Although I’m kind of against floor ads (because 1) do you really want people walking all over your brand name? and 2) what will we do when we have no more surfaces left to advertise on?), I’ve gotta admit this is hella clever. (Via AltText.)
Although I’m kind of against floor ads (because 1) do you really want people walking all over your brand name? and 2) what will we do when we have no more surfaces left to advertise on?), I’ve gotta admit this is hella clever. (Via AltText.)
Stephen Dubner has posted a previously unpublished interview with August Wilson on his Freakonomics blog, in which the playwright talks about the men he admired growing up. It’s funny — so many of the men Wilson identified with were fighters — Sonny Liston, Charley Burley, Malcolm X — but so much of this interview is about acceptance.
MeFi-ed again. (Fourth time around, yo!) The natives are pretty much calling for our heads by this point. Oh, but backlash can be ugly.
When I was tiny, among my favorite toys was the Playmobil gas station, which I guess offered its own commentary on the times. But this Playmobil airport security checkpoint set makes me a bit sad. Not Armageddon (that’s so ten months ago), but sad. (Via Off Center.)
Is it just me, or is the “foobars are a conversation” meme totally played out? The first hundred Google results for the phrase “are a conversation” reveal that among other things:
I could go on. At what point does (did?) this phrase lose all effective meaning?
Speaking of miniature photography, these photos of a model railroad set are so incredible I’m actually reposting them from Boing Boing, even though you probably already saw them thrice by now.
The free fonts are almost always not the best fonts, but here’s the best of the free fonts, which are all pretty good. (Lifehackular.)
Matt Yglesias notes a fascinating tidbit from Franz de Waal’s Our Inner Ape:
Scientists used to consider the frequency band of 500 hertz and below in the human voice as meaningless noise, because when a voice is filtered, removing all higher frequencies, ne hears nothing but a low-pitched hum. All words are lost. But then it was found that this low hum is an unconscious social instrument. It is different for each person, but in the course of a conversation people tend to converge. They settle on a single hum, and it is always the lower status person who does the adjusting. This was first demonstrated in an analysis of the Larry King Live television show. The host, Larry King, would adjust his timbre to that of high-ranking guests, like Mike Wallace or Elizabeth Taylor. Low-ranking guests, on the other hand, would adjust their timbre to that of King. The clearest adjustment to King’s voice, indicating lack of confidence, came from former Vice President Dan Quayle.
Related: This 2000 Discover essay on “the psychology of dominance.”