What would it look like if you stuck today’s stars in Hitchcock’s classic films? Vanity Fair tried to figure it out.
What would it look like if you stuck today’s stars in Hitchcock’s classic films? Vanity Fair tried to figure it out.
Courtesy of the BBC, this video features Brian Cox, a particle physicist and ex D:Ream keyboard player, who travels across the US, firing lasers at the moon and going wild in the Arizona desert, all in order to understand the deep secrets of gravity — something that neither Newton nor Einstein fully understood. It’s in gravity, Cox thinks, that we can find the meaning and logic of the Universe.
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We covered the Second Amendment a couple of weeks ago. (Does it confer the right to bear arms?) So why not touch on the First Amendment this week and point you to an engaging interview (MP3 — iTunes — Feed) with the Pulitzer Prize-winning author Anthony Lewis, who has just released the new book: Freedom for the Thought That We Hate: A Biography of the First Amendment.
For those who use their iPod to take advantage of our copious podcast collections:
via Lifehacker
If you’re a resident of a Super Tuesday state, we hope you can find some time to pull the lever tomorrow. Also, we hope you’ll forgive (at least) one more political post before Super Tuesday. Whatever your political affiliations, the video below is a compelling example of new media at work. According to the New York Times’ political blog, the lead singer of the Black Eyed Peas rounded up 30 or so celebrities and put together this video set to the soundtrack of Barack Obama’s concession speech in New Hampshire. Because the group worked for free and edited the video on their own, they turned the project around in two days. The effect is powerful (and the video is added to our YouTube Playlist). You can see Obama’s original speech here.
Is this blogworthy? Amusing? You be the judge:
On the eve of Super Tuesday, things are getting ugly. Immanuel Kant has gone negative on Friedrich Nietzsche (see below), and the Nietzsche campaign has wasted no time responding. These enlightened attacks ads have been added to our YouTube Playlist.
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“Across the Universe” was written by John Lennon in 1969. On Monday, NASA will beam “Across the Universe” literally across the universe, straight to Polaris, the North Star. According to Wired Magazine, the song traveling at the speed of light will take 431 years to reach its final destination, which is a mere 2.5 quadrillion miles away. Lennon must be smiling somewhere.
Watch the work of a satirical illustrator in action over at The New Yorker.
Earlier this week, we highlighted a great conversation about whether we inherited morality from our primate ancestors. It raised the question whether our “inner chimp” tells us what is right or wrong.
Now, to switch gears just a bit, we bring you an interview with Neil Shubin that delves into your “inner fish” (MP3 — iTunes — Feed — Web Site). Shubin is the author of Your Inner Fish: A Journey into the 3.5‑Billion-Year History of the Human Body, and here he talks about how various parts of the human body (our hands and head, for example) evolved from the anatomy of ancient fish and other long extinct creatures. What this goes to show is that “our humanity, … which makes us so unique … is really built by bits and pieces shared with everything we call worms, jellyfish, sponges, and so forth.” “The utterly unique and beautiful can be made from something very common.” And there’s something aesthetically beautiful about that.
Shubin, I should mention, made headlines in 2006 when he and a team of scientists revealed the discovery of Tiktaalik roseae, a 375 million year old fossil that captures the moment when sea creatures made their transition to land. Good stuff.
On the lighter side .…
Yesterday, I got a chance to attend Larry Lessig’s last lecture ever on “Free Culture.” (More on Lessig here.) It was a presentation worthy of Steve Jobs, and I’ll have more to say about it later.
For now, I’ll leave you with an example of creative “remixing” cited during his talk. It’s political satire. Not the kind that your father grew up with. But the kind that’s grown out of the new digital landscape.