Wednesday, May 14, 2008
GIRL PHILOSOPHERS ON YOUTUBE
When I woke up this morning I made some coffee and ate breakfast infront of the computer. While I was eating I did a YouTube search for "Girl Philosophers" and this is what I found. To my surprise girl philosophy is a whole genre. Who would have thought? Here's a sample....
Monday, May 12, 2008
PHYSICS FOR CARTOONISTS: THE HIGGS BOSON
If you're not interested in physics you should stay and read this anyway, because something major is about to happen and when it does you don't want to regret that you missed a chance to have it explained simply. I don't pretend to understand it myself, and the odds are that I'll goof up the explanation, but it's better than nothing...so read on!
CERN, the European particle accelerator lab, is going to turn on it's new 6 billion dollar LHC collider later this year. It's first task is to look for the Higgs Boson, the so-called "God particle" that's thought to be the reason other particles have mass.
According to Higgs, the natural state of all particles is be massless and to travel at the speed of light. The reason that only photons and gluons really do travel that fast is that other particles are slowed down by the medium they're forced to travel through, something called the Higgs Field.
The Higgs Field (if it really exists) is a field, just like a magnetic field. It's everywhere in the universe, that's why even the most remote part of space isn't really a vacuum. It may be clear of particles, but it's not clear of fields.
Astronomers were amazed to find that the universe is not only expanding, but that the expansion is accelerating. Nothing in our experience can account for that, so it was necessary to posit a repellent energy that existed even in the vacuum of space. Lots of theories were put up to speculate where that energy might come from, including the idea that it might be leaked into our universe from parallel universes. That remains a possibility but the theory that excites physicists the most is that it has something to do with an as yet undetected field, the Higgs Field.
The Higgs Field is so important to the current standard model of physics that if it's not discovered we'll have to throw out a lot of current ideas about quantum physics and cosmology.
One problem with the CERN experiment is that in order to discover the Higgs Boson (the particle version of the Higgs Field) they'll have to recreate the simpler condition of the universe as it was less than a billionth of a second after the Big Bang. That condition might be what we would call today a black hole. One group is attempting to get a restraining order against CERN, arguing that a micro black hole, once started, might be impossible to stop. Such a black hole might consume the Earth, maybe our whole solar system.
CERN says not to worry, that Hawking Radiation would sap energy from the black hole and prevent it from growing, but CERN's critics point out that Hawking Radiation is a controversial theoretical construct which has never been born out by observation. What if there is no such thing as Hawking Radiation? The black hole will keep growing.
I assume the CERN people know what they're doing, and I'm dying to know the outcome of the experiment, but I'll sleep a little easier when all this is behind us.
The first video I put up (at the top of the page) gives an overview of the LHC (Large Hadron Collider) that'll become fully operational later this year. The other video shows Peter Higgs, one of the people who got the whole thing started. I don't understand a lot of what he's saying but the man is fascinating to listen to.
BTW, I forgot to mention why the question of mass is on the front burner these days. The accelerating expansion story I mentioned is one reason but there's more. The reason is that we now know the masses of all the quarks, etc. that make up matter. The problem is that when you add these masses up they don't equal the mass of the particles they're part of...not by a long shot. So where does the rest of the mass come from? It must come from something outside the quarks, maybe from a field of some sort. If it exists, that might be the Higgs Field. Interesting, huh!?
Sunday, May 11, 2008
UNCLE EDDIE'S LUNCHTIME BOOK CHAT 2
Welcome to Uncle Eddie's Lunchtime Book Chat! It's a 6 minute video featuring a reading of H.P. Lovecraft's "Dunwich Horror."
Friday, May 09, 2008
CHOICE FEARLESS FOSDICK ON THE ASIFA SITE!!!!!!
Pinch me so I'll know I'm not dreaming! This is too good to be true! ASIFA-Hollywood has just put up a whopping, large post on Fearless Fosdick, the best cartoon strip (actually a strip-within-a-strip) in the American newspapers of my time!
Many thanks to ace-cartoonist and Al Capp fan, Mike Fontanelli for putting this together! Mike knows what the good stuff is and he serves up only the best. Many thanks also to ASIFA webmaster Steve Worth, for giving the drawings the star treatment. Compare the way the drawings look here, with my layout, to the infinitely superior way they look on the ASIFA site. Steve is far and away the best web designer I know of.
Mike makes the point in his article that Fearless Fosdick was the major inspiration for Kurtzman's MAD. Looking at the evidence, I don't doubt it for an instant.
Incidentally, did you know that the first 12 issues of Mad have been collected in two volumes of the set shown above? I haven't seen them, so I don't know what they look like, but here's a link to a bookseller that stocks them:
Here's (above) a page from the new Archie, borrowed from KevinWolf.com. When Cartoon Brew did a piece on this they were inundated with letters.
