Volume 22 Issue 9
Check Out Some New and Upcoming VICE Documentaries
Broadly explores the new wave of feminism in Insane Clown Posse Juggalo culture, and VICE News gets exclusive access to a militia-run migrant camp in Libya. This is a guide to where we've been and where we're going.
Two Kinds of Memory and Memory Itself
Pinckers' latest project looks at the weird place Japan holds in the collective mind of the West.
Games Based on Movies Are Getting Better – So When Will Cinema Be So Respectful?
'Assassin's Creed' is coming to cinemas, but do we really think it'll be any good? Course not. Movies based on games have always been crud.
Bangladeshi Sweatshops Continue to Imperil Workers’ Lives
In 2013, the Rana Plaza garment factory collapsed, killing more than 1,100 Bangladeshi workers. Despite the news coverage, sweatshops aren't much better today.
Magic Rocks
These photos are from Jim Mangan's upcoming book, 'Magic Rocks, which will be released at the New York Art Book Fair as a continuation of his book 'Bastard Child' this September.
Uchronia: Imagining an Alternate History Where a Malian Emperor Discovered America
In 'Uchronia,' photographer Maciek Pozoga and musicologist Christopher Kirkley imagine what might have happened if a Malian emperor was actually the first person to get to the New World.
The Eastern European Gay Rights Movement Is Struggling to Be More Than a Western Cause
The region has lagged behind Western Europe when it comes to gay rights thanks to its reactionary nationalist movements and Russia's outwardly homophobic regime.
A Woman on Death Row and the Neighbor Who Put Her There
Mary Jane Veloso lives about 300 feet away from Maria Cristina Sergio in the Philippines. Veloso is on death row for allegedly smuggling heroin into the country. Sergio is in jail and awaiting trial after being accused of trafficking her neighbor.
The Oath Keepers Are Ready for War with the Federal Government
The heavily armed citizen militia joined Oregon gold miners in a land dispute with the federal government that could end in a bloodbath.
'Beneath the National Palace of Culture': Fiction by Garth Greenwell
One of the hardest stories to write is a love story. It's difficult to render chemistry in writing, and it's particularly difficult to capture one-way obsessions, or unrequited love. This story does.
Photographs of the Underwater Telecommunication Cables Tapped by the NSA
Trevor Paglen took a literal deep dive into government surveillance for his latest project.
Two Vodkas and One Iced Coffee with Salman Rushdie
VICE caught up with the iconic author to discuss his 12th novel, 'Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights.' As he chatted about everything from fatwa to Twitter feuds, Rushdie proved he is as controversial, and incredible, as ever.