The world be an infinitely more cheerful place if every 20th Century Fox Film started like this, wouldn’t it?
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The world be an infinitely more cheerful place if every 20th Century Fox Film started like this, wouldn’t it?
Find us on Facebook and Twitter, and don’t forget to check out our collection of 500 Free Online Movies.
Steven Pinker is an experimental psychologist and one of the world’s foremost writers on language, mind, and human nature. Currently at Harvard, Pinker has also taught at Stanford and MIT, and his research on visual cognition and the psychology of language has won prizes from the National Academy of Sciences, the Royal Institution of Great Britain, the Cognitive Neuroscience Society, and the American Psychological Association.
This video (find part 1 above, part 2 below, and the transcript here) is taken from a talk given on September 10, 2008 at Warwick’s Bookstore in La Jolla, California. Here, we find Pinker talking about his then new book, The Stuff of Thought: Language as a Window into Human Nature, and doing what he does best: combining psychology and neuroscience with linguistics. The result is as entertaining (and not safe for work) as it is insightful.
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By profession, Matthias Rascher teaches English and History at a High School in northern Bavaria, Germany. In his free time he scours the web for good links and posts the best finds on Twitter.
Finding this short documentary on “Queen of British Pop” Kate Bush was a treat for me, I must confess, not least because of the always entertaining presence of John Lydon (Johnny Rotten from the Sex Pistols). Having nurtured a deep love for Bush’s music in my youth as a sort of guilty pleasure, it’s only in my adulthood that I decided it’s ok to say, dammit, I think Kate Bush is just absolutely brilliant and I don’t care who knows it. It’s probably the case that with age, all guilty pleasures just become pleasures (or should, anyway). Alright, she may have single-handedly inspired every melodramatic 80s teenager in a theater club to put on gauzy, homemade dresses and twirl around warbling and swooning, but what, I ask, is wrong with that? There are worse things birthed by pop trends, that’s for sure, and it’s arguable, really, how much of Bush’s music can be called “pop,” anyway, since she includes so many British and international folk influences in her repertoire. And yes, it’s true, some people, like Lydon’s mother (whom he quotes above), think her singing sounds less pop star and more like “a bag of cats”–a reaction that seems to thrill him–but she certainly made an impression on David Gilmour, who passed her demo on to EMI and helped launch her career. In addition to Lydon, Kate Bush: Queen of British Pop includes interviews with Lily Allen, her early producers, and her brother, John Carder Bush, discussing her songwriting process as a young teenager.
It wasn’t long after her earliest writing efforts that Bush was signed to EMI at the age of 16 and set about recording her first album The Kick Inside. While she’s typically remembered for hits from her 1985 Hounds of Love—including “Cloudbusting” and “Running up that Hill” (and their incorporation into several dancefloor hits of the 90s)—Bush’s first single “Wuthering Heights,” released when she was just nineteen, hit number one on the UK and Australian charts in 1978. Bush insisted that this be the first single from her album, despite the fact that, well, it’s an incredibly bizarre song for a pop release, in its arrangement and its subject matter—Emily Bronte’s 1847 gothic novel. But it works in a way that only Bush could get away with (covers of the song are generally risible and unconvincing). She somehow manages to perfectly encapsulate the novel’s chill and its poignancy, alternately pleading and threatening in the voice of Cathy’s ghost, imploring the haunted Heathcliff to let her in again. (For a truly haunting experience, see this video of the track slowed down to an ethereal 36-minute crawl). No one else could pull off this almost-pretentious balance between the sublime and the ridiculous, combined with her interpretive dance and rolling eyes, without getting labeled as some sort of a novelty act, but as Lydon puts it, her “shrieks and warbles are beauty beyond belief” to many ears, and she was taken seriously and awarded an iconic status. Or, in another one of Lydon’s little gems: “Kate Bush and her grand piano… that’s like John Wayne and his saddle.” I already warned you I’m a fan. You may just hear a bag of cats.
