Entertainment

Obituary: Brian Clemens

The scriptwriter and producer Brian Clemens, responsible for TV hits such as The Avengers, New Avengers and The Professionals, has died aged 83.

Clemens, honoured by The Queen in 2010 for services to broadcasting and drama, died on Saturday, his family confirmed.

He wrote various television series including The Baron, The Persuaders, The Protectors, Danger Man, The Invisible Man and Bergerac.

One of his sons, George Clemens, said: He was a true inspiration.

He told the BBC: The world has lost a really great man who has given so much.

Born in Croydon in 1931, Clemens had his first work commissioned by the BBC in 1955.

He went on to be a staff writer for a film and TV production company, before enjoying considerable success with a huge number of TV scripts in the 1960s.

His production companies created The New Avengers and The Professionals, while Clemens also wrote for a number of US shows including Remington Steele, Perry Mason and the Highlander TV series.

He wrote and produced for Hammer Films, while his screenplay credits included Highlander II: The Quickening — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Wildlife

African Lions love their new Christmas Tree / Linton Zoo

Many of the animals have an extra seasonal variation in enrichment items at this time of the year. Having been the centre of fun for several weeks in peoples homes the discarded Christmas Trees come to Linton Zoo to provide hours of fun for the animals — via Youtube

Craft

Rotating Tip Ergo Slingshot / Eric Au

It was time to try something new, something exciting, something… with moving parts. Slingshots aren’t known for moving parts, but it was time to try it out. Rotating fork tips aren’t something I came up with but I did want to take a stab at it and try to make a deadly accurate BB shooter — via Metro Grade Goods

Craft

Circular Knitic / Varvara Guljajeva + Mar Canet

Circular Knitic is the first open hardware circular knitting machine and it is new project commissioned art piece by Etopia (centre for art and technology Zaragoza) for the exhibition DOERS. A SHOW ABOUT THE WORLD OF MAKING curated by David Cuartielles (From 20 December 2014 to 31 July 2015).

Thanks to Kultuuri Katel Makerspace, Gustavo Valera, Marta Corsini, Juan Prada, Laura Balboa, José Carlos Arnal, Jesús Rodriguez, Sergio Artiaga, Raul Martinez.

Project by Varvara Guljajeva and Mar Canet 2014 — via Youtube

History

What the World Will Speak in 2115

Thankfully, fears that English will become the world’s only language are premature. Few are so pessimistic as to suppose that there will not continue to be a multiplicity of nations and cultures on our planet and, along with them, various languages besides English. It is difficult, after all, to interrupt something as intimate and spontaneous as what language people speak to their children. Who truly imagines a Japan with no Japanese or a Greece with no Greek? The spread of English just means that earthlings will tend to use a local language in their own orbit and English for communication beyond. Advertisement

But the days when English shared the planet with thousands of other languages are numbered. A traveller to the future, a century from now, is likely to notice two things about the language landscape of Earth. One, there will be vastly fewer languages. Two, languages will often be less complicated than they are today—especially in how they are spoken as opposed to how they are written.

Some may protest that it is not English but Mandarin Chinese that will eventually become the world’s language, because of the size of the Chinese population and the increasing economic might of their nation. But that’s unlikely. For one, English happens to have gotten there first. It is now so deeply entrenched in print, education and media that switching to anything else would entail an enormous effort. We retain the QWERTY keyboard and AC current for similar reasons.

Also, the tones of Chinese are extremely difficult to learn beyond childhood, and truly mastering the writing system virtually requires having been born to it. In the past, of course, notoriously challenging languages such as Greek, Latin, Aramaic, Arabic, Russian and even Chinese have been embraced by vast numbers of people. But now that English has settled in, its approachability as compared with Chinese will discourage its replacement. Many a world power has ruled without spreading its language, and just as the Mongols and Manchus once ruled China while leaving Chinese intact, if the Chinese rule the world, they will likely do so in English. A Chinese teacher gives an English lesson to students in the Gansu province of northwest China in July 2013. Some have predicted that Mandarin Chinese will eventually become the world’s language, but its elaborate tones are too difficult to learn beyond childhood.

