The Candid Side of George Carlin

A quick find … I want­ed to flag a good inter­view with George Car­lin where he talks can­did­ly about his evo­lu­tion as a com­ic and the strange tra­jec­to­ry of his career. The con­ver­sa­tion was held at the 92nd Street Y in New York. You can down­load it here: iTunes — Feed — MP3 — Blog Post.

Also see the 92nd Street Y’s col­lec­tion on iTunes here, which we men­tioned in our ear­li­er post today.

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iTunesU Goes Beyond The Campus: Spotlight on the ResearchChannel

In case you haven’t been watch­ing … Apple’s iTune­sU has start­ed strik­ing out in new direc­tions. When it launched a lit­tle more than a year ago, iTune­sU served up free edu­ca­tion­al con­tent exclu­sive­ly from uni­ver­si­ties. Now, it has gone “beyond the cam­pus.”

With this move, Apple is now fea­tur­ing edi­fy­ing mate­r­i­al from such insti­tu­tions as The New York Pub­lic Library, the 92nd Street Y (nice look­ing col­lec­tion here), the Nation­al Sci­ence Dig­i­tal Library, and the Cen­ter for Strate­gic and Inter­na­tion­al Stud­ies. Also in the mix, you’ll find pod­casts from the ResearchChan­nel. Based out of the Uni­ver­si­ty of Wash­ing­ton, the ResearchChan­nel brings togeth­er con­tent from lead­ing research and aca­d­e­m­ic insti­tu­tions (see mem­ber list here), and then dis­trib­utes it to con­sumers most­ly through satel­lite and cable, but also via the web. iTune­sU is a fair­ly new dis­tri­b­u­tion chan­nel. And even new­er is YouTube. (See their chan­nel here.)

What kind of con­tent does the ResearchChan­nel serve up? Here’s a sam­pling of the pro­grams you’ll find: Dark Ener­gy, or Worse: Was Ein­stein Wrong?; Bioen­er­gy and Bio­fu­els: An Overview; The Psy­chol­o­gy of Blink: Under­stand­ing How the Mind Works Uncon­scious­ly; The Teen Brain; and Mesopotamia to Iraq: Per­spec­tives on the Mid­dle East.

The ResearchChan­nel, I should men­tion, is not the only ven­ture in this line of busi­ness. The UChan­nel (for­mer­ly the Uni­ver­si­ty Chan­nel), com­ing out of Prince­ton Uni­ver­si­ty, offers a rather sim­i­lar prod­uct: Web site — iTunes — Rss feed — YouTube . Like­wise, FORA.TV does a good job of aggre­gat­ing smart video: Web site — iTunes — Rss feeds — YouTube.

For more smart audio con­tent, check our Ideas & Cul­ture Pod­cast Col­lec­tion.

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RIP: George Carlin on the Tonight Show (1966)

Here’s the obit. And here’s Car­lin with John­ny Car­son over 40 years ago, sport­ing a very dif­fer­ent look. Rather remark­able to look at.

Also worth a look is his famous piece: Sev­en Dirty Words You Can’t Hear on TV because it formed the basis for a first amend­ment case that went to the US Supreme Court in the 1970s. Obvi­ous­ly, giv­en the very nature of the con­tent and case, you should know in advance that the video is not exact­ly “fam­i­ly-friend­ly” video.

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Zurich Chamber Orchestra Animated on YouTube

The Roller Coast­er…

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YouTube’s New Screening Room (Free Indie Films)

YouTube just launched its new “Screen­ing Room,” and there’s a good chance that the Sun­dance Film Fes­ti­val will nev­er quite be the same again.

The Screen­ing Room presents high qual­i­ty, inde­pen­dent films to YouTube users and promis­es to roll out four new films every two weeks. Giv­en YouTube’s immense reach, these indies will imme­di­ate­ly find a vast inter­na­tion­al audi­ence. Then, to sweet­en the deal even fur­ther, YouTube will offer film­mak­ers a major cut of the adver­tis­ing rev­enue gen­er­at­ed by the view­ing of each video. Plus, hard and dig­i­tal copies of the films can be sold as well. If this new ven­ture gains trac­tion (and you have to think it will), YouTube could sud­den­ly find itself the cen­ter of grav­i­ty for the indie world, dis­plac­ing Sun­dance along the way.