After the release of The Kick Inside, Bush embarked on her first and only tour in 1979. The video below is a performance of “Wuthering Heights” from a German appearance:
For a variety of reasons, she would never tour again and only perform live sporadically. This is in part due to her desire to control every part of her career, from writing and producing, to performing and promotion. In “Queen of British Pop,” her brother describes her frustration with the world of talk shows and magazine interviews, which tended to trivialize her music and ask condescending questions about her love life and hair styling. Any pop sensation should expect this, I suppose, but Bush resented the way she was objectified by her label and the press. She considered herself a serious artist and set out to prove it by focusing exclusively on her work, not herself, as the product, a decision that earned her a reputation (not entirely undeserved) as a “weirdo recluse,” but also enabled her to retain complete creative control, make a series of remarkably eclectic and personal records, and become a pioneer and a positive figure for dozens of female artists after her. She did make the occasional foray onto television and film after her retreat from the limelight. A memorable example is this silly duet with Rowan Atkinson (in character as a sleazy American lounge singer) for a 1986 Comic Relief concert.
Bush won high praise from critics and peers last year for her return to “sublime and ridiculous” territory with latest album 50 Words for Snow. A 1993 documentary called “This Woman’s Work,” available free here, presents a longer exploration of her work, with several interviews with Bush.
Josh Jones is a doctoral candidate in English at Fordham University and a co-founder and former managing editor of Guernica / A Magazine of Arts and Politics.
In this week’s issue of the New Yorker, neurologist and writer Oliver Sacks has an article titled “Altered States.” Subtitled “Self-experiments in chemistry,” it covers, to be blunter, what Sacks experienced and learned — or failed to learn, substance depending — when he began doing drugs.
His desire to conduct these self-experiments flared up in his thirties, when, among other sudden jolts of curiosity, he felt a suspicion that he had never really seen the color indigo. “One sunny Saturday in 1964, I developed a pharmacologic launchpad consisting of a base of amphetamine (for general arousal), LSD (for hallucinogenic intensity), and a touch of cannabis (for a little added delirium). About twenty minutes after taking this, I faced a white wall and exclaimed, ‘I want to see indigo now — now!’ ” The resulting experience, and surely many others besides, should appear in detail in Sacks’ upcoming book Hallucinations. While you need to subscribe to the magazine to read the New Yorker piece, anyone can watch the video above, which spends a few minutes with Sacks talking about what drugs taught him about the brain.
Every subject Sacks writes about seems to start with his interest in our unusual sensory experiences and end in the organic workings of our brains. His body of work comprises books on migraine, encephalitis, visual agnosia, deafness, autism, color blindness, and various other perceptual impairments. Thinking back to his self-induced hallucinations, he remembers feeling that “the drugs might sensitize me to experiences of a sort my patients could have,” making him more empathetic to what they were going through. On the other hand, he says, some drugs “gave me some very direct knowledge of what physiologists would call the reward systems of the brain,” producing “intense pleasure, sometimes pleasure of an almost orgasmic degree, with no particular content,” the kind that made him fear he would become one of those famous lab rats with an electrode connected to its brain’s pleasure center, pushing and pushing the lever to stimulate that center to the very end. But he stepped back, observed, wrote, and avoided that fate, or at least its equivalent in the human domain, living to tell the tale more eloquently than most any writer around.
(See also: more from Oliver Sacks on the New Yorker’s Out Loud podcast.)
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Colin Marshall hosts and produces Notebook on Cities and Culture. Follow him on Twitter at @colinmarshall.
Intelligence comes at a price. The human species, despite its talent for solving problems, has managed over the millennia to turn one of its most basic survival mechanisms–the stress response–against itself. “Essentially,” says Stanford University neurobiologist Robert Sapolsky, “we’ve evolved to be smart enough to make ourselves sick.”
