forever” (7310 words)
- David Hill, “Sweat in the Game: A Gambler’s Grind in the NBA” (3061 words)
- David Hill, “Fading the Vig”
- David Hill, “The Hunting Party: Two Days in Vegas at the ‘Big Buck Hunter’ Championships” (Thrillist, 2017, 7550 words)
- David Hill, “The Siren Song of the American Truck Driver” (The Ringer, 2017, 7000 words)
- David Hill "In the Pit with the Fighting Roosters" (The Ringer, 2018, 8200 words)
- Kashmir Hill, “How Facebook Figures Out Everyone You’ve Ever Met” (Gizmodo, 2017, 2400 words)
- Michael Hobbes, “Everything You Know About Obesity is Wrong” (HuffPost Highline, 2018, 7400 words)
- Michael Hobbes, “The Golden Age of White Collar Crime” (HuffPost Highline, 2020, 7100 words)
- Michael Hobbes, “Savvy Punditry isn't Smart” (2021, 2400 words)
- Jacob Hodes, “Whitewood Under Siege” (4237 words)
- Marc Hogan, “The Contentious Tale of the McDonald’s ‘I’m Lovin It’ Jingle” (1450 words)
- Alex Horton, “In Iraq, I raided insurgents. In Virginia, the police raided me.” (1804 words)
- Kerry Howley, “Everyone Believed Larry Nassar (The Cut, 2018, 6300 words )
- Hua Hsu, “My Dad and Kurt Cobain” (The New Yorker, 2022, 5200 words)
- Anne Hull, “The Lonely Road of Staying Clean” (3778 words)
- Wil S. Hylton, “The Mysterious Metamorphosis of Chuck Close” (7500 words)
- Leslie Jamison, “The Empathy Exams” (9470 words)
- Leslie Jamison, “Fog Count” (6444 words)
- Sarah Jeong, “Did Inadequate Women’s Healthcare Destroy Star Wars’ Old Republic?” (2118 words)
- Cord Jefferson, “The Zimmerman Jury Told Young Black Men What They Know Already” (1120 words)
- Maggie Jones, “What Teenagers Are Learning from Porn” (NYT, 2018, 7700 words)
- Chris Jones, “The Art of the Body Shot” (1158 words)
- Chris Jones, “TV's Crowning Moment of Awesome” (5085 words)
- Tom Junod, “The State of the American Dog” (6324 words)
- Tom Junod, “The Falling Man” (7385 words)
- Tom Junod, “Theater of Pain” (5947 words)
- Tom Junod, “Surviving the Fall” (1889 words)
- Rawiya Kameir, “Rethinking Appropriation and Wokeness in Pop Music” (Pitchfork, 2020, 2900 words)
- Jay Caspian Kang, “The Headline, The Tweet, and the Unfair Significance of Jeremy Lin” (2234 words)
- Jay Caspian Kang, “Our Demand is Simple: Stop Killing Us” (6966 words)
- Jay Caspian Kang, “The High is Always the Pain and the Pain is Always the High” (5173 words)
- Jay Caspian Kang “What a Fraternity Hazing Death Revealed About the Painful Search for Asian-American Identity”(New York Times, 2017, 7162 words)
- Alex Kantrowitz, “How the 2016 Election Blew Up in Facebook's Face” (3443 words)
- Joshua Kaplan, Justin Elliott, and Alex Mierjeski “Clarence Thomas and the Billionaire” (ProPublica, 2023, 3200 words)
- Pete Keeley, “Guns and (Shea) Butter: An Oral History of ‘Predator’” (The Hollywood Reporter, 2017, 6300 words)
- Kim Kelly, “The Singing Left” (The Baffler, 2021, 2500 words)
- Danyoung Kim, “When Cars Kill” (The New Yorker, 2022, 5900 words)
- Walter Kirn, “Confessions of an Ex-Mormon” (6000 words)
- Jonathan Kirshner, “America, America” (4218 words)
- Phil Klay, “The Citizen-Soldier” (9382 words)
- Chuck Klosterman, “Myspace.com/Doppelganger” (1169 words)
- Chuck Klosterman, “Three Man Weave” (2048 words)
- Chuck Klosterman, “Taylor Swift Runs the World” (4624 words)
- Chuck Klosterman, “The Pretenders” (3400 words)
- Dan Kois, “The Case for Hanging Out” (Slate, 2023, 2800 words)
- Scaachi Koul, “The Crisis in Kashmir Has Started a Conversation I Don’t Know How to Have” (Buzzfeed, 2019, 3750 words)
- Scaachi Koul, “I Shouldn’t Have to Lose Weight for my Wedding. So Why Do I Feel Like a Failure?” (2018, Buzzfeed, 3530 words)
- Scaachi Koul, “I Watched ‘Cats’ and WTF?” (Buzzfeed, 2019, 900 words)