Many thanks to ace-cartoonist and Al Capp fan, Mike Fontanelli for putting this together! Mike knows what the good stuff is and he serves up only the best. Many thanks also to ASIFA webmaster Steve Worth, for giving the drawings the star treatment. Compare the way the drawings look here, with my layout, to the infinitely superior way they look on the ASIFA site. Steve is far and away the best web designer I know of.
Mike makes the point in his article that Fearless Fosdick was the major inspiration for Kurtzman's MAD. Looking at the evidence, I don't doubt it for an instant.
Incidentally, did you know that the first 12 issues of Mad have been collected in two volumes of the set shown above? I haven't seen them, so I don't know what they look like, but here's a link to a bookseller that stocks them:
http://www.kenpiercebooks.com/mad.htm
Here's (above) a page from the new Archie, borrowed from KevinWolf.com. When Cartoon Brew did a piece on this they were inundated with letters.
Labels:
al Capp,
betty and veronica,
fearless fosdick
Wednesday, May 07, 2008
CARTOONIST FASHION SHOW: WRINKLES
I thought I'd show off my treasured Wrinkle Jacket. The video is 3 1/2 minutes long.
BTW, I said "Moon Mullins" when I meant to say Jiggs, a character from an old newspaper strip called "Maggie and Jiggs."
Monday, May 05, 2008
A TRIBUTE TO MY GRANDFATHER
Here's a tribute to my grandfather, one of the best men I've ever known. He certainly wasn't easy to get along with, and he had no time for me, but he was a stand-up guy who deserves to be remembered.
Thinking about my grandfather always brings to mind Dickens' "Great Expectations." In that story a poor kid had a mysterious benefactor whose help allowed him to go to good schools and become a gentlemen. Late in the story the kid, now grown up, discovers that his benefactor was no less than the coarse, grungy, escaped convict that he helped as a boy. It's a story that means a lot to me because my own life unfolded in a similar way, and I also had a coarse, grungy benefactor whose identity was hidden from me.
Just a couple of corrections to the video: The Peter Sellers song I excerpted this time was "Ukulele Lady," not "Hula Hands," and "Days of Wine and Roses" was not a horrible film, rather it was a good film about a horrifying subject. The video above lasts 8 1/2 minutes. Sorry about the length.
Saturday, May 03, 2008
NIGHTMARE PLAYGROUNDS
Steve Worth sent me links to a site that put up horrific playground sculptures from around the world. Holy Mackerel! These are really scary!
There's lots more that I can fit in here, so if you want to see it all go to:
http://www.darkroastedblend.com/2008/02/nightmare-playgrounds.html
These giant hornets (above) are positively evil. the bleak, un-inspired layout of the grounds heightens the effect.
The tree strangles a guy who'd stopped to rest. That'll teach him!
Yikes! A little bunny in the hands of an evil nurse!
Some of the nightmare sculptures impressed me as imaginative and stimulating, and possibly even good for kids. I wouldn't mind seeing sculptures like this one (above) in a park. It could have used more detail, though. It looks half-finished.
Or this one (above). Who wouldn't want have their pictures taken with the skeletons?
This one (above) is really thought-provoking. Your mind races ahead, thinking of stories to explain why the devil would be apprehensive about something in a green box.
Why is this idealistic girl tied to a tree? Boy, this park certainly prompts you to think. The problem is that I have a feeling that the park itself is unimaginatively landscaped. The physical layout of a park should be its greatest attraction. You need to get that right before putting in sculptures. Not only that but the sculptures need to be skillfully done, which this isn't. Even so, it's interesting.
Why is this guy sitting on the ground? Are his legs in stocks? Is he on a throne of some kind? Is he sitting on the shoulders of some underground troll? You can't help but weave stories about visuals like this.
There's lots more that I can fit in here, so if you want to see it all go to:
http://www.darkroastedblend.com/2008/02/nightmare-playgrounds.html
These giant hornets (above) are positively evil. the bleak, un-inspired layout of the grounds heightens the effect.
The tree strangles a guy who'd stopped to rest. That'll teach him!
Yikes! A little bunny in the hands of an evil nurse!
Some of the nightmare sculptures impressed me as imaginative and stimulating, and possibly even good for kids. I wouldn't mind seeing sculptures like this one (above) in a park. It could have used more detail, though. It looks half-finished.
Or this one (above). Who wouldn't want have their pictures taken with the skeletons?
This one (above) is really thought-provoking. Your mind races ahead, thinking of stories to explain why the devil would be apprehensive about something in a green box.
Why is this idealistic girl tied to a tree? Boy, this park certainly prompts you to think. The problem is that I have a feeling that the park itself is unimaginatively landscaped. The physical layout of a park should be its greatest attraction. You need to get that right before putting in sculptures. Not only that but the sculptures need to be skillfully done, which this isn't. Even so, it's interesting.
Why is this guy sitting on the ground? Are his legs in stocks? Is he on a throne of some kind? Is he sitting on the shoulders of some underground troll? You can't help but weave stories about visuals like this.
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