YouTube has banned the James Randi Educational Foundation!?!?
Category Archives: Video
Run Away!
Time-Lapse Video: Retreating Glacier
This remarkable image sequence captures a series of massive calving events at Columbia Glacier near Valdez, Alaska. Composed of 436 frames taken between May and September of 2007, it shows the glacier rapidly retreating by about half a mile (1.6 kilometers), a volume loss of some 0.4 cubic miles (1.67 cubic kilometers) of ice or 400 billion gallons (1.5 trillion liters) of water.
Does it Weigh the Same as a Duck?
Iron: 7.87 g/cm^3 Mercury: 13.5 g/cm^3
Reinterpreting the Classics
Time Lapse
Physics in Art
Machines that Almost Fall Over
A system of sculptures that is constantly on the brink of collapse. My intention was to capture and sustain the exact moment of impending catastrophe and endlessly repeat it.
While at rest, or with the hammer slowly moving, the pieces stay upright because the center-of-mass is located somewhere over the base. The key is to make sure the impact doesn’t change that.
Also, there’s Conversation Piece
Film editor Walter Murch, who edited many of Francis Ford Copolla’s films, developed a theory about edits while working on The Conversation (1974) He noticed that in many cases, the best place to make a cut was when he blinked. Subsequently, Murch wrote about the human blink as a sort of mental punctuation mark: a signifier of a viewer’s comfort with visual material and therefore, a good place to separate two ideas with a cut.
This sculpture is a physical test of Murch’s principle. I watched The Conversation while wearing a custom device that recorded the pattern of my blinks during the film. Using this information, I created a display in which the left mallet taps out the paattern of my blinks, while the right mallet taps out the pattern of Murch’s edits. When the two match up, the cymbal chimes for success.
Beat notes, sort of.
Jeepers, It's Patches O'Houlihan!
Have over 22,000 films. Will travel. For more than a decade, we’ve been rescuing old 16mm school films from dumpsters and obscurity and showing them to folks like you.
Among the must-see-tee-vee, er, film:
Alcohol Is Dynamite (1958)
Am I Trustworthy? (1950)
Destruction: Fun or Dumb? (ca. 1970s)
Duck and Cover (Archer, 1951)
Getting Along With Others (1965)
How Quiet Helps At School (1953)
Living with the Atom (1957)
More Dates For Kay (Coronet, 1952)
Respect for Property (1959)
So I Took It… (1975)
VD is for Everybody (1969)
Why Doesn’t Cathy Eat Breakfast? (1972)
Oh, gosh dangit. How to Play Dodgeball (Über-American Instructional films) isn’t there. Yet.
Hindenberg Studies
Crossing Over
The Crossover Flywheel hockey training aid
The one redeeming facet about when “I am the story” reporters try to participate in their pieces is that there’s the potential that they can get hurt.
Worth Every Penny
Stop-action Coinstar commercial