Science in the Movies – Right and Wrong

Science fiction movies are science fiction, right? But that doesn’t mean movie makers are free to completely ignore reality.  The Smithsonian’s Collage of Arts and Sciences recently ran a pair of entries looking at SciFi and fantasy movies that did a horrible job with science and those that stayed pretty true to reality.

The movies on the “good” list include 2001: A Space Odyssey (except for the whole evil computer thing), Finding Nemo (except for the whole talking fish thing), Contact, The Andromeda Strain, and A Beautiful Mind.

Those on the “bad” list include Armageddon, 2012, The Core, Volcano, and The 6th Day. Might I add my own thought that all of the movies on the “good science” list are also good movies, especially 2001 and Andromeda Strain, two of my faves growing up.

And every one of the bad science movies is truly awful, especially Armageddon and The Core.  (And the only reason I can’t say anything really bad about 2012 is that I bailed on it on Netflix about 10 minutes in.)

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Are phone apps ancillary markets for movies?

I would think so.  Questions on Twitter today from students using Mass Communication: Living in a Media World:

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Talking about media coverage of health care debate

I’m going to be talking to a business class about media coverage of the health care debate tonight.  Most of the figures I’ll be using come from two Pew Foundation reports:

Here’s some  video I’m going to be sharing with them.

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When politicians’ private remarks go public

The news broke today that Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney said some pretty disparaging things about the 47% of Americans who don’t end up having to pay income tax while speaking at a private fund raising event.  The leaked video of the talk was posted online by the progressive political news journal, Mother Jones. Here’s the video Mother Jones posted:

Romney, at a hastily called press conference Monday evening took responsibility for the comments and said that while he admitted that it wasn’t “elegantly stated,” it did represent his thoughts on the subject.

Romney was caught with a common problem facing politicians these days.  He had comments intended for a very limited audience exposed to the nation as a whole.

Candidate Barack Obama had a similar kind of remark go public in the 2008 primary campaign when he told people at a fund raiser that bitter rural Pennsylvanians were clinging to “guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren’t like them.”

So the question now is not just how will the the voters react to Candidate Romney’s statement, it’s how the two campaigns will interact based on the the comments.  Candidate Obama survived his outing of private remarks.  Will Romney?

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Working with social media

I’ve been talking lately with folks about social media.  Here are a few thoughts on the subject:

What are social media?

  • Online sites that allow users to generate content, comment, tag, and network with friends or other like-minded people.

What are our social media?

News breaks on social media whether you want it to or not

Know what you’re broadcasting via social media.

Know what other people are saying about you on social media

How can you use social media to help you in your work?

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Truth 7 – There is no “they” – Does the anti-Muslim film blamed for rioting even exist?

On Tuesday evening, the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya, and the U.S. embassy in Cairo, Egypt were attacked by protestors.   The attack in Benghazi led to the death of American ambassador to Libya J. Christopher Stevens and three other United States officials.

While what happened with the attacks is still confusing, one of the narratives emerging from them is that the protesters (if not necessarily the people who murdered the ambassador) were provoked by a YouTube movie.

But here’s the problem.  No one is quite clear on exactly what this “movie” is, who made it, or if it even exists.  Stories have been flowing across the Internets:

Here’s the thing – this is starting to sound a lot like Truth 7 – There is no “they.”  There are lots of rumors and stories circulating, and reporters are giving credence to these reports without having any clear idea about where the stories are coming from and whether they have any basis in fact (are they true?).

If we are going to try to understand the complex world we live in, we need to base that understanding on something approaching reality.  And that reality will not come to use from some kind of mysterious “they.”

UPDATES:

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Sept. 12 Anniversary – We Choose to go to the Moon

No, not the anniversary of the day after Sept. 11, but the 50th anniversary of President John F. Kennedy’s “We Choose to go to the Moon” speech at Rice University.

“We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win, and the others, too.”

Thanks to @pourmecoffee for reminding us about this anniversary. Also a great illustration of the power of long tail media like YouTube that can give us access to almost unlimited choice when it comes to what we will watch and listen to.

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A Motorcycle Ride to the United 93 Memorial on a Rainy Summer Day

This has nothing to do with the media. It’s a brief story about a ride I took on my motorcycle to the United 93 Memorial on a rainy June day back in 2004. It was written shortly after I had recovered from a fairly serious illness, and I was happy just to be back on the road. I’ve taken to posting on 9/11.