In the 2008 National Geographic documentary Stress: Portrait of a Killer (above), Sapolsky and fellow scientists explain the deadly consequences of prolonged stress. “If you’re a normal mammal,” Sapolsky says, “what stress is about is three minutes of screaming terror on the savannah, after which either it’s over with or you’re over with.” During those three minutes of terror the body responds to imminent danger by deploying stress hormones that stimulate the heart rate and blood pressure while inhibiting other functions, like digestion, growth and reproduction.
The problem is, human beings tend to secrete these hormones constantly in response to the pressures of everyday life. “If you turn on the stress response chronically for purely psychological reasons,” Sapolsky told Mark Shwartz in a 2007 interview for the Stanford News Service, “you increase your risk of adult onset diabetes and high blood pressure. If you’re chronically shutting down the digestive system, there’s a bunch of gastrointestinal disorders you’re more at risk for as well.”
Chronic stress has also been shown in scientific studies to diminish brain cells needed for memory and learning, and to adversely affect the way fat is distributed in the body. It has even been shown to measurably accelerate the aging process in chromosomes, a result that confirms our intuitive sense that people who live stressful lives grow old faster.
By studying baboon populations in East Africa, Sapolsky has found that individuals lower down in the social hierarchy suffer more stress, and consequently more stress-related health problems, than dominant individuals. The same trend in human populations was discovered in the British Whitehall Study. People with more control in work environments have lower stress, and better health, than subordinates.
Stress: Portrait of a Killer is a fascinating and important documentary–well worth the 52 minutes it takes to watch.
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Henry Rollins had dropped out of college and was working at a Haagen-Dazs in Washington, DC when he joined the seminal L.A. hardcore punk band Black Flag in 1981, a career move that would shape the rest of the singer/author/actor/activist’s life. And although he left higher education for a more individualized path, Rollins has a very high regard for the potential of a good education to change people’s lives.
We’ve previously featured Rollins’ motivational Big Think talk to young people on the dangers of resentment. In the short, but equally inspiring, talk above–from the same set of interviews–Rollins describes education as the engine of a democratic society, “the great equalizer.” For Rollins, education is the key to a “more vigorous democracy.” And although he makes some arguable claims about the possibility of educational reform to substantially diminish the effects of institutionalized racism and poverty, his view of what an education should be corresponds to what educational reformers have stressed for decades—that moving to a focus on critical thinking, rather than “teaching to the test,” is a shift that needs to happen in order for students to become curious, intentional, and independent learners and, ultimately, free and independent citizens.
Rollins speculates that certain political actors and vested interests deliberately block educational reform to maintain the status quo. Whether or not you accept his analysis, there’s no denying that the state of primary, secondary, and higher education in the U.S. is dire, and the functional efficacy of our democratic process seems constantly in jeopardy. Alluding to the dictum attributed to Thomas Jefferson (who may not have actually written this) that “An educated citizenry is a vital requisite for our survival as a free people,” Rollins believes that educational reforms offer “the way out” of our current political gridlock and of the despairing situations underprivileged people are born into. I think he makes a pretty compelling case in just under four minutes.
Josh Jones is a doctoral candidate in English at Fordham University and a co-founder and former managing editor of Guernica / A Magazine of Arts and Politics.
Even those of us who have never read The Importance of Being Earnest, The Picture of Dorian Gray, or anything else Oscar Wilde wrote can still recite a thing or two he said. “A little sincerity is a dangerous thing, and a great deal of it is absolutely fatal,” for example, or that jewel of so many Facebook profiles, “We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.” I personally prefer “I can resist everything except temptation,” but none of these quite hold the power of Wilde’s immortal (if seemingly unconfirmed) dying line: “Either those drapes go or I do.” Now you can hear the poet, playwright, one-time novelist, and dedicated raconteur speak his own words in this recording of two verses from his 1897 poem The Ballad of Reading Gaol, embedded above.
