Posts Tagged: ‘mind-blowing video’

This installment of Mind-Blowing Video is going to be all over the place, so BEAR WITH ME and for Carl‘s sake don’t play them all at once. First up, let’s hit the trailer for the best nature documentary you probably never saw. Why? Because when France’s 1999 film “Microcosmos” traveled to the US, distributes went with this horrible promotion art instead of the original. Hey, “A Bug’s Life” was doing big business, so why WOULDN’T you repackage the film with a cheesy shot of a mantis in shades?

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We’ve all heard examples of fake Chinese or German from speakers who lack familiarity with either language. While typically cringe-worthy, these examples do raise interesting questions regarding our own language. What does English sound like to non-English speakers? After more than 40 years, Adriano Celentano’s “Prisencolinensinainciusol” remains one of the most illuminating examples. Prepare to rock out and sorta kinda rap with an Italian comedian:

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Your Stuff to Blow Your Mind duo is back in HowStuffWorks’ Atlanta home base after attending the World Science Festival in New York City. We’ll be sharing all we learned in a series of forthcoming blog posts and podcasts, but here’s just a little something I came across when I fit in a trip to the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). Yes, what you’re seeing is essentially storm chasing as an art form.

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Well I’m all grown up now.

Yes, Julie and I have discussed the reality and inevitability of sexbots before on the Stuff to Blow Your Mind podcast and now Chinese developers have created sperm-collecting robots designed to stimulate human males and collect their genetic material. As you’ll see in the following video, the whole thing looks like one of Doctor Who’s Daleks, except with an unsettling-looking apparatus on the front instead of a death ray. The things debuted at China International Medical Equipment Fair in Shenzhen, China last month. Let’s watch:

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Wingsuit flying, if you’re not aware, is the adventurous pastime of those for whom traditional skydiving no long stirs the exhilarating fear of death. I researched the topic shortly after arriving at HowStuffWorks to write How Wingsuit Flying Works, but as remarkable as the engineering is and as phenomenal as some of the related world records are, it really takes a video like this to drive home the sheer madness and awe of it all.

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Anyone who has ever played “Rock ‘Em Sock ‘Em Robots” knows that artificially intelligent machines exist to punch the bejesus out of each other for our viewing enjoyment.

Really, what other uses would we have for one of humanity’s greatest scientific accomplishments? Sure, saving lives and cleaning up nuclear disaster zones is great, but how are we supposed to bet on that?

First, let’s look at a few examples from our sci-fi pop culture. Up first? The trailer for the upcoming film “Real Steel,” which apparently features Hugh Jackman, Kate from “Lost” and Liz Lemon’s dentist in supporting roles opposite a bunch of punching machines.

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I’ve always found tornadoes rather terrifying, due in large part to my years spent in tornado-infested Middle Tennessee. It seems like I spent a lot of nights huddled into windowless bathrooms or basements with my family, listening to weather reports or watching vicious DOPPLER-envisioned storms swirl behind a TV meteorologist. And then sometimes I’d stare out into the gray madness, equally fearful and hopeful that I might glimpse a vortex swell and descend in that signature destructive dance. I think that’s why they fascinate us so. They’re beautiful and terrible, “awesome” in the true, Biblical sense of the word.

Fortunately, I have never glimpsed an actual tornado, though I’ve observed their ferocity in the damage they leave behind many times. And fortunately the storms that ravaged parts of Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama and Mississippi this week (see this NYT article) didn’t affect anyone I know. But in this age of smart phone cameras and YouTube, we don’t have to risk catastrophic injury to glimpse these amazing storms. Let’s look at some of the clips, shall we?

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Via the Stuff to Blow Your Mind podcast, Julie and I have put the call out for listeners to help us take over the #blewmymind hash tag on Twitter. Previously, there was a lot of less-than-mind-blowing stuff tacked onto that tag, so our fans have started hitting it with genuine cranium-fracturing science and wonder. Which brings us to this amazing time lapse film, brought to our attention on Twitter by Chris AKA @thedangermoose.

Filmed between April 4 and 11 of this year, the footage captures some amazing views of the Milky Way from the secluded heights of El Teide, Spain´s highest mountain. Here’s a cool tidbit on the footage from filmmaker Terje Sorgjerd:

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It’s Friday and spring is in the air, so let’s watch a video about bugs in the air. In fact, let’s watch a video about roughly 3 billion bugs soaring along invisible highways in the sky. This one comes courtesy of NPR and Radiolab’s Robert Krulwich and is but one of several audio stories they’ve set to animation recently. And yes, you’ll hear about the lone termite that braved altitudes of 19,000 feet. That’s as high as the summit of Mount McKinley.

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I know, this sounds like an April Fools joke but seriously, we finally know the “shape” of the Earth and it looks like a partially-deflated kickball or a late-November jack-o-lantern collapsing with rot. What’s the catch? This video (obtained via The Daily Galaxy) shows the results of the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Gravity field and steady-state Ocean Circulation Explorer (GOCE)’s two-year mission to map the Earth’s geoid. The geoid is the surface of an ideal global ocean without tides and currents. It’s shaped only by gravity.

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