The first four films fea­tured in The Screen­ing Room are hard­ly duds. The Dan­ish Poet won the 2007 Oscar for best ani­mat­ed short; Love and War won the same award at the Los Ange­les Film Fes­ti­val; Our Time Is Up got an Oscar nom­i­na­tion in 2006; and then there’s Miran­da July’s “Are You the Favorite Per­son of Any­body?. The next batch of films comes out July 4. For more info, see this piece in the LA Times.

Adden­dum: I have since stum­bled upon this video that promotes/tells you more about the Screen­ing Room.

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The Grey Video: Mixing The Beatles with Jay‑Z

In 2004, Dan­ger Mouse released The Grey Album which lay­ered the rap­per Jay-Z’s The Black Album on top of The Bea­t­les’ White Album. Black and white makes grey.

Now, on YouTube, you can find The Grey Video, which exper­i­men­tal­ly brings Dan­ger Mouse’s con­cept to video. The video, cre­at­ed by two Swiss direc­tors, mesh­es clips from The Bea­t­les’ film A Hard Day’s Night with footage of Jay‑Z per­form­ing. Watch it below, and get more info on The Grey Album here. Also check our col­lec­tion of MP3 Music Blogs.

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Warrantless Wiretaps: They’re Not Just for Terrorists Anymore; They’re for Pulitzer Prize Winners Too

The con­tro­ver­sy sur­round­ing the Bush admin­is­tra­tion’s adven­tures with war­rant­less wire­tap­ping first began in Decem­ber 2005, when the New York Times broke the sto­ry. Dur­ing the months that fol­lowed, the whole debate remained fair­ly abstract. We talked about indi­vid­ual rights and the pow­er of the exec­u­tive. We nev­er thought about the indi­vid­u­als who were actu­al­ly mon­i­tored by the pro­gram. And that’s because we did­n’t know who was on the gov­ern­men­t’s list, and because we assumed that the gov­ern­ment was tar­get­ing ter­ror­ists, or those close­ly con­nect­ed to them … which isn’t exact­ly how things turned out.

The lat­est edi­tion of This Amer­i­can Life (enti­tled “The Truth Will Out”) fea­tures an inter­view with an appar­ent tar­get of the wire­tap­ping pro­gram. It’s none oth­er than Lawrence Wright, a staff writer for The New York­er mag­a­zine (see his lat­est piece here) who cov­ers the Mid­dle East and won the Pulitzer Prize (2007) for his book: The Loom­ing Tow­er: Al Qae­da and the Road to 9/11. Dur­ing the seg­ment (which starts at minute 26 of the hour-long pro­gram), Wright recounts how he dis­cov­ered the tap­ping, and how Mike McConnell, the Direc­tor of Nation­al Intel­li­gence, react­ed when Wright con­front­ed him with this knowl­edge. You can down­load the pro­gram here: MP3 — iTunes — Feed.

By the way, This Amer­i­can Life, per­haps the most pop­u­lar pod­cast out there, is look­ing to raise mon­ey to keep the pod­cast going. You can donate mon­ey here and sup­port pub­lic radio at its best.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Ira Glass on Why Cre­ative Excel­lence Takes Time

This Amer­i­can Life Demys­ti­fies the Housing/Credit Cri­sis

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Reading Marx’s Capital with David Harvey (Free Lectures)

David Har­vey, an impor­tant social the­o­rist and geo­g­ra­ph­er, has got the right idea. Take what you know. Teach it in the class­room. Cap­ture it on video. Then dis­trib­ute it to the world. Keep it sim­ple, but just do it.

In launch­ing this new web site, Har­vey is mak­ing avail­able 26 hours of lec­tures, dur­ing which he gives a close read­ing of Karl Marx’s Das Kap­i­tal (1867). This work, often con­sid­ered to be Marx’s mas­ter­piece, is where he elab­o­rat­ed a cri­tique of cap­i­tal­ism and laid the ground­work for an ide­ol­o­gy that took the 20th cen­tu­ry by storm (and then it dis­ap­peared in a fair­ly quick snap). Har­vey is no stranger to this text. He has taught this class for over 40 years now, both in uni­ver­si­ties (Johns Hop­kins and CUNY) and in the com­mu­ni­ty as well.

The videos will be rolling out in stages. We have post­ed the first one below. (The first lec­ture actu­al­ly starts about 6 min­utes in. A short intro­duc­tion pre­cedes it). Gen­er­al­ly, the videos can be accessed via Har­vey’s web site, or via iTunes and RSS Feed. Also, we have placed the course in our col­lec­tion of Free Online Cours­es, which keeps on grow­ing. Find it under the “Eco­nom­ics” sec­tion.

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Open Culture was founded by Dan Colman.