August 21
"
Multitasking messes with the brain in several ways. At the most basic level, the mental balancing acts that it requires—the constant switching and pivoting—energize regions of the brain that specialize in visual processing and physical coordination and simultaneously appear to shortchange some of the higher areas related to memory and learning. We concentrate on the act of concentration at the expense of whatever it is that we’re supposed to be concentrating on."
[more inside]
posted by jbickers at 8:29 AM -
17 comments
Atlantic Yards is the largest project Frank Gehry, now seventy-eight, has ever undertaken. And if it proves to be his last large project, it will be a fitting capstone to a career utterly blind to the public function of architecture. For how better to assert your dedication to personal expression over context than to have your distinct visual style serve as the emblem for the death of two Brooklyn neighborhoods?
Charles Taylor discusses the anti-humanism of Modern architecture.
[Via] [Previously]
posted by Sonny Jim at 3:34 AM -
52 comments
August 20
The Archive. A short film by
Sean Dunn and
Ed David.
"The world is dead out there. They have their ears closed. They don't understand what's going on at this moment. It's gonna take them 10, 15, 20 years to wake up and realize what they missed." Nobody has more records than
Paul Mawhinney. He's ready to sell the whole thing for 6 cents on the dollar of their worth. 3 million records for $1 each. And nobody is buying. (
Previously on Mefi.)
[more inside]
posted by grabbingsand at 1:25 PM -
24 comments
Artist
Joseph Griffith, whose work draws from
fantasy and
mythology, has also turned his attention to one of America's most significant historical moments: "I painted
this for the 225th anniversary of the Battle of Yorktown when George Washington and the Continentals traunched the British. The county would not dignify it with a response, however, George Washington's Mount Vernon estate kindly wrote me an e-mail saying they would 'pass it along to the staff'."
posted by Marisa Stole the Precious Thing at 11:25 AM -
51 comments
Some of the female
Chinese gymnasts are apparently under-age. It wasn't their skulls, their chins or their eyes that gave them away: it was the
internet.
posted by chuckdarwin at 7:51 AM -
128 comments
Follow the money: for the past year,
the big trade was short bank stocks, and use the cash to go long oil. Massively profitable, but now that trade is unwinding. So where is the big money being invested now? Lots of places:
diamonds,
fine art,
guitars, and
Madonna.
posted by Mutant at 2:50 AM -
36 comments
Two commercial pilots find themselves on the no-fly list. One pilot
sues after having his flight privileges revoked, while the second pilot (and a five-year old sharing his name) note they can
bypass the watchlist by checking in using their initials instead of their full names. TSA has also found themselves in the news this week for disrupting 40 flights and damaging 9 planes during an
overzealous security check.
posted by grippycat at 12:03 AM -
70 comments
August 19
Cockatoos are much better dancers than macaws. Well that was my clear conclusion after watching the first two vid clips linked to
why animals dance in this Guardian feature. And since this is from a serious researcher I don't think they are faked. For those with
much more time, this site has an interesting podcast on the topic of music and the brain.
posted by binturong at 7:18 PM -
21 comments
And you may find yourself behind the wheel of a large automobile | And you may find yourself in a beautiful house, with a beautiful wife | And you may ask yourself... Well...
How did I get here?
posted by unSane at 7:02 PM -
68 comments
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