Yet more to the point, by 2115, it’s possible that only about 600 languages will be left on the planet as opposed to today’s 6,000. Japanese will be fine, but languages spoken by smaller groups will have a hard time of it. Too often, colonisation has led to the disappearance of languages: Native speakers have been exterminated or punished for using their languages. This has rendered extinct or moribund, for example, most of the languages of Native Americans in North America and Aboriginal peoples of Australia. Urbanization has only furthered the destruction, by bringing people away from their homelands to cities where a single lingua franca reigns — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Entertainment

Dji. Death fails / Simpals

Dji. Death fails from simpals on Vimeo

Animation studio Simpals (located in Moldova) produced its fourth short animated film Dji. Death fails

Dji is an unusual death. The Dark Knight has appeared in a different form. No, he is not white and fluffy. Dji is just terribly unlucky. All he has to do is to take the soul of a dying man. But the screenwriters prepared some obstacles for Dji. Will he manage to overcome them? You’ll see.

Directed by Dmitri Voloshin

Wildlife
  • Zao Kitsune Village / Yasaka Amam
  • Zao Kitsune Village / Yasaka Amam
  • Zao Kitsune Village / Yasaka Amam
  • Zao Kitsune Village / Yasaka Amam

Zao Kitsune Village / Yasaka Amam

These pictures from the Zao Kitsune (Fox) Village were posted by Twitter user @yasaka_amam, and they capture the gorgeous creatures in all their fluffy glory. I don’t know quite how close the foxes actually let you get to them, but I would just love to bury my face in those silky red coats. And maybe take one home with me. Or a whole leash of them, which is apparently the collective noun for foxes — via RocketNews24

Entertainment

Obituary: Rod Taylor

Australian actor Rod Taylor, who starred in Alfred Hitchcock’s thriller The Birds, has died aged 84, according to reports in the US.

Taylor, who lived in the United States, is said to have died at his home in Los Angeles after a dinner party.

He came to prominence in the 1960s, starring alongside Hollywood greats like Jane Fonda and Richard Burton.

In 2009, he made a cameo as ex-UK Prime Minister Winston Churchill in Quentin Tarantino’s film Inglourious Basterds.

He got his first leading role in the 1960 adaptation of HG Wells’ science-fiction classic The Time Machine and went on to star in several hit films in the 1960s and 1970s.

He also voiced one of the Dalmatian dogs in Disney’s animated hit 101 Dalmatians — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Design

Vintage car lights / Urban Light Factory

We suspect they don’t come cheap, but when you see the work that has gone into these vintage car lights for the home by Urban Light Factory, you will perhaps understand why. The company is based in Berlin, turning unrestored old car (and motorbike) lights into working lighting for the home — tripod lights and ceiling lighting. Very eco-friendly, but also incredibly stylish too. All the lights come in wonderful wooden boxes and each light also comes with the custom tools and instructions needed to change a bulb, along with details of the light’s history. All are individual designs and as such, you’ll need to ask for the price of each via the site — via Retro To Go

Wildlife

Blue the Cougar Kitten / Stone Zoo

Blue, approximately 10 weeks old, has settled into his temporary nursery in the Windows to the Wild exhibit space. When he is big enough, he will move to the cougar exhibit within Treasures of the Sierra Madre at Stone Zoo — via Youtube

Craft, Wildlife

Bronze Kraken Pendant / Marty Bobroskie

Set sail on an epic adventure wearing this solid bronze Kraken Squid Pendant. Ten detailed tentacles undulate from this impressive giant squid sea monster. The pendant is 1 7/8” long with detailed suction cups on the reverse side. Take a plunge into uncharted waters and let the adventure begin — viaEtsy

Science

New hope for rape kit testing advocates

Five years after more than 11,000 unprocessed rape kits — some dating back to the 1980s — were discovered in a police warehouse in Detroit, cities across the US are working to eliminate their own huge backlogs of untested evidence. Thousands of sexual assault cases are beginning to be resolved.

When Detroit prosecutors and state police toured a large storage warehouse in 2009, they made a startling discovery — more a huge cache of untested rape kits, each representing a report to the police and a lengthy hospital visit to collect evidence.

Armed with a large grant by the National Institute of Justice, prosecutors and Detroit police have now completed testing of 2,000 of those kits and are in the process of testing another 8,000.

The testing, as of October, had produced more than 750 DNA matches to a national database managed by the FBI known as Codis.

Investigations of these matches continue, but so far the Wayne County prosecutor’s office — which includes Detroit — has produced warrants for 23 alleged rapists and convicted 14 of them, with three awaiting trial.

The office, run by the county’s top prosecutor, Kym Worthy, has also identified 188 serial rapists from the processed kits who have committed crimes in 27 other states — via redwolf.newsvine.com