Monday 26 May 2014

Our 9 Favorite Features Stories This Week

This week for BuzzReads, Gregory Johnsen tells the gripping tale of a 2008 terrorist attack on the U.S. embassy in Yemen — and how much worse it could have been. Read that and these other great stories from around BuzzFeed and the web.


The Benghazi That Wasn’t: How One Man Saved The American Embassy in Yemen — BuzzFeed


The Benghazi That Wasn’t: How One Man Saved The American Embassy in Yemen — BuzzFeed


In September 2008, seven terrorists in Sanaa killed themselves and 12 others in the deadliest assault on a U.S. Embassy in a decade. And if not for an unlikely hero, things would have been unimaginably worse. Read it at BuzzFeed.


BuzzFeed


The Case for ReparationsThe Atlantic


The Case for Reparations — The Atlantic


Do not miss this very big, very important piece by Ta-Nehisi Coates, who asks: Can America move forward without dealing with its past? Read it at The Atlantic .


Carly Mydans/Library of Congress / Via theatlantic.com


The Worst Day Of My Life Is Now New York’s Hottest Tourist Attraction — BuzzFeed


The Worst Day Of My Life Is Now New York’s Hottest Tourist Attraction — BuzzFeed


Nearly 13 years after his sister’s death, Steve Kandell makes a reluctant visit to the 9/11 Memorial Museum, where public spectacle and private grief have a permanent home together. Read it at BuzzFeed.


Stan Honda / AFP / Getty Images


How YouTube and Internet Journalism Destroyed Tom Cruise, Our Last Real Movie StarLA Weekly


How YouTube and Internet Journalism Destroyed Tom Cruise, Our Last Real Movie Star — LA Weekly


"You've seen it, too. You can probably picture it in your head: Tom Cruise, dressed in head-to-toe black, looming over a cowering Oprah as he jumps up and down on the buttermilk-colored couch like a toddler throwing a tantrum," Amy Nicholson writes, "There's just one catch: It never happened." Read it at LA Weekly .


Via laweekly.com




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