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11-Year-Olds: Your Ivy League Mission Starts Now
He's the 'Steve Jobs
of College Counseling'
longform

He's the 'Steve Jobs of College Counseling'

Wall Street Journal profiles Jamie Beaton of Crimson Education, whose clients are as young as 11

(Newser) - One way to get into an elite college is to have your rich parents buy you spot in shady fashion . At the opposite end of the spectrum: Start working at it early, meaning well before high school. The Wall Street Journal profiles 29-year-old Jamie Beaton, a New Zealander whose Crimson...

'Why Are We Not Talking About Kenny?
'Why Are We Not
Talking About Kenny?'
longform

'Why Are We Not Talking About Kenny?'

Los Angeles Times reports on boy's unsolved death, and the pending release of a child killer

(Newser) - The California parole board has approved the release of a woman in her 70s who has been in prison since 1995 for murdering her 8-year-old niece. As Madie Moore gets ready for freedom, others in her family—including her own daughter—remain opposed, reports the Los Angeles Times . The reason...

Small Footwear Company Learns a Lesson on Theft
Small Footwear Company
Learns a Lesson on Theft
longform

Small Footwear Company Learns a Lesson on Theft

Outdoor explains how cargo theft nearly did in Bedrock Sandals

(Newser) - A particular type of theft—cargo theft—has been surging in frequency over the past four years, and Outside Online goes deep on one particular incident involving a truckload of shoes. More specifically, "mountain clogs," made by Bedrock Sandals, a small Montana company popular with outdoor enthusiasts. After...

They Dig to Find a Legendary Cave That Might Not Exist

Colorado Sun explains the hunt to find the 'Cyclopean Cave' in the Rockies

(Newser) - At the very least, it's a great yarn. But if some cavers are correct, it might also be a massive, fabulous cave tucked beneath the Rockies. The Colorado Sun explains: Back in the 1880s, a journalist named Orth Stein wrote of visiting what he dubbed the Cyclopean Cave via...

One Company Drives Risky World of Competitive Cheer

New York Times looks at how Jeff Webb's Varsity Spirit dominates the lucrative industry

(Newser) - Cheerleading may elicit images of pompoms and ponytails, but the athleticism required to pull off stunts performed in competition these days requires more than glittery pep. As it turns out, cheering has resulted in more catastrophic injuries than any sport played by female high school and college athletes combined, writes...

These 'Mushroom Heads' Signify a Big Shift in Football
These 'Mushroom Heads'
Signify a Big NFL Shift
longform

These 'Mushroom Heads' Signify a Big NFL Shift

Wired looks at how protective Guardian Caps are gaining a foothold in the league

(Newser) - They look a little goofy. "Condom caps, mushroom heads—we've heard them all," says Erin Hanson, co-founder of the company that makes protective football helmets called Guardian Caps. "We just laugh, because we agree." As Wired explains, more important than how they look is how...

Under Her Rule, Hundreds Were Taken to a Dark Secret Prison

With Sheikh Hasina no longer in Bangladesh, prisoners' stories are emerging

(Newser) - Sheikh Hasina led an authoritarian regime in Bangladesh for 15 years before fleeing the country in August . As she left, Mir Ahmad Quasem Arman came back to life. The New York Times reports he was one of three prisoners who had long been held at a secret underground prison called...

It's a Massive Tax Payment, and a Massive Mystery to Boot

Tim Fernholz attempts to find out who died and left the US a record estate sum

(Newser) - Last year, a researcher poring over Treasury Department stats did a double-take on one particular sum: A $7 billion estate and gift tax payment. Which apparently means, as Tim Fernholz reports at Sherwood , that somebody very, very rich died and left the government the huge payment. It's unusual in...

There's a Disturbing Trend in Political Donations
There's a Disturbing Trend
in Political Donations
longform

There's a Disturbing Trend in Political Donations

Both parties are benefiting from strategies that exploit seniors with dementia, reports CNN

(Newser) - A CNN investigation has uncovered a troubling trend in political fundraising, one in which elderly Americans—particularly those with dementia—are unwittingly becoming major donors to campaigns. Both parties have benefited from the practice, which often begins with a small online donation to a candidate. But once the hooks are...

'Kinder, Nicer' OnlyFans Upends Ordinary Lives
'Kinder, Nicer' OnlyFans
Upends Ordinary Lives
longform

'Kinder, Nicer' OnlyFans Upends Ordinary Lives

A Reuters investigation digs into the 'collateral damage' of porn addiction and more

(Newser) - A series of Reuters investigations has been digging into the darker side of OnlyFans, and the latest focuses on what the outlet calls the "collateral damage" of the porn-centric site that has exploded in popularity. In one example, a husband became addicted to the site and secretly spent $135,...

Husband Recounts the Weeks Before Wife Killed Their Kids

The New Yorker talked to Patrick Clancy

(Newser) - Patrick Clancy's loss is widely known. Article after article has been written about what happened on January 24, 2023, the day his wife, Lindsay, sent him out to grab takeout and medicine and strangled their three young children in their home in Duxbury, Massachusetts, while he was gone. Lindsay...

Her Hunch 20 Years Ago Made Her a Billionaire
Her Hunch
20 Years Ago
Made Her
a Billionaire


longform

Her Hunch 20 Years Ago Made Her a Billionaire

Guardian profiles Bet365 founder Denise Coates, who knew gambling's future was online

(Newser) - Britain's richest woman didn't start out that way. As the Guardian reports, 57-year-old Denise Coates grew up as the daughter of a "moderately successful" businessman, and part of his business included brick-and-mortar betting parlors. In the early 2000s, Coates bet big that the future of gambling lay...

After He Died at 25, His Parents Took Comfort in His Secret Life

They didn't realize Mats Steen had a whole community of friends in World of Warcraft

(Newser) - When Mats Steen died at age 25, his parents were devastated—not only by the loss of their son at such a young age, but by what they saw as his lonely, isolated life. Steen had been diagnosed as a toddler with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a genetic muscle wasting disorder...

Behind Boar's Head Brand: a Remarkable Family Feud

The Brunckhorsts and the Bischoffs don't get along, and it's playing out in court

(Newser) - The Boar's Head brand of deli meat has been in the news lately because of a listeria outbreak that has killed 10 people across the US and sickened dozens more. But the controversy also has called attention to an epic family feud within the billon-dollar meat empire that stretches...

He's Sitting on a Domain Worth Millions, but Not for Profit

The Hustle digs into the curious history of milk.com

(Newser) - Writer Alex Mayyasi stumbled upon an internet anomaly when he randomly typed milk.com into his browser. He expected to see a big dairy lobby or the URL parked for sale given its value as a short, single-word domain, but he instead found a relic from the internet's early...

Rikers Women Recall Officer 'Champagne' With Horror

Two dozen lawsuits allege he raped and abused them for years, reports Gothamist

(Newser) - A Gothamist investigation has turned up disturbing allegations against one prison guard in particular at Rikers Island who is accused in two dozen lawsuits of raping and sexually abusing female inmates over a span of decades. The inmates knew by him the nickname of "Champagne," but he has...

What Happened to the Minivan?
What Happened to the Minivan?
longform

What Happened to the Minivan?

Ian Bogost traces how it got 'replaced' by the SUV

(Newser) - Once upon a time, the minivan was a new and exciting "savior." Then it became ubiquitous, though never particularly cool. And then it became ... obsolete? In a piece at the Atlantic , Ian Bogost traces the history of what he calls "the perfect vehicle," and argues that...

In Galveston, the Sea Keeps Coming. So Do the Condos
Island City
of Galveston
Faces Big
Questions

longform

Island City of Galveston Faces Big Questions

Washington Post explores the Texas city's existential fight with the ocean

(Newser) - Given its location on a Gulf Coast barrier island, Galveston, Texas, is particularly vulnerable to rising sea levels and the rising intensity of storms. But as the Washington Post reports in an in-depth look at the city's existential fight with nature, that isn't keeping new arrivals away. Consider...

The State Said Miller's Death Was Humane. I Watched It

Lauren Gill describes jerking, shaking during Alabama execution

(Newser) - The state of Alabama executed Alan Miller using nitrogen gas on Sept. 26. Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall said in a statement afterward that the execution "progressed as planned," with Miller making "slight movements associated with the dying process. ... the State proved once again that nitrogen hypoxia...

'History's Hardest Puzzle' Continues to Elude
'History's Hardest Puzzle'
Continues to Elude
longform

'History's Hardest Puzzle' Continues to Elude

Atlantic looks at the latest efforts to decode the inscrutable Voynich manuscript

(Newser) - What has roughly 38,000 words over 234 pages and yet is not just unreadable but indecipherable? The ancient Voynich manuscript , of course, which just might be "history's hardest puzzle," writes Ariel Sabar in the Atlantic . Cryptographers, mathematicians, and linguists have been trying to decode the 15th-century...

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