- Jackie Kruszewski, “In Which We Don’t Do Coke in the Bathroom of the Restaurant” (2055 words)
- Molly Lambert, “Porntopia” (Grantland, 10555 words)
- Molly Lambert, “In Which We Teach You How to Be a Woman in any Boys' Club” (This Recording, 2011, 2829 words)
- Molly Lambert, “Lexapro, Kanye & Me” (MTV, 1052 words)
- John Lanchester, “After the Fall” (London Review of Books, 2018, 7,694 words)
- Jaron Lanier, “There is No A.I.” (The New Yorker, 2023, 3800 words)
- Jeanne Marie Laskas, “To Obama With Love, With Hate, and With Desparation” (8823 words)
- Kiese Laymon, “What I Pledge Allegiance To” (The Fader, 3418 words)
- Kiese Laymon, “Da Art of Storytellin” (Oxford American, 1233 words)
- Kiese Laymon, “How to Slowly Kill Yourself and Others in America” (Gawker, 4711 words)
- Kiese Laymon, “I Am a Big Black Man Who Will Never Own a Gun Because I Know I Would Use It” (Gay Mag, 2018, 2500 words)
- John Patrick Leary, “The Performative Rhetoric of 'Allyship'” (The New Republic, 2021, 525 words)
- Jill Lepore, “The Disruption Machine” (The New Yorker, 6025 words)
- Jill Lepore, “Franklin, Reconsidered” (4968 words)
- Jill Lepore, “The Last Amazon: Wonder Woman” (7938 words)
- Jill Lepore, “Battleground America” (9205 words)
- Ariel Levy, “Thanksgiving in Mongolia” (The New Yorker, 2013, 3906 words)
- Ariel Levy, “Lift and Separate” (The New Yorker, 2009, 6139 words)
- Ariel Levy, “A Ring of One's Own” (7775 words)
- Sheila Liming, “My Professor’s Living Room” (Majuscule, 2019, 3000 words)
- James Livingston, “Fuck Work” (3000 words)
- Patricia Lockwood, “Rape Joke” (1295 words)
- Patricia Lockwood, “Malfunctioning Sex Robot” (London Review of Books, 2019, 6750 words)
- Lili Loofbourow, “The Male Glance” (VQR, 2018, 6000 words)
- German Lopez, “America’s Gun Problem, Explained” (3466 words)
- Sara Lukinson, “The Friendships That Hold Us in Their Keep” (The New York Times, 2017, 1000 words)
- Jeb Lund, “Everything Stupid is Alive, and Everything Stupid Can Kill You” (1906 words)
- Alec MacGillis, “‘I Will Never Let Boeing Forget Her’” (ProPublica, 2019, 7,838 words)
- Drew Magary, “Stephen A. Smith is Never Satisfied” (GQ, 2019, 11,500 words)
- Drew Magary, “The Night the Lights Went Out” (Deadspin, 2019, 7,130 words)
- Mike Mariani, “Promethea Unbound” (The Atavist, 2017, 12630 words)
- Molly McHugh, “How We Built Our Bubble” (The Ringer, 2016, 3165 words)
- Kelsey McKinney, “When the Cherries Run Out” (Defector, 2021, 2450 words)
- Kelsey McKinney, “The Money is in All the Wrong Places” (Defector, 2022, 2375 words)
- Kelsey McKinney, “Is The Phillies’ Good Luck Charm A Dedication To Himbo Culture And Showing Clavicle?” (Defector, 2023, 2500 words)
- Tressie McMillan Cottom, “When Your Curriculum Has been Tumblrized” (665 words)
- Tressie McMillan Cottom, “I Was Pregnant and in Crisis. All the Doctors and Nurses Saw Was an Incompetent Black Woman” (Time, 2019, 1800 words)
- Tressie McMillan Cottom, “We Need to Address Scam Culture” (New York Times, 2021, 1200 words)
- Sarah Maslin Nir, “The Price of Nice Nails” (6594 words)
- Alana Massey, “Against Chill” (Matter, 2015, 1400 words)
- Dylan Matthews “The TSA is a waste of money that doesn’t save lives” (Vox, 1064 words)
- B.D. McClay, “A Decade of Sore Winners” (The Outline, 2019, 3200 words)
- B.D. McClay, “Let People Enjoy this Essay” (Gawker, 2021, 2900 words)
- Mac McClelland, “Can the Ivory-Billed Woodpecker Be Found in Cuba?” (Audobon, 7150 words)
- Dan McQuade, “The Myth of Cops Overdosing from Touching Fentanyl Persists for a Reason” (Defector, 2021, 4600 words)
- Dvora Meyers, “The U.S. Gymnastics System Wanted More Medals, And Created A Culture Of Abuse To Get Them” (Deadspin, 2017, 6500 Words)
