Puppies for These Hard Times

In case you were won­der­ing what kind of media we would be most hun­gry for in hard times (big bud­get action movies? escapist sit-coms), don’t for­get that this is reces­sion 3.0. Intro­duc­ing The pup­py cam, with 22,000 view­ers and count­ing. The shibu pup­pies are adorable, wor­ry-free, and of course, non-union.  Click here and tell us are you not enter­tained? (Thanks SA for the tip.)

Vintage Nabokov

Tak­en from a French tele­vi­sion pro­gram, this vin­tage clip fea­tures Vladimir Nabokov (1899–1977) read­ing from Loli­ta and reveal­ing his list of the most impor­tant nov­els of the 20th cen­tu­ry, among oth­er things. Nabokov speaks in Eng­lish here. So don’t let the ini­tial French throw you off. We’ve added this gem to our YouTube playlist.

Loli­ta, light of my life, fire of my loins. My sin, my soul. Lo-lee-ta: the tip of the tongue tak­ing a trip of three steps down the palate to tap, at three, on the teeth. Lo. Lee. Ta.

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Thomas Friedman on the Green Revolution

Thomas Fried­man has a new book out, Hot, Flat, and Crowd­ed. And it gets into the whole ques­tion of what a “green rev­o­lu­tion” is real­ly all about. New books mean book tours, and here we have an out­take from a spir­it­ed talk he recent­ly gave in North­ern Cal­i­for­nia. You can watch the full talk on Fora.tv here.

By the way, Fried­man starts talk­ing at the out­set about “ET,” and it hap­pens to stand for “Ener­gy Tech­nol­o­gy.”

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Oxford Scholars Name Top Ten Irritating Phrases

What are some of the most annoy­ing phras­es in the Eng­lish lan­guage? In a new forth­com­ing book, A Damp Squid: The Eng­lish Lan­guage Laid Bare, Oxford researchers list the com­mon phras­es that we use incor­rect­ly or just all too exces­sive­ly. Here’s the list (and if you have your own dis­liked expres­sions, list them below in the com­ments).

1 — At the end of the day
2 — Fair­ly unique
3 — I per­son­al­ly
4 — At this moment in time
5 — With all due respect
6 — Absolute­ly
7 — It’s a night­mare
8 — Should­n’t of
9 — 24/7
10 — It’s not rock­et sci­ence

via The Tele­graph

 

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Joss Whedon: The Death of Orson Welles, The History of Women and Beyond

One of my friends from way back, Sheer­ly Avni, has just post­ed an inter­view with Joss Whe­don, who has now dom­i­nat­ed in four media cat­e­gories: film (Seren­i­ty), tele­vi­sion (Buffy the Vam­pire Slay­er), comics (Run­aways, The Aston­ish­ing X‑Men) and final­ly the inter­net. (Dr. Hor­ri­ble’s Sin­ga­long Blog). The inter­view was con­duct­ed for Moth­er Jones, so there’s a lot about pol­i­tics, gen­der, the writ­ers’ strike, and, yes, TV and film. It runs about 38 min­utes. Have a lis­ten.

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Woody Allen and the Reverend Billy Graham In Conversation

Here we have the odd cou­ple. The agnos­tic film­mak­er and one of Amer­i­ca’s most influ­en­tial reli­gious fig­ures engaged in a live­ly con­ver­sa­tion. It’s actu­al­ly a rather gen­tle­man­ly exchange from the late 1960s, and it’s added to our video col­lec­tion of Cul­tur­al Icons. Part 1 appears below, and you can get Part 2 here.

You can find this video per­ma­nent­ly host­ed in our col­lec­tion of 235 Cul­tur­al Icons.

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Obama’s Victory: The View From Grant Park (Chicago)

Here’s the moment when Chica­go, Oba­ma’s adopt­ed home­town, learned about his vic­to­ry Tues­day night. It has been a long time since we’ve seen this kind of civic engage­ment and excite­ment. Catch the moment below and watch his vic­to­ry speech here.

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This American Life: Another Frightening Show About the Economy

Back in May, This Amer­i­can Life (iTunes — Feed — Web Site) aired an episode called The Giant Pool of Mon­ey (stream here). The show, which demys­ti­fied the mort­gage cri­sis in an unsu­al way, became a major hit. Now, they have aired a sequel: Anoth­er Fright­en­ing Show About the Econ­o­my (stream here), and it explains the rip­ple effects of the orig­i­nal mort­gage cri­sis that have pushed the Amer­i­can finan­cial sys­tem to the brink. How did com­mer­cial paper freeze up, and why does this paper mat­ter? What exact­ly are cred­it default swaps, why was­n’t this mas­sive mar­ket reg­u­lat­ed, and how does this poor­ly under­stood mar­ket threat­en our eco­nom­ic well being? It’s all answered here. Give a lis­ten.

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