Archive for May, 2011

I’m afraid of heights, but this suspension bridge might be just pretty enough to lure me out onto its narrow, swaying, totally frightening surface.

The Capilano Suspension Bridge is 450-feet-long walking bridge hung 230 feet above the Capilano River, just outside of downtown Vancouver, B.C. On the other side of the bridge is a 300-year-old West Coast rain forest.

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I would have written this post earlier, but I was too worried I’d jinx my second shuttle launch attempt if I got cocky and started handing out advice and whatnot without ever actually having watched one lift off. Now that I’ve seen Endeavor safely into the sky, however, here goes. Because while seeing a shuttle launch wasn’t easy, and it wasn’t cheap, it was so amazing it brought tears to my eyes. I’m tearing up a little now just reminiscing about it. And to any aeronautics enthusiasts out there who are debating, I have to say, it was well worth the effort and expense. 100 percent. The experience is incredible, and now that I’ve seen a shuttle blast off into space, I can’t imagine passing up the chance while I had it.

So for anyone out there harboring the dream, you have one more shot with the space shuttle Atlantis (tentatively targeted for June 28 or possibly mid July) and I’ll give you the lowdown on what I found works and what doesn’t after the jump.

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Love it or hate it, mathematics is a core part of who we are and the universe in which we live. In this episode of Stuff to Blow Your Mind, Julie and I take a sweeping look at the world of numbers. Yes, we’ll kick things off in the cradle with the number sense of infants and lizards. Then we’ll scale the mighty tower of mathematics that has allowed humanity to extend life, understand the mysteries of life and travel beyond the confines of our home planet.

But what is this tower of mathematics made of? When we really get down to it, what IS math?

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All the flurry over Schwarzenegger’s ‘out-of-wedlock’ birth got me thinking about the language we use to discuss babies born to unmarried or married-but-not-to-each-other parents. To me, terms like “out-of-wedlock children” and “unwed mothers” have a culturally negative ring to them, echoing more flagrantly offensive descriptors, “bastard” and “illegitimate.” Moreover, they seem outdated since out-of-wedlock births aren’t out of the ordinary anymore.

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(Please excuse the subject matter; this post is on media criticism, not really on illegal and corrupt sex acts.)

Infrequent, it is when the topic of zoophilia makes the news cycle. Which is what makes the news cycle during the second weekend in May 2011 remarkable. Zoophilia, the clinical term for the more vulgar term bestiality (vulgar being a less common term for common), was all over the place in the last news cycle.

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So, you’ll probably get sand in your shorts. But if you sit down at the top of a 150-foot sand dune in the desert, then push off and slide down the dune, you might hear something familiar: the sound of the televised 2010 World Cup — aka, a whole lot of people blowing vuvuzelas.

Seriously, that’s what a booming dune sounds like.

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Until now, the military has explicitly restricted female soldiers from fighting on the front lines of combat, but that has changed with the nature of the Middle East warfare. The Marines have even tapped a group of women to form “Female Engagement Teams,” which PRI describes as “a first-time experiment by the Marines in Afghanistan to let women join all-male patrols on the frontlines.”

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Maria Hallett, former lover of pirate Samuel “Black Sam” Bellamy, was a central character in the story of the Whydah shipwreck, one of several Sarah and I covered in shipwreck-themed podcast series recently. In fact, she may have been the whole reason the Whydah was in New England on April 26, 1717, when it met that massive storm off the coast of Cape Cod that led to its demise. We didn’t have the chance to talk about Maria’s fate in that episode, so I wanted to do that here.

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It’s finally grilling season again, and my first responsibility of the year as barbecue host is this weekend. To be honest, I prefer spelling it barbeque or BBQ — the letter Q is so underappreciated — but the great AP Stylebook Gods have spoken. My hands (or fingertips, I guess) are bound. Anyway, I’m not tied to any regional grilling styles or gathering agendas, but here are some ideas for what I have found helps move any barbecue from good to great.

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J.R.R. Tolkien is so hot right now. Fresh off the heels of the greatest correction in the history of print journalism comes news that New Line Cinema plans to re-release the entire “Lord of the Rings” trilogy in 500 theaters across the U.S. next month. And if that makes you happy, the prospect of (finally!) watching the extended versions on the big screen may actually make your head explode.

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