Entertainment, Wildlife

The End / Chris Meyer

The End from Chris Meyer on Vimeo.

We love dinosaurs! But why did they die off? There are many theories, and some are more realistic than other. There’s the hand of God, the Ice Age or a giant meteorite. We took a closer look at five of these theories.

Concept, Layout & Animation: Bettina Gericke, Chris Meyer
Sound Design: Torsten Strer, Johannes Helsberg

Entertainment

BBC to reveal a number of missing Doctor Who episodes

A number of early episodes of Doctor Who, which were believed to have been permanently lost, have been returned to the BBC.

BBC Worldwide is expected to confirm the find at a press screening in London later this week.

It follows weeks of speculation that some lost episodes had been located.

A total of 106 episodes featuring the first two actors to play the Doctor, William Hartnell and Patrick Troughton, are currently missing.

The BBC destroyed many of the sci-fi drama’s original transmission tapes in the 1960s and 1970s.

However, the majority of the episodes had been transferred on to film for foreign broadcasters. It is often these prints found in other countries that are the source of retrieved episodes — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Craft, Entertainment, Wildlife

Applejack and Pinkie Pie / morisato54

What do you get when you put Applejack and Pinkie Pie in one automaton? I’m not really sure myself, but it certainly looks like a lot of fun! WOOOOO!!! Both ponies, stand, apples, balloons and trophy body are carved from Philippine mahogany. The gears and trophy figurehead are made of Narra hardwood. The figures are hand painted with enamel and protected with clear flat lacquer. Both ponies stand at 5″ and the whole piece measures 8 1/2″ long, 5″ wide, and 7 3/4″ high. It took 124 hours to make — via Youtube

Art, Entertainment

Operation / Jason Freeny

Jason Freeny does it again with his latest toy dissection of one of the most nostalgic medical games of our childhood, Operation. In production since 1965, Operation tests a players’ steady hand as they attempt to pick out iconic ailments and anatomical parts without buzzing and setting off Cavity Sam’s red nose. Jason recreated the game board and replaced Cavity Sam’s fake innards with real anatomy. Not such an easy game anymore huh? — via Street Anatomy

Entertainment

Russell Brand and the GQ awards: It’s amazing how absurd it seems

Foreign secretary William Hague gave an award to former Telegraph editor Charles Moore, for writing a hagiography of Margaret Thatcher, who used his acceptance speech to build a precarious connection between my comments about the sponsors, my foolish answerphone scandal at the BBC and the Sachs family’s flight, 70 years earlier, from Nazi-occupied Europe. It was a confusing tapestry that Moore spun but he seemed to be saying that a) the calls were as bad as the Holocaust and b) the Sachs family may not’ve sought refuge in Britain had they known what awaited them. Even for a man whose former job was editing the Telegraph this is an extraordinary way to manipulate information.

Noel, who is not one to sit quietly on his feelings, literally booed while Charles Moore was talking, and others joined in. Booing! When do you hear booing in this day and age other than pantomimes and parliament? Hague and Johnson are equally at home in either (Widow Twanky and Buttons, obviously) so were not unduly ruffled, but I thought it was nuts. The room by now had a distinct feel of us and them and if there is a line drawn in the sand I don’t ever want to find myself on the same side as Hague and Johnson. Up went Noel to garner his gong and he did not disappoint: Always nice to be invited to the Tory party conference, he began, Good to see the foreign secretary present when there’s shit kicking off in Syria.

Noel once expressed his disgust at seeing a politician at Glastonbury. What are you doing here? This ain’t for you, he’d said. He explained to me: You used to know where you were with politicians in the 70s and 80s cos they all looked like nutters: Thatcher, Heseltine, Cyril Smith. Now they look normal, they’re more dangerous. Then, with dreadful foreboding: They move among us. I agree with Noel. What are politicians doing at Glastonbury and the GQ awards? I feel guilty going, and I’m a comedian. Why are public officials, paid by us, turning up at events for fashion magazines? Well, the reason I was there was because I have a tour on and I was advised it would be good publicity. What are the politicians selling? How are they managing our perception of them with their attendance of these sequin-encrusted corporate balls?

We witness that there is a relationship between government, media and industry that is evident even at this most spurious and superficial level. These three institutions support one another. We know that however cool a media outlet may purport to be, their primary loyalty is to their corporate backers. We know also that you cannot criticise the corporate backers openly without censorship and subsequent manipulation of this information — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Craft, Entertainment, Wildlife

The Making of CMC Automata / morisato54

If you hadn’t guessed it from the title, this video brings you through the creative process of my crafting automata, specifically the three Cutie Mark Crusaders sold at the Cutie Mark Convention charity auction in Cincinnati. I was actually invited to do a live panel at first but I’m terribly shy to a fault so I cooked this up instead — via Youtube

Entertainment, Rights, Technology

Just call the NSA / Bahram Sadeghi

The NSA is in dire need of customer service training — at least in the case of Bahram Sadeghi, a Dutch-Iranian filmmaker who decided to call the surveillance agency for help after one of his e-mails was accidentally deleted. In a three-minute exchange with NSA spokespeople, Sadeghi manages to confound one with his request (you can almost hear the relief in her voice when Sadeghi asks to speak to someone else) and gets a curt reply from another — via The Washington Post

Let Me Explain Why Miley Cyrus’ VMA Performance Was Our Top Story This Morning

Over the years, CNN.com has become a news website that many people turn to for top-notch reporting. Every day it is visited by millions of people, all of whom rely on The Worldwide Leader in News — that’s our slogan — for the most crucial, up-to-date information on current events. So, you may ask, why was this morning’s top story, a spot usually given to the most important foreign or domestic news of the day, headlined Miley Cyrus Did What??? and accompanied by the subhead Twerks, stuns at VMAs?

It’s a good question. And the answer is pretty simple. It was an attempt to get you to click on CNN.com so that we could drive up our web traffic, which in turn would allow us to increase our advertising revenue.

There was nothing, and I mean nothing, about that story that related to the important news of the day, the chronicling of significant human events, or the idea that journalism itself can be a force for positive change in the world. For Christ’s sake, there was an accompanying story with the headline Miley’s Shocking Moves. In fact, putting that story front and centre was actually doing, if anything, a disservice to the public. And come to think of it, probably a disservice to the hundreds of thousands of people dying in Syria, those suffering from the current unrest in Egypt, or, hell, even people who just wanted to read about the 50th anniversary of Martin Luther King’s I Have A Dream speech — via redwolf.newsvine.com