- Emily Michot and Julie K. Brown, “How a future Trump Cabinet Member Gave Serial Sex Abuser Jeffrey Epstein the Deal of a Lifetime” (Miami Herald, 2019, 5800 words)
- Sarah Marshall,”Violent Delights” (The Beliver, 2022, 7500 words)
- Sarah Miller, “The Movie Assassin” (Popula, 2018, 5500 words)
- Steve Molaro, “The Great Pizza Orientation Test” (The Sneeze, 2007, 462 words)
- Rani Molla “The rise of fear-based social media like Nextdoor, Citizen, and now Amazon’s Neighbors” (Recode, 2019, 2000 words)
- Alexandra Molotkow, “Sing to Me” (Real Life, 2016, 2756 words)
- Jon Mooallem, “Who Invented the High Five?” (ESPN, 2013, 3101 words)
- Michael J. Mooney, “The Most Amazing Bowling Story Ever” (D Magazine, 2012, 4570 words)
- Kevin Morris, “The Greatest Story Reddit Ever Told” (Kernel, 5562 words) (archived version)
- Wesley Morris, “2015: :The Year We Obsessed Over Identity” (New York Times, 3811 words)
- Wesley Morris, “Last Taboo” (The New York Times, 2016, 6236 words)
- Amanda Mull, “Body Positivity Is a Scam” (Racked, 2018, 2,447 words)
- Amanda Mull, “Pandemic Shoppers are a Nightmare” (The Atlantic, 2021, 3200 words)
- Giri Nathan, “Conquering the Carolina Reaper Requires Self-Deceit, Milk, and a Lot of Barf” (Deadspin, 2019, 2750 words)
- Joshua Needelman, “Putting the Rich World of Philadelphia’s Public Art Online” (New York Times, 2023, 1150 words)
- Casey Newton, “Bodies in Seats” (The Verge, 2019, 6,712 words)
- Hamilton Nolan, “Fuck Boston” (Gawker, 557 words)
- Hamilton Nolan, “Everything’s Not Good” (Gawker, 1650 words)
- Hamilton Nolan, “The Working Person’s Guide to the Industry that Might Kill Your Company” (Splinter, 2018, 1700 words)
- Hamilton Nolan, “Amazon Warehouse Employees are the Most Important Workers in America” (Splinter, 2017, 1550 words)
- Hamilton Nolan, “A Year in the Life of Safeway 1048” (In These Times, 2021, 3100 words)
- Emily Nussbaum, “How Jokes Won the Election” (The New Yorker, 4100 words)
- Caroline O'Donovan, Charlie Warzel and Logan McDonald, “We Followed YouTube's Recommendation Algorithm Down the Rabbit Hole” (BuzzFeed, 2019, 2800 words)
- Ryan O’Hanlon, “Allen Iverson, iPhones, and Inbox Zero: What We Lose When We Obsess Over Efficiency” (The Ringer, 2017, 1000 words)
- Luke O’Neil, “Yes, I said, but always as a tree way up ahead” (Welcome to Hell World, 2019, 5000 words)
- Luke O’Neil, “I hate what they’ve done to almost everyone in my family” (Welcome to Hell World, 2019, 5700 words)
- Luke O’Neil, “They reached out to Navient and were told lies by Navient” (Welcome to Hell World, 2019, 4000 words)
- Luke O’Neil, “This is the most ghoulish cynical capitalistic nightmare” (Welcome to Hell World, 2019, 3300 words)
- Dan O’Sullivan, “Money in the Bank” (Jacobin, 2014, 5800 words)
- Rebecca Onion, “Against Generations” (Aeon, 2015, 3100 words)
- Rebecca Onion, “Snapshots of History” (Slate, 2373 words)
- Daniel Mallory Ortberg, “Inappropriate Internal Responses I Have Had to Innocuous Statements” (The Toast, 233 words)
- Daniel Mallory Ortberg, “Femslash Friday: Mean Girls’ Layers Upon Lesbian Layers” (The Toast, 980 words)
- Daniel Mallory Ortberg, “The Queen of Summer: Martin Prince’s Finest Moments” (The Toast, 1184 words)
- Daniel Mallory Ortberg, “Everyone Has Imposter Syndrome Except for You” (The Toast, 334 words)
- Daniel Mallory Ortberg, “If Stanley Tucci Were Your Boyfriend” (The Toast, 639 words)
- Patton Oswalt, “A Closed Letter to Myself About Thievery, heckling and Rape Jokes” (6333 words)
- Alex Pappademas, “The Decade Comic Book Nerds Became Our Cultural Overlords” (Gen, 2019, 2650 words)
- Alex Pareene, “Consolation Prizes” (The Baffler, 2019, 4750 words)
- Alex Pareene, “Teenage Pricks” (The Baffler, 2019, 4300 words)
- Alex Pareene, “The Death of the Rude Press” (The New Republic, 2019, 1700 words)
