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Joy Crane


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OneZero • 25th June 2020

Beyond the Pain Matrix

The DayLife Army always seemed like a troll. Then it became a nightmare. It started with a tweet. In the fall of 2013, Matthew had recently turned 18 and was just finishing up his first semester at a college in Chicago. A freshman music business student with a happy-go-lucky laugh and a fascination with the internet, he’d been making electronic tracks since high school and wanted to learn how to market his work.
New York Magazine • 20th August 2018

The Best Books for Making Sense of the Financial Crash, 10 Years Later

The financial crisis of 2008 was the most important single economic event since the 1930s ... To build out an essential reading list, we consulted a group of economists and authors who’ve spent the past decade analyzing the crash.
New York Magazine • 1st April 2018

501 Days in Swampland

What follows is 501 days of official corruption, from small-time graft and brazen influence peddling to full-blown raids on the federal Treasury.
New York Magazine • 23rd January 2018

What’s in Play in the 2018 Governors’ Races

A breakdown of the 15 most competitive seats.
Tomi Um
New York Magazine • 28th December 2017

Bitcoin for The Baffled

A mostly comprehensive timeline of bitcoin’s highs and lows — from the infamous 10,000-bitcoin pizza delivery of 2010 to the pre-Christmas roller-coaster ride.
Tomi Um
New York Magazine • 26th December 2017

Do You Really Know What Bitcoin Is?

A Guide for the Confused.
Jasmine Kang
New York Magazine • 10th April 2017

The Industrial Engineer

"The Job" series: first-person stories exploring the American workforce and how we work now.
The Center for Investigative Reporting • 28th May 2020

The Unreckoned

To better understand what the #MeToo movement is up against, we spoke with women from dozens of industries who remain unable to report sexual abuse and harassment.
Observer • 24th June 2019

Scientists Behind ‘Puppy Dog Eyes’ Study Explain Evolution of Cuteness

In a new study published last week, a team of U.S. and UK scientists explained how they’ve found an answer to the puzzle of how man’s best friend got its puppy dog eyes. The sad, pleading look has had such sway over people during the past 33,000 years of dog-human relations that our preference for the look directed the evolution of dogs’ facial anatomy, the scientists say.
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