When Arnold Schwarzenegger Was the Newest Member of the Gym By Ben Huberman Highlight From his earliest days in California, Arnold was a polarizing, impossible-to-ignore figure.
Long Live the Oddly Charming Poetry of the Mail-Order Catalog By Ben Huberman Highlight Hammacher Schlemmer, which publishes America’s longest-running catalog, still takes its product descriptions seriously.
The Contradictions of Twitter’s ‘We Care’ Campaign By Jacob Silverman Feature With bots, fake news, and an angry right-wing flank, Twitter is crashing against the limits of ideological neutrality.
The Little Franchise That Couldn’t By Michelle Weber Highlight Ollie Gleichenhaus cooked up a mean hamburger. How come Americans are eating Big Macs and Whoppers instead of Ollieburgers?
How Southern Cities Are Joining the Knowledge Economy By Aaron Gilbreath Highlight Greenville, South Carolina has revitalized its city center by incubating start-ups. Can other Southern cities do the same?
Can This Tech Company’s Digital Border Wall Secure it More Government Defense Contracts? By Aaron Gilbreath Highlight Looking inside the new tech company who is building a cost-effective digital wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.
How Amazon Exploits Chinese Workers to Crank Out Its Products By Aaron Gilbreath Highlight How Jeff Bezos, the world’s richest man, exploits Chinese workers to manufacture Kindles and smart speakers.
The Difference Between Being Broke and Being Poor By Erynn Brook Feature It’s a recognition that comes in the aisle of a grocery store.
The Menace and the Promise of Autonomous Vehicles By Jacob Silverman Feature What does it mean to experiment with technology that we know will kill people, even if it could save lives?
Has India’s Booming IT Industry Finally Plateaued? By Aaron Gilbreath Highlight India’s once lucrative IT sector now fears it’s glory years are ending as one of its biggest companie starts downsizing.
Reporting on Bolivia’s Coca Rebirth: An Interview with Jessica Camille Aguirre By Aaron Gilbreath Commentary After a profound shift in thinking about an unfairly stigmatized plant, Bolivia is ready to spread the gospel of coca.
The Startup Stampede to Warby Parker Everything By Aaron Gilbreath Highlight Venture capitalists are helping launch a number of direct to consumer startups, or DTCs. But do sofas, toothbrushes, and suitcases need the Warby Parker business model?
Do These Pants Make Me Look Like Everyone Else? Be Honest, Alexa. By Michelle Weber Highlight What happens to taste when machines become the tastemakers? Kyle Chayka meditates on style, algorithms, and our generic yet lullingly unobjectionable future.
Digital Media and the Case of the Missing Archives By Danielle Tcholakian Commentary The more work that journalists create for the internet, the more work is rendered obsolete.
Before We All Teach Someone a Lesson By Catherine Cusick Highlight Online harassment gets out of hand constantly. Can prosocial bots help turn the tide of anonymous interactions before people become abusive?
Hoffnung um jeden Preis By Lindsay Gellman Feature Privatkliniken in Deutschland verkaufen Krebspatienten Hoffnung zu Höchstpreisen — mit durchwachsenem Erfolg.
The Last Resort By Lindsay Gellman Feature Private clinics in Germany sell cancer patients hope — and mixed results — at exorbitant prices. Some, like the Hallwang Clinic, cater primarily to foreigners.
Seeking a Roadmap for the New American Middle Class By Livia Gershon Feature Could Starbucks become the new General Motors? Or could the American worker make it even better?
Welcome to the Center of the Universe By Shannon Stirone Feature For the men and women who use the Deep Space Network to talk to the heavens, failure is not an option.
What Is New York City Without Its Historic Buildings? By Aaron Gilbreath Highlight A city loses its life-force when it loses its historic buildings.
The Billionaire Philanthropist By Jacob Silverman Feature It’s American tradition for CEOs to stockpile their wealth, avoid taxes, and participate in the theater of giving. Will Jeff Bezos make it scale?
Move Slow and Break Less By Catherine Cusick Highlight Mike Monteiro thinks more designers should refuse to move fast and break things.
It’s a Wonderful World: The Remaking of California Agriculture By Aaron Gilbreath Feature An interview with Mark Arax about the two decades he spent writing about the San Joaquin Valley empire of Lynda and Stuart Resnick.
To Live and Die in Utopian New Zealand By Aaron Gilbreath Highlight How the super rich like Peter Thiel are buying land in New Zealand to survive the apocalypse.
Blockchain Just Isn’t As Radical As You Want It To Be By Longreads Feature On how a new administrative technology is being conflated with radical politics.
The Dark Side of Amazon’s Job Creation By Mike Dang Highlight Is any new job a good job? A look at Amazon’s warehouse jobs, where workers struggle to keep up.
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