Wilde got his material for this work straight from the source: convicted in 1895 of “gross indecency,” he did the following two years of “hard bed, hard fare, hard labour” at HM’s Prison, Reading. There he witnessed a Royal Horse Guard trooper hang for cutting his wife’s throat. Sensing a theme of the human condition, Wilde would later write: “Yet each man kills the thing he loves / By each let this be heard. / Some do it with a bitter look / Some with a flattering word. / The coward does it with a kiss / The brave man with a sword!” The earlier verses you hear Wilde read — for whatever definition of “hear” the limitations of eighteenth-century recording devices allowed — end in a summation of just what struck him so deeply about all this business: “The man had killed the thing he loved / And so he had to die.”
Find more works by Oscar Wilde in our collections of Free Audio Books and Free eBooks.
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Colin Marshall hosts and produces Notebook on Cities and Culture. Follow him on Twitter at @colinmarshall.
During the 1940s, when India won its independence from Britain, the leaders of the newly-formed nation began imagining the Indian Institutes of Technology, otherwise known as the IITs. Much like MIT in the US, these schools would cultivate some of the world’s top scientists and engineers. And they’d make technology key to the future of India’s economic development.
Today, the IITs stand atop the Indian educational system and, like their peer institutions in the US, they’re making a point of putting free courses on the web. Rather quietly, they’ve amassed some 268 courses, giving anyone with an internet connection access to 10,000+ video lectures. As you might expect, the course lineup skews heavily toward science and technology, the stuff that contributes to India’s industrial base — Introduction to Basic Electronics, High Performance Computer Architecture, Space Flight Mechanics, Steel Making, and all of the rest. But they’ve also added a few contemplative courses to the mix, courses like Contemporary Literature, Quantum Physics, the History of Economic Theory, and Game Theory and Economics.
You can start rummaging through the complete list of IIT courses on YouTube here, or you can access them via this IIT website, which gives you the ability to download videos straight to your computer. Naturally we’ve added many essential IIT courses to our list of Free Online Courses from Great Universities — Harvard, Yale, Stanford, MIT, UC Berkeley, Oxford, the list goes on.
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A few weeks back, we showed you the first grainy footage of NASA’s rover, Curiosity, landing on the dusty surface of Mars. And we promised to follow up with higher res footage when it became available. Well, it’s now online and on display above. Just to recap, the video shows the final descent of Curiosity, from the point where it jettisons its heat shield to the moment when it touches down on the martian surface. The video was stitched together with 666 images taken at a rate of four per second.
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Classic. And if you’re not familiar with the reference — Miles Davis’ 1970 experimental jazz album, Bitches Brew — you can catch it on YouTube, or snag a copy online.
H/T Kottke
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It’s hard to imagine him as an old man, but Joe Strummer would have turned 60 today. Strummer was the heart and soul of the legendary punk group The Clash, the reason many people called it “The only band that matters.”
He was a man with a Bob Dylan-like instinct for self-invention. Born John Graham Mellor on August 21, 1952 in Ankara, Turkey (his father was in the British diplomatic service), he changed his name to Joe Strummer in the early 1970s while playing in a rhythm and blues band called the 101’ers. When the Sex Pistols opened for the 101’ers, Strummer was so impressed with the band’s take-no-prisoners attitude that he threw himself into the punk movement, accepting an offer from guitarist Mick Jones, bassist Paul Simonon and manager Bernie Rhodes to join what would eventually become The Clash.
With the Clash, Strummer helped move punk beyond the self-absorbed nihilism of its early days to embrace political and social awareness. After the band disintegrated in the mid 1980s, Strummer spent over a decade in semi-retirement before returning in the late 1990s for what he called his “Indian summer,” with a popular BBC radio show and a new band, The Mescaleros. But just as he was regaining his old momentum, Strummer died unexpectedly of heart failure on December 22, 2002, at the age of 50.
In the video above, Strummer sings the title song to the The Clash’s 1980 album London Calling, which Rolling Stone ranked Number 8 on its list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. “Recorded in 1979 in London,” writes the magazine, “which was then wrenched by surging unemployment and drug addiction, and released in America in January 1980, the dawn of an uncertain decade, London Calling is 19 songs of apocalypse, fueled by an unbending faith in rock & roll to beat back the darkness.”
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