- Ian Parker, “The Story of a Suicide” (The New Yorker, 12875 words)
- Ben Paynter, “Genius: The Nickelback Story” (Bloomberg, 3316 words)
- Jeff Pearlman, “The Paragraph: The Fallout from Sportswriting’s Filthiest Fuck-Up” (Deadspin, 2017, 5275 words)
- Bradford Pearson, "The Most Amazing Bowling Story Ever" (D Magazine, 2012, 4600 words)
- Laurie Penny, “Meltdown of the Phantom Snowflakes” (2815 words)
- Laurie Penny, “On Nerd Entitlement” (2815 words)
- Laurie Penny, “The Globalized Jitters” (The Baffler, 2017, 4300 words)
- Jennifer Percy, “I Have No Choice but to Keep Looking” (6184 words)
- Anne Helen Petersen, “There Are Things of Which I May Not Speak” (2903 words)
- Anne Helen Petersen, “Here’s What It’s Like at Standing Rock” (1545 words)
- Anne Helen Petersen, “Jennifer Lawrence and the History of Cool Girls” (Buzzfeed, 2014, 5927 words)
- Amanda Petrusich, “MTV, Chance the Rapper and a Defense of Negative Criticism” (1403 words)
- Shannon Pettypiece, “Walmart's Crime Problem” (3176 words)
- Brian Phillips, “We Are Living in a Robot Moment” (MTV, 2586 words)
- Brian Phillips, “Shirtless Trump Saves Drowning Kitten” (MTV, 1738 words)
- Brian Phillips, “A Fighter Abroad” (Grantland, 4950 words)
- Brian Phillips, “The Sea of Crises” (Grantland, 10196 words)
- Brian Phillips, “Corruption, Murder, and the Beautiful Game” (Grantland, 4209 words)
- Brian Phillips, “The Cost of Living in Mark Zuckerberg’s Internet Empire” (The Ringer, 2018, 2000 words)
- Brian Phillips, “Boca Juniors, River Plate, and the Allure of Violence in Sports” (The Ringer, 2018, 1100 words)
- Charlie Pierce, “The Cynic and Senator Obama” (Esquire, 6590 words)
- Simon Pitt, “Computer Files are Going Extinct” (OneZero, 2019, 2500 words)
- Catherine Porter, “At His Own Wake, Celebrating Life and the Gift of Death” (The New York Times, 2017, 7500 words)
- Monica Potts, “How Rural America Steals Girls’ Futures” (The Atlantic, 2023, 3530 words)
- Lisa Rab, “Life Below the Poverty Line in Banktown, USA” (Charlotte Magazine, 3769 words)
- Patrick Radden Keefe, “The Family That Built an Empire of Pain” (The New Yorker, 2017, 13000 words)
- David Rakoff, “Fu Fighters” (Outside, 3200 words)
- David Rakoff, “Whatsizface?” (Salon, 3741 words)
- Claudia Rankine, “The Meaning of Serena Williams” (NYTimes, 3189 words)
- Venkatesh Rao, “The American Cloud” (Aeon, 3800 words)
- Tarance Ray, “United in Rage” (The Baffler, 2021, 6800 words)
- Elspeth Reeve, “The Secret Lives of Tumblr Teens” (New Republic, 9864 words)
- Nathaniel Rich, “Losing Earth: The Decade We Almost Stopped Climate Change (The New York Times Magazine, 2018, 30,663 words)
- Jordan Ritter Conn, “The End of the Hoop Dream” (Grantland, 7500 words)
- Soraya Roberts, “Winona, Forever” (Hazlitt, 2016, 9618 words)
- Cory Robin, “The Obamanauts” (Dissent, 2019, 6000 words)
- Cory Robin, “The Plight of the Political Convert” (The New Yorker, 2019, 3000 words)
- Nathan Robinson, “The Cool Kid’s Philosopher” (Current Affairs, 2017, 7800 words)
- Zandria F. Robinson, “Listening for the Country” (Oxford American, 7358 words)
- Zandria F. Robinson, “Border Wars” (Oxford American, 2017, 8200 words)
- Jon Ronson, “How One Stupid Tweet Blew Up Justine Sacco's Life” (New York Times, 2015, 4500 words)
- Jon Ronson, “Marwencol” (The Guardian, 2015, 2500 words)
- Jon Ronson, “How to Spot a Psychopath,” (The Guardian, 2011, 4421 words)
- Jon Ronson, “Robots Say the Damndest Things” (GQ, 2015, 4700 words)
- Jody Rosen, “The Day the Music Burned” (New York Times Magazine, 2019, 1200 words)
- Hanna Rosin, “The Overprotected Kid” (The Atlantic, 8849 words)
- Helen Rosner, “The Best Diners are Still Just Diners” (The New Yorker, 2024, 1250 words)
- David Roth, “Downward Spiral” (The Baffler, 2017, 5000 words)