Took a short ride last Saturday. The distance wasn’t much, under 200 miles, but I went through two centuries of time, ideas, and food. Which felt really good after having been ill for the last month-and-a-half.

Headed out of Morgantown about 7:30 a.m. on I68. Stopped at Penn Alps for breakfast. Nice thing about being on insulin is that I can include a few more carbs in my diet these days. Pancakes, yum! (Penn Alps, if you don’t know, runs a great Pennsylvania Dutch breakfast buffet on weekends that is well worth riding to. Just outside of Grantsville, MD.)

Then off on the real purpose of the trip. Up US 219 toward the Flight 93 Sept. 11 memorial. The ride up north on 219 is beautiful; I’ve ridden it before. I always like when you come around the bend and see the turbines for the wind farm. Some people see them as an eye sore; for me they’re a potential energy solution and a dramatic sight. Chalk one up for industrial can be beautiful.

Continue on up to Berlin, PA, where I take off on PA 160 into Pennsylvania Dutch country. I start seeing hex signs painted on bright red barns, or even hung as a wooden sign. Not quite cool enough to put on my electric vest, but certainly not warm. Then it’s heading back west on a county/state road of indeterminate designation.

Now I’m into even more “old country” country. There’s a horse-and-buggy caution sign. Off to the left there’s a big farmstead with long dark-colored dresses hanging from the line, drying in the air. They may not stay dry, based on what the clouds look like.

The irony of this ride hits pretty hard. I’m on my way to a memorial of the violence and hatred of the first shot of the 21st century world war, and I’m traveling through country that is taking me further and further back into the pacifist world of the 19th century Amish and Mennonites.

A turn or two more, following the map from the National Parks web site, and I’m on a badly scared, narrow road that is no wider and not in as good of shape as the local rail trail. (Reminds me why I like my KLR!)

It’s only here that I see the first sign for the memorial. No one can accuse the locals of playing up the nearby memorial. Perhaps more flags and patriotic lawn ornaments than usual, but no strident statements. And then the memorial is off a half-mile ahead.

The crash site is to the south, surrounded by chain-link fencing. No one but families of the victims are allowed in that area. Off a small parking area is the temporary memorial, in place until the National Park Service can build the permanent site. There’s a 40-foot long chain-link wall where people have posted remembrences, plaques on the ground ranging from hand-painted signs on sandstone, to an elaborately etched sign on granite from a motorcycle group. The granite memorial is surrounded by motorcycle images.

The messages are mostly lonely or affirming. Statements of loss, statements of praise for the heroism of the passengers and crew. But not statements of hatred. It reminds me in many ways of the Storm King Mountain firefighter memorial. Not the formal one in Glenwood Springs, but the individual ones out on the mountain where more than a dozen wildland firefighters died several years ago.

It’s time to head home. When I go to join up with US 30, it’s starting to spit rain, so I pull out the rain gloves, button down the jacket, and prepare for heading home. It rains almost the whole way back PA 281, but I stay mostly dry in my Darien. The only problem is the collar of my too-big jacket won’t close far enough, and water dribbles down inside. It reminds me that riding in the rain, if it isn’t coming down too hard, can be almost pleasant, isolated away inside a nylon and fiberglass cocoon.

I’m home before 1 p.m.. I’ve ridden less than 200 miles. But I’ve ridden through a couple of centuries of people’s thoughts, actions, and food. And I’m finally back on the bike.

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Michael Jackson’s “Bad” Turns 25

25 years ago Michael Jackson released his album Bad  as a reaction against the whole “Wacko Jacko” mystique that had grown up around him.

Journalist Joseph Vogel, writing for The Atlantic, tells the story of this album and why Jackson created it.  Highly recommend.

Also recommended is a special episode of Brian Ibbott’s Coverville podcast that is a (most of) album cover of Jackson’s Bad.  Highly recommended listening.

Video of Jackson’s “Leave Me Alone” from Bad:

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Remembering 9/11 with Media Images

So much of our understanding of the Sept. 11th , 2001 terror attacks come from the images we saw through the media.  Here’s a sampling of those I’ve posted in the past:


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