I think more grocery stores should do this.
Month: February 2012
Back in the seventies and eighties, there were a number of shows featuring competitions between casts of different TV shows from the major networks, which were then limited to ABC, CBS and NBC. This was well before the internet as we know it today and just at the start of the age of the VCR (its existence was threatened by lawsuits from the movie studios until 1984), so it was much easier to turn television shows into events. The most notable of these shows was Battle of the Network Stars, which featured casts from all three networks competing in unstaged, unrehearsed physical competitions.
Also notable: the All-Star editions of Family Feud – the original one, with Richard Dawson as host (a role he parodied as “Killian” in The Running Man). The video above features the casts of The Love Boat and WKRP in Cincinnati facing off against one another, and it was a pretty amusing episode.
What People Think Rob Ford Is
Here’s a handy chart showing you who thinks what of His Worship (an honorific I have trouble applying to David Miller, never mind this joke in office.)
January’s Viral Videos
Here are nine minutes and ten seconds of the videos that people shared like crazy during the month of January. There’s a little swearing in a couple of the videos, largely because they depict scenes that would make us, as observing third parties, say “How did they ever expect that would end well?”
My favourite of the videos in this digest is Ceiling Fan Trick, shown below:
Pure comedy gold.
Here’s a short film by Brent Hoff (editor of the DVD magazine Wholphin) showing a competition to see who can produce the most love, as determined by MRI scans of their brains. Each of the competitors was given five minutes in an fMRI machine, during which time they had to think of someone they loved and “love them as hard as they could”.
The MRI would be used to monitor those areas of the brain involved in producing the neurochemicals associated with love – dopamine, serotonin, ocytocin and vasopressin – and measure their output. These pathways converge in a spot called the nucleus accumbens, which is one of the parts of the brains that would be watched closely. The winner, at least by the objective standard of this competition, would be the person who generated the most activity in those brain parts.
The competition took place at Stanford’s Center for Cognitive and Neurobiological Imaging with the help of research director Bob Dougherty and scientific director Melina Uncapher.
Among the people in the competition: a 75-year-old man who was happily married for 50 years, the young woman with a new sweetheart, a student who’s never been in love but likes to think about it in abstract terms, a ten-year-old boy thinking of his newborn cousin and a guy trying to get over his ex (my heart went out to this poor fella). What was just as interesting as the results were how the people in the competition reacted to the whole experience.
I’m going to leave it up to the neuroscientists and philosophers to debate whether or not you can actually measure love with an MRI and delve into the “Do we really have souls, or its it just chemicals?” debate, and they’re free to do so in the comments.
The Rules of Movie Poster Design
The poster 6 Rules of Modern Poster Design does a great job of illustrating the cliches of modern movie poster design while paying homage to Saul Bass.