- David Roth, “Richie Incognito Will Get Work As Long as the NFL Mistakes Fear for Strength” (Deadspin, 2019, 1600 words)
- David Roth, “The Man Who Was Upset” (The New Republic, 2019, 4900 words)
- David Roth, “ESPN has Found the Absolute Worst Way to Talk About the Absolute Coolest Stuff” (Defector, 2021, 1400 words)
- David Roth, “Mark Zuckerberg is TNR's 2021 Scoundrel of the Year” (The New Republic, 2021, 2400 words)
- David Roth, “The Man Who Invented Himself” (Defector, 2023, 2550 words)
- David Roth, “Scorn Illustrated” (Defector, 2023, 2100 words)
- Elizabeth Royte, “Vultures are Revolting: Here's Why We Need to Save Them” (National Geographic, 4900 Words)
- Franceska Rouzard, “Advanced Search” (Real Life, 2016, 4587 words)
- Harriet Ryan, Lisa Girion and Scott Glover, “Oxycontin’s 12-Hour Problem” (LA Times, 6778 words)
- Larry Sanger, "Is there a new Geek Anti-Intellectualism?" (Larry Sanger.org, 2373 words)
- Eli Saslow, “Into the Lonely Quiet” (The Washington Post, 6433 words)
- Eli Saslow, “The White Flight of Derek Black” (The Washington Post, 6536 words)
- Eli Saslow, “’How’s Amanda?’: A Story of Truth, Lies, and American Addiction” (The Washington Post, 2016, 5799 words)
- Luke Savage, “Entertainment Monopolies are Zombifying Mass Culture” (Jacobin, 2021, 1600 words)
- George Saunders, “My Writing Education: A Time Line” (The New Yorker, 4187 words)
- George Saunders, “Who Are All These Trump Supporters?” (The New Yorker, 10474 words)
- George Saunders, “The Great Divider” (GQ, 11158 words)
- Tom Scocca, “On Smarm” (Gawker, 9200 words)
- Amy Schneider, "How I Got Smart" (Defector, 2021, 1500 words)
- Kathryn Schulz, “The Really Big One” (The New Yorker, 6184 words)
- Kathryn Schulz, “Citizen Khan: The Muslim Tamale King of Wyoming” (The New Yorker, 7700 words)
- Sarah Schweitzer, “The Life and Times of Strider Wolf” (Boston Globe, 6649 words)
- A.O. Scott, “Film Snob? Is That So Wrong?” (The New York Times, 2015, 1774 words)
- David Sedaris, “What I Learned” (The New Yorker, 2070 words)
- Jennifer Senior, “Why You Never Truly Leave High School” (New York, 5530 words)
- Jennifer Senior, “The Ones We Sent Away” (The Atlantic, 2023, 13500 words)
- Adam Serwer, “Civility is Overrated” (The Atlantic, 2019, 3600 words)
- Matthew Shaer, “Whatsoever Things are True” (Atavist, 16226 words)
- Charlotte Shane, “The Right to Not Be Pregnant” (Harpers, 2022, 3300 words)
- Stephen Shankland, “The Secret Life of the 500+ Cables that Run the Internet” (CNet, 2023, 4000 words)
- Timothy Shenk “Already Great: the Dead-End Optimism of Parks & Rec” (Dissent, 2019, 3700 words)
- Gabriel Sherman, “The Revenge of Roger's Angels” (New York, 7380 words)
- Earl Shorris, “American Vespers: The Ebbing of the Body Politic” (Harpers, 4237 words)
- Craig Silverman, “Old, Online, and Fed on Lies: How an Aging Population Will Reshape the Internet” (Buzzfeed, 2019, 3800 words)
- JJ (fka Jes) Skolnik, “The Fight for All-Ages Shows” (Pitchfork, 2015, 1254 words)
- Ben Smith, “My Life in the Blogosphere” (Buzzfeed, 2074 words)
- Zadie Smith, “Generation Why?” (NY Review of Books, 5685 words)
- Zadie Smith, “Fences: A Brexit Diary” (NY Review of Books, 4557 words)
- Zadie Smith, “What Beyonce Taught Me” (The Guardian, 3610 words)
- Nick Solares, “New York Pizza Styles: A Complete Guide” (Eater, 3724 words)
- Leah Sottile, “This is Meant to Hurt You” (Moss, 3793 words)
- Rebecca Solnit, “Living in Dark Times.” (The Guardian, 3610 words)
- Doreen St. Felix, “The Images We Can't Unsee” (MTV, 2016, 1065 words)
- Emily St. James, “What's So Scary About a Transgender Child?” (Vox, 2022, 3750 words)
- Tiffany Stanley, “Life, Death, and Insulin (Washington Post, 2019, 5,200 words)
- Dean Starkman, “Confidence Game” (Columbia Journalism Review, 7710 words)
- James B. Stewart, “The Real Heroes are Dead: A Love Story” (The New Yorker, 10450 words)
- Sarah Stillman, “Taken” (The New Yorker, 11462 words)
- Sarah Stillman, “The List” (The New Yorker, 11547 words)
- Matt Taibbi, “Why Sports are for Losers” (Men's Journal, 1641 words)
- Matt Taibbi, “The Great American Bubble Machine” (Rolling Stone, 9726 words)
- Matt Taibbi, “Why Isn’t Wall Street in Jail?” (Rolling Stone, 6189 words)
- Matt Taibbi, “Looting Main Street” (Rolling Stone, 4422 words)
- Jason Tanz, “Playing for Time” (Wired, 6454 words)
- Ben Taub, “The Assad Files” (The New Yorker, 10453 words)
- Amanda Taub, “The Truth about ‘Political Correctness’: It doesn’t actually exist” (Vox, 1889 words)
- Astra Taylor, “Why Does Everyone Feel So Insecure All the Time?” (New York Times, 2023, 3000 words)
- Sam Thielman, “No Matter How Your Heart is Grieving: Disney for the Sad” (The Toast, 4253 words)
- Andrew Thomas, “Heaps of Woe” (Run of Play, 1812 words)
- Wright Thompson, “Michael Jordan Has Not Left the Building” (ESPN, 2016, 7750 words)
- Jonathan Tjarks, “Does My Son Know You?” (The Ringer, 2022, 2800 words)
- Jia Tolentino, “Interview With a Woman Who Recently Had an Abortion” (Jezebel, 2016, 8200 words)
- Jia Tolentino, “All the Greedy Young Abigail Fishers and Me” (Jezebel, 2016, 3200 words)
- Jia Tolentino, “Athleisure, Barre, and Kale: The Tyranny of the Ideal Woman” (The Guardian, 2019, 4600 words)
- Wells Tower, “The Elvis Impersonator, the Karate Instructor, a Fridge Full of Severed Heads, and the Plot 2 Kill the President” (GQ, 8386 words)
- Reggie Ugwu, “Inside the Playlist Factory” (Buzzfeed, 5733 words)
- Reggie Ugwu, A Secret Ingredient in Songs of Summer (The New York Times, 2019, 1100 words)
- Brian VanHooker, “An Oral History of The Onion's 9/11 Issue” (Mel, 2021, 9000 words)
- Don van Natta, Jr. “Jerry Football” (ESPN, 10875 words)
- Claire Vaye Watkins, “On Pandering” (Tinhouse, 5152 words)
- Vanessa Veselka, “In the Wake of Protest: One Woman’s Attempt to Unionize Amazon” (The Atlantic, 4757 words)
- James Vincent, “Breaking Down the Best Slapstick GIF We’ve Ever Seen” (681 words)
- Sarah Vowell, “The Speech the President Should Give” (741 words)
- Jim Vorel, “The Loss of Netflix DVDs is More Bitter than You Realize” (Paste, 2023, 1975 words)
- Kate Wagner, “This Sport Will Kill You if You Let It” (Derailleur, 2021, 3050 words)
- Alissa Walker, “Stop Drinking Bottled Water” (1531 words)
- Carvell Wallace, “Letter to my Mother after Charleston” (888 words)
- David Foster Wallace, “E unibus pluram: Television and US Fiction” (21928 words)
- David Foster Wallace, “Roger Federer as Religious Experience” (6619 words)
- David Foster Wallace, “String Theory” (15000 words)
- David Foster Wallace, “9/11 The View from the Midwest” (4439 words)
- David Foster Wallace, “Host” (The Atlantic, 14934 words)
- Libby Watson, “What Happens When We Die” (Sick Note, 2021, 3300 words)
- Charlie Warzel, “A Honeypot for Assholes” (Buzzfeed, 5970 words)
- Charlie Warzel, “The Big Tech Platforms Still Suck During Breaking News” (BuzzFeed, 2017, 1400 words)
- Caity Weaver, “My 14 Hour Search for the End of TGI Friday's Endless Appetizers” (Gawker, 6217 words)
- Caity Weaver, “Gravy Boat: My Week on the High Seas with Paula Deen and Friends” (Gawker, 7290 words)
- Caity Weaver, “The Most Deranged Sorority Girl Email You Will Ever Read” (Gawker, 1597 words)
- Caity Weaver, “The Ken Doll Reboot: Beefy, Cornrowed, and Pan-Racial” (GQ, 2017, 4144 Words)
- Jennifer Weiner, “The F Word” (Allure, 2250 words)
- Jessica Weisberg, “A Family Matter” (The Atavist, 10175 words)
- Lindy West, “Hello, I am Fat” (The Stranger, 1106 words)
- Lindy West, “A Great Big Person” (The Guardian, 2903 words)
- Bee Wilson, “Why We Fell for Clean Eating” (The Guardian, 2017, 5763 words)
- Gabriel Winant, “Who Works for the Workers?” (n+1, 5628 words)
- Adam Winkler, “Corporations Are People' Is Built on an Incredible 19th-Century Lie” (The Atlantic, 2018, 1265 words)
- Alia Wong, “College-Admissions Hysteria is Not the Norm” (The Atlantic, 2019, 500 words)
- Steven T Wright, “’The Linux of Social Media’ – How LiveJournal pioneered, then lost blogging” (Ars Technica, 2019, 3600 words)
- Lawrence Wright, “America’s Future is Texas” (The New Yorker, 2017, 19000 Words)
- Laura Yan, “24 Hours at My Local Dunkin' Donuts” (The Outline, 2018, 3521 words)
- Damon Young, “Thursday Night Hoops” (Defector, 2021, 5000 words)
- Molly Young, “Sweatpants in Paradise” (The Believer, 2957 words)
- Jess Zimmerman, “Hunger Makes Me” (Hazlitt, 3130 words)
- Jess Zimmerman, “It Doesn't Hurt, It Hurts All the Time” (Catapult, 2020, 4500 words)
- David Zipper, “How Cars Turned into Giant Killers” (2023, Slate, 3900 words)
- Dave Zirin, “’Ne Vous Laissez Pas Manipuler,’ aka #StayWoke” (The Nation, 914 words)
- Lindsay Zoladz, “Joni Mitchell: Fear of a Female Genius” (2017, The Ringer, 5800 words)
- Lindsay Zoladz, “Look, Now Look Again: On Agnès Varda” (The Ringer, 2018, 3000 words)
MULTIMEDIA FEATURES
- Rebecca Adams, “11 Images that People With Anxiety Will Understand”
- Alphonso, McKenna and Van Paassen, “Student Aid” (2840 words)
- Shane Bauer, “My Four Months as a Private Prison Guard” (36619 words)
- Berkeley Grad Media/Journalism, “Chasing Lithium”
- Jon Bois, “17776: What Football Will Look Like in the Future” (SB Nation, 2017, 40,000 words)
- Ryan Bradley, “The Cancer Almanac" (3305 words)
- John Branch, “Snow Fall” (17000 words)
- Steven Brill, “America’s Most Admired Lawbreaker”
- Matthew Carney, “Leave No Dark Corner: The Chinese 'Social Credit' System”
- Scott Carney, “An Economic Analysis of the Somali Pirate Business Model”
- Nicky Case, “The Wisdom and/or Madness of Crowds”
- Alvin Chang, “We can draw school zones to make classrooms less segregated”
- Simon Cox, “The Reykjavik Confessions”
- Coral Davenport, Josh Haner, Larry Buchanon & Derek Watkins, “Greenland is Melting Away”
- Joshua Davis, “Deep Sea Cowboys”
- Melissa del Bosque, “Beyond the Border"
- Eater, “The Eater Guide to Paris”
- Andre Elliot & Ruth Fremson, “Invisible Child”
- Fletcher, Tretick and Reed, “An Oral History of the March on Washington”
- Paul Ford, “What is Code” (38000 words)
- Brett Gaylor, “Do Not Track”
- Gabriel Gianordoli, “How Fan Culture is Swallowing Democracy” (The New York Times, 2019, 1800 words)
- David Graeber, “To Have is to Owe”
- Jayson Greene, “Keep the Things You Forgot: An Elliott Smith Oral History”
- Vi Hart and Nicky Case, “The Parable of the Polygons”
- Michael Hobbes, “Millennials are Screwed” (8100 words)
- Patrick Hruby, “The Long, Strange Trip of Dock Ellis”
- Hua Hsu, “Touchstones: Nirvana's Nevermind”
- The Intercept, “The Drone Papers”
- Josie Jammet, “The Fall of the House of Tsarnaev”
- Mark Johnson and Rick Wood, “The Course of their Lives"
- Daniel Jones, “The 36 Questions that lead to Love”
- Kathryn Joyce, “Out Here, No One Can Hear You Scream” (7000 words)
- Jon Keegan, “Blue Feed, Red Feed”
- Madison Malone Kircher, Briand Feldman, Max Read, “The Year in Memes”
- Michael Keller and Josh Neufeld, “Terms of Service”
- Kate Kilpatrick and Ian Bates, “Treasured Island”
- Lighthouse Reports: Did Evil Win?
- Bob Marshall, Brian Jacobs, Al Shaw, “Losing Ground"
- Caitlin McNally, “Stickup Kid” (1000 Words, Atavist)
- Siddhartha Mukherjee, “Doctor Without Borders”, (4932 Words)
- National Geographic: “Billions of Birds Migrate: Where do they go?”
- NPR, Planet Money Makes a T-Shirt
- NYT, Walking New York
- NYT, “25 Songs That Tell Us Where Music is Going” (27119 words)
- NYT, “The 1619 Project” (The New York Times, 2019)
- Elian Peltier, James Glanz, Mike Grondahl, Weily CAi, Adam Nossiter and Liz Alderman: Notre-Dame came far closer to collapsing than people knew. This is how it was saved. (2019, 3700 words. The New York Times)
- Brian Phillips, “Out in the Great Alone” (19296 words)
- Pointer, “The Story Behind an Identity Theft”
- Malia Politzer and Emily Kassie, “The 21st Century Gold Rush: How the refugee crisis is changing the world economy”
- Pro Publica, “Year in (mostly) Visual Journalism”
- The Pudding, “The Musical Diversity of Pop Songs”
- Evan Ratliff, Vanish (1200 Words)
- Evan Ratliff, “The Mastermind”
- Eric Reidy, “Ghost Boat”
- Kevin Roose, “The Making of a YouTube Radical”
- Neena Satija, Kiah Collier, Al Shaw and Jeff Larson, “Hell and High Water”
- Northeastern Univ: Experience: “What Would You Do? Take an immigrant's journey”
- Slate Staff, “2014: The year of outrage”
- Doreen St. Felix, “Touchstones: Missy Elliott's 'Supa Dupa Fly'”
- Anya Strzemien, “This is 18 Around the World -- Through Girls' Eyes”
- John Jeremiah Sullivan, “The Ballad of Geeshie and Elvie”
- Andrew Thompson and Matt Daniels, “The Musical Diversity of Pop Songs”
- UNC Journalism, “The UnderCurrent”
- Eleizabeth Van Brocklin, “Lockdown: Living Through the Era of School Shootings, One Drill at a Time” (2019, The Trace, 3700 words)
- Connie Wang, “Generation Connie” (New York Times, 2023, 3400 words)
- Charlie Warzel and Stuart Thompson, “Twelve Million Phones, One Dataset, Zero Privacy” (New York Times, 2019, 5000 words)
- WaPo Mag & Ben Folds: Alternative Storytelling Issue
- Craig Whitlock, “The Afghanistan Papers: At War with the Truth” (6500 words)
- Francisco Zizola, “Adrift: At Sea With a Search-and-Rescue Mission in the Mediterranean”
PODCASTS
- Slow Burn
- Radiolab
- Bundyville
- This American Life
- Reply All
- Startup
- Still Processing
- FilmSpotting
- Beautiful Stories from Anonymous People
- Freakonomics Radio
- 99% Invisible
- Science Vs
- Switched on Pop
- Love & Radio
- Death, Sex & Money
- You Must Remember This
- The Allusionist
- The Memory Palace
- Backstory
- Ologies
- The Dollop (especially the ep on Uber)
- Modern Love
- Song Exploder
- Why is This Happening?
- Every Little Thing
- You're Wrong About
- Another Round
- The Sporkful
- Longform
- Broken Record
- Criminal
- Invisibilia
- Planet Money
- WTF
- Crimetown
- Desert Island Discs
- Serial
- Millennial
- Revisionist History
- Internet Explorer
- 2 Dope Queens
- The Mystery Show
- Throwing Shade
- More Perfect
- Heavyweight
- Embedded
- There Goes the Neighborhood
- Code Switch
- Reveal
- Benjamen Walker's Theory of Everything
- The Radio Diaries
VIDEOS/PHOTOS
- ESSENCE for “Black Girl Magic: Sage Adams,” directed by Laurie Thomas, “Black Girl Magic: Ammarah Haynes,” directed by Madeleine Hunt-Ehrlich, and “Black Girl Magic: Berneisha Hooker,” directed by Nailah Jefferson, at essence.com
- New York With Narrative 4 for “Guns & Empathy,” December 26 at nymag.com
- QKatie, “Cooking to Remember Home” (Verse Video)
- Adam Kissick, “Newport Folk Festival” (photoseries)
- STAT for “Science Happens! With Carl Zimmer: Episode 1,” March 25, “Science Happens! With Carl Zimmer: Episode 5,” March 31, and “Science Happens! With Carl Zimmer: Episode 8,” August 25, at statnews.com
- Teen Vogue for “Guys Read: Sexual Assault—Jason and Yahdon,” “Guys Read: Sexual Assault—Spencer and Anthony” and “Guys Read—Sexual Assault: Andrew and Alex,” April 29 at teenvogue.com
- TIME for “100 Photographs: Untitled (Cowboy),” “100 Photographs: A Portrait of Domestic Violence” and “100 Photographs: The Falling Man,” November 17 at 100photos.time.com
- Chart Party and Dorktown at SB Nation
- Earworm at Vox
- NBA Desktop at The Ringer
- Edith Zimmerman, “My First Year Sober” (Spiralbound, 2018)