week of 07/29/2007

Donate to the Academic Film Institute and save a rare movie

Geoff sez, "The Academic Film Achive of North America's "Save a Film" inititative encourages people to sponsor the uploading of a rare film from our 6,000+ 16mm film archive to the Internet Archive for free public viewing. Subject areas include animation, art, documentary, and science. The site decribes how to navigate the AFA's chronological list of film shows from which to pick a film, and even offers a page of suggested films. Sponsorship is tax-deductable, and the sponsor gets credit on Internet Archive's site for helping to save this important element of cinematic history." Link (Thanks, Geoff!)

Animated Alan Watts

Wattscartoon South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone and their pals animated several audio recordings of Alan Watts, an iconic philosopher and writer who turned scores of people on to Zen Buddhism.
Link (Thanks, Anthony Hall!)

Plastic God's Axis of Evil Lego-like figurines

Plastic God has made a series of plastic figurines of leaders who have made a lot of people miserable. The Saddam Hussein doll glows in the dark to indicate his posthumous status.

200708041956

Plastic God’s Axis of Evil is a limited edition boxed set of 5” rotocast collectibles, featuring everyone’s favorite cast of current political icons: Saddam Hussein, Tony Blair, Kim Jong-il, George “W” Bush and Osama bin Laden. The dolls have 7 points of articulation and come packed together in a flip open window door box.
Link

Charles Simonyi, astronaut, interviewed today

 Images Simonyiportrait  Images Viewearth
In April, former Microsoft exec Charles Simonyi took the longest space tourist trip in history. He spent two weeks aboard the International Space Station, having traveled there aboard a Soyuz rocket launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Simonyi documented his experiences in training, in space, and back on terra firm at his terrific site Charles In Space. (Image at right shows the view from his window in the descent capsule.)

Today, I had the opportunity to talk with Charles at Science Foo Camp, a mind-blowing "unconference" of scientists, big thinkers, and other people much smarter than I, hosted by O'Reilly Media, Nature Publishing, and Google. Charles is quite, er, down-to-Earth, but when he reminisced about his time in space his eyes lit up with wonder. His enthusiasm was infectious--this is the space age, and we are here to go! Sign me up! I hope you enjoy this brief audio interview with Charles Simonyi about his spaced-out adventure. (Music is "Theme from 2001" by The Ray McVay Roadshow, 1974).

[Browser-compatibility note: The audio link in this post appears as embedded Flash, and is brought to you by HP's iPaq 510 Voice Messenger. If your web reader doesn't allow you to access Flash, here's a direct MP3 Link. Enjoy!]

Typewriter art


Andrew Macrae creates lovely text art on acid-free paper using a 1965 Olympia SG3 and a 1968 Hermes 3000 typewriter and colored ribbons. No Wite-Out, either! Impressive. Link (Thanks, Andrew!)

Update: Ben sez, "I thought it might interest you to know that he did the cover of my autobiography, Twenty-Six Lies/One Truth, which was published by Wheatland Press late last year. He won an award for the cover."

Mule library

Bibliomulas are mules toting mini-libraries to remote communities in Venezuela in an effort to encourage reading. Sometimes, the mules also carry projectors and laptop computers. A BBC News reporter recently took a trip with the Bibliomulas through the foothills of the Andes. From the BBC News:
Mulelibrary Anyone who was not out working the fields - tending the celery that is the main crop here - was waiting for our arrival. The 23 children at the little school were very excited.

"Bibilomu-u-u-u-las," they shouted as the bags of books were unstrapped. They dived in eagerly, keen to grab the best titles and within minutes were being read to by Christina and Juana, two of the project leaders.
Link (Thanks, Paul Saffo!)

When Amber met Amber


Video and performance artist Amber Hawk Swanson ordered a life-sized, realistic sex doll made to look just like her, and named it Amber. The couple scampered off to Vegas and got married. "Their wedding video and other footage documenting their relationship will screen for the public this week," reports the Chicago Reader. Link. (Thanks, Susannah Breslin)

DefCon 15: video of NBC "Dateline" mole fleeing premises

According to DefCon staff reports, NBC DATELINE producer Michelle Madigan attended this year's underground hacking conference in Las Vegas without identifying herself as press, and with a hidden camera tucked away in her purse -- hoping to catch conference attendees confessing to crimes in the presence of federal agents, a la "To Catch a Predator."

But the first rule of exploits, as anyone in the room worth their SSH could have told her, is -- don't get caught. Ms. Madigan was.

In this video, she departs Defcon 15, escorted by a phalanx of unfriendly jeering persons, having just being outed. Video Link.

One YouTube commentser jokes, "She was probably really easy to spot, since she was probably the only girl there." A bit of an overstatement, as the video was shot by a decidedly female DefCon attendee named Elizabeth Safran -- but the point's not entirely off. I mean, at least wear a hoodie or avoid shaving for a few days. (I kid, I kid! I kid because I love!)

Previously on BB:

  • Dateline NBC's DefCon mole has been outed

    Update: Wired Threat Level blog has more.

    According to DefCon staff, Madigan had told someone she wanted to out an undercover federal agent at DefCon. That person in turn warned DefCon about Madigan's plans. Federal law enforcement agents from FBI, DoD, United States Postal Inspection Service and other agencies regularly attend DefCon to gather intelligence on the latest techniques of hackers. DefCon holds an annual contest called Spot the Fed, in which attendees out people in the audience they think are undercover federal agents. The contest is good-natured, but the feds who get caught are generally ones who don't mind getting caught.

    DefCon staff say that Madigan was asked four times -- two times on the phone and two times at the conference -- if she wanted to obtain press credentials, but she declined.

    Link.
  • Continue reading DefCon 15: video of NBC "Dateline" mole fleeing premises.

    Students produce the future of newsgathering


    Citizen journalism evangelist Dan Gillmor writes in with word of the student projects from the News21 Initiative jointly held at at Berkeley, Northwestern, Columbia and USC. He says, "This year it's called 'Faces of Faith in America,' and includes all kinds of neat Web stuff in addition to traditional media production."

    There are some pretty amazing interactive, Web-native multimedia presentations among the student work, including:

    * Minorities Representing Majorities: a Google Maps mashup showing the 40 electoral districts where politicians who practice "minority faiths" (like Islam, Hinduism and Sikhism) serve as governmental representatives. The presentation includes video profiles of seven of these leaders.

    * Magical Mystery Tour: A guided tour to the centers of "spiritual seekers" in California -- drag the lens over different sites, from Mount Shasta to Salvation Mountain and see videos of the seekers who come to them.

    Data Road Trip: A national map of the statistical hotspots for crises and upwellings of faith and religion, including the Bronx, with the highest abortion rate in the nation; Arkansas, where the divorce rate is highest; and LA County, with the largest number of Hindu temples. Click on each for a smart mini-video documentary.

    These student presentations are better than anything I've seen from "real" news agencies and could serve as a model for the future of interactive/online journalism.

    Play Infocom Hitchhiker's text adventure by IM


    Ben Burry has hooked up a Jabber bot to a copy of the old Infocom Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy text adventure game. Now you can play H2G2 over IM -- or over phone, if you have an IM-to-SMS gateway running! Link (via Games * Design * Art * Culture)

    HOWTO make a giant, insane match


    Billy, an intern at Instructables, made this gigantic match out of 15,000 match-heads, 30 ping pong balls, and a 96-inch long piece of 4x4 lumber. The ignition sequence -- lovingly documented in a series of videos on the Instructables page -- is a joyous conflagration. Link

    Petaluma Chicken promo film, 1932


    This 1932 promo for the Petaluma Chicken industry must be seen to be believed. A jolly chef presides over a bevy of "farm girls" who crack hundreds of eggs, then climb into a giant skillet for an egg-cellent dance number. Link (Thanks, Jonathan!)

    Vladimir Zimakov's linoleum cut illustrations and printmaking

    Vladimir Zimakov is an illustrator, book artist, designer, and printmaker who lives in the Los Angeles area. Many of his pieces are meant to illustrate books, but they really contain their own stories. His work oozes with mood and emotion. These two linoleum cut illustrations ("The Card Play" and "Danse Macabre") are for a classic novel titled Walpurgisnacht, by Gustav Meyrink (1868-1932).
     Images Walpurgisnacht Walp2  Images Walpurgisnacht Walp4
    From the project page:
    This early 20'th century novel uses the city of Prague as the setting for a clash between German officialdom immured in the ancient castle, and a Czech revolution seething in the city below. History, myth, romance and political reality merge in this truly apocalyptic epic. Gustav Meyrink is an Austrian writer who is mostly known to the english-speaking world for his 1915 classic "The Golem".
    Link (via Juxtapoz)

    Wolfram: Tomorrow's bridges will be evolved and random

    Stephen Wolfram, the creator of Mathematica and king-hell booster for cellular automata as a way of solving problems (and even creating space-time), has posted a fascinating rumination on what a bridge might look like if it were designed through evolutionary computing.
    So what should the bridges of the future look like? Probably a lot less regular than today. Because I suspect the most robust structures will end up being ones with quite a lot of apparent randomness...

    So we're going to end up being exposed to something really quite new. Something that exists in the abstract computational universe, but that we're "mining" for the very first time to create structures we want.

    Link (Thanks, Kathryn!)

    See also: Minneapolis bridge collapse: blog roundup
    Wolfram blows Kurzweil's mind
    Wolfram's giant book free online
    Rucker's students do Wolfram simulations

    Dateline NBC's DefCon mole has been outed

    Threat Level reports that Dateline NBC has sent an undercover mole with a hidden camera to the DefCon hacker conference. Dateline is hoping to get videos of hackers talking about crimes they committed.
    200708031619 DefCon says it was tipped off by their own mole at Dateline who sent them a pic of the undercover journalist who DefCon employees identified as producer Michelle Madigan.

    DefCon, an annual underground hacking convention in Las Vegas, has a strict policy against filming conference attendees -- TV media outlets are barred from sweeping a room with their cameras and also have to get permission from any individuals before capturing them on film. All journalists covering DefCon sign an agreement upon registering for the conference that outlines the rules, but the DefCon organizers say the mole apparently registered as a regular attendee, thereby bypassing the legal agreement.

    Before opening the show for business Friday, the DefCon goons announced to the crowd that there was a media mole among them. DefCon has been broadcasting her picture on the screens in conference rooms before each talk.

    Link

    Smithsonian images gets open copyright religion

    Carl Malamud sez, "I'm delighted to report that the Smithsonian has approved a purchase of four-more hi-res scans of photos with a stated intended use of "upload to the Internet." The embedded copyright tags have been changed as well. In a related development, I got email from the Acting Secretary and another one from the Chief Information Officer. The Smithsonian has formed a pan-Institutional task force to re-examine their copyright policies and they'll be taking comment from members of the public this fall. Both great developments. A new broom does indeed sweep clean!" Link (Thanks, Carl!)

    Kadrey, Herbert and Anderson at free SFinSF event, 8/15

    The excellent SFinSF reading series continues on August 15th at 7PM with Brian Herbert, Kevin Anderson, Richard Kadrey. These are free readings and panels by prominent science fiction authors, and this isn't one to miss. I'm halfway through Richard Kadrey's Butcher Bird, and it's incredible -- a seamless and savage blend of underground losers and dark mythology.
    Please join us for authors BRIAN HERBERT (DUNE), KEVIN J. ANDERSON, AND RICHARD KADREY

    Wednesday, August 15th, 7PM

    reading. bar. discussing. signing. free admission.

    Moderated by Terry Bisson

    Variety Children’s Charity
    The Variety Preview Room
    1st floor of The Hobart Bldg.- entrance btwn. Quiznos & Citibank
    582 Market St. @ Montgomery, San Francisco
    BART/MUNI Montgomery Station is right outside the front door.
    www.varietync.org

    Cash bar opens at 6:00PM - soda, beer, wine & whiskey, with proceeds going to the authors and the Variety Childrens Charity. Seating is limited and on a first-come, first-seated basis, so get there early! We attempt to seat everyone who arrives, but please be there by 7PM. When the house is full, it's full.

    Link

    CBC bans employee blogging without permission - no politics or causes allowed

    Jesse sez, "The official Canadian Broadcasting Corporation blog ('Inside The CBC') has a story about a new CBC document that suggest CBC employees must seek permission from their superiors to create AND maintain blogs in which they are identifiable as CBC employees." This is a jaw-dropping policy for a public service news agency to develop -- requiring its employees to get permission to express their personal views is absolutely beyond the pale, especially for an institution nominally about freedom of expression. The policy applies to all CBC employees -- including janitors, and prohibits them from advocating for any group or cause, or expressing partisan opinions. I think you have to really squint at the Charter of Rights and Freedoms -- and Canadian labor law -- to make this legal. For starters, it can't possibly be legal to prohibit unionized CBC employees from advocating for their union.
    To be clear, this policy applies only to personal blogs where the author identifies themselves as a CBC employee. But if you’re writing a truly transparent, personal blog, sometimes you want to talk about what your job is. It’s part of who we are. But now, if you do that, you apparently fall within the scope of this document.
    Link (Thanks, Jesse!)

    Webb Alert day 2

    Picture 4-32
    Webb Alert, the new daily Internet news roundup hosted by Morgan Webb promises to be a terrific five-minute Web video show.

    They've added an RSS feed so you can subscribe and watch it on your iPod or on Miro.

    Congratulations and best of luck, Morgan and Rob! Link

    Order a live burro by mail

    PCL Linkdump presents this wonderful magazine advertisement from the late '50s. Spencer gifts was selling REAL LIVE MEXICAN BURROS by mail.

    Burro

    REAL LIVE MEXICAN BURROS

    The Gift of a Lifetime for Any Youngster

    From South of the Border comes this soft-eyed gentle little pet of all Mexican children, and the hard-working friend of their parents... to make Christmas this year unforgettable for your youngster! You'll be the talk of the town! Everyone will want to pet your burro.

    What years of pleasure this real, live Mexican burro will bring you and your children, Lovable, huggable, long-earred, extra tame, extremely intelligent. Friendly to other animals. Easily hitched to small cart. Economical to raise. Eats anything -- straw, hay, alfalfa, corn, oats, grass, bread, etc. Hardy, select specimens -- sound, well-fed, clean.

    When fully grown at about 2 years, they stand about 43" high (size of a large dog) and weigh about 200 lbs. Live up to 25 years. Thrive in any climate.

    Send check or money order for amount of Burro now. Burro will arrive about 5 weeks from time we recive your order, unless otherwise specified. Comes uncrated, with food and water for the journey, by Railway Express, collet, F.O.B. Laredo, Texas. You pay express charge of $20 to $40 on arrival. Mexican and U.S. duties already paid. Sorry, no exchanges or refunds. Dipped and U.S. Gov't inspected before shipping. Guaranteed live delivery in their natural born colors.

    Baby -- For children up to 5 years (3 mos. old -- 38" high -- 50lbs) Female: $95 Male $85

    Youngster -- For children up to 10 years (7 mos. to 1 yr. -- 40" high -- 100lbs) Female: $95 Male $85

    Mother and Baby (Total weight about 200 lbs) Pair $175

    Male and Female (For breeding) Pair $180

    Female in Foal $155

    Saddle -- Handmade in Mexico, genuine leather $75

    Bridle -- $15

    Also in the ad, "MESS LESS PET" -- a fake mouse; "the answer to anyone that wants a pet, but doesn't want the bother of a live one." 59 cents ppd. Link

    Previously on Mad Professor:
    • Another fine Mexican Import: Tio Nacho Soap

    Free call indicator for iPhone users

    David Pogue passes along a good tip for iPhone users on his blog:
    You know, of course, that in general, cellphone calls to other people who have the same carrier as you (like Verizon or AT&T) are free, right?

    But how do you KNOW when somebody with the same carