Holden Thorp’s Cautionary Tale

Editor's Note: The following is an adapted excerpt from Thomason's upcoming book Discredited: The UNC Scandal and College Athletics' Amateur Ideal. // Art by Casey Robertson

This wasn’t how things were supposed to go for Holden Thorp. He was the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s favorite son, the boy genius who’d fallen in love with the chemistry lab and followed that love all the way to the Ivy League, only to look homeward, still. He returned to Chapel Hill… Continue reading Holden Thorp’s Cautionary Tale

Circles in the Dirt

Photo by Ash Bean

NASCAR’s roots in North Carolina are weaker than ever, as an ever-more-corporate sport looks for its identity amidst declining viewership. Does the back-of-the-pack—the scrappy also-rans and up-and-comers—hold answers?

Searching for McClatchy’s North Carolina Future

Art by Israel Vargas

The News & Observer and The Charlotte Observer remain the state’s most powerful and essential media outlets. But as North Carolina faces a dire local news and information crisis, the papers’ new ownership, shrinking footprint, and challenging business environment raise doubt about their future as the center of the state’s media world.

Say His Name: James Cates

A murder 50 years ago rattled Chapel Hill’s Black community, laying bare the college town’s persistent inequality. As the university renames a slate of buildings on campus, it’s time for its historical reckoning to expand to its relationship with the town around it.

The Next Chapter of Hollywood East

Politics wounded the state’s once-thriving film industry. But now, a bipartisan $68 million incentives bill offers a new script, marked by soaring post-pandemic demand and a shaky ideological truce. As neighboring states seize the regional film mantle, can North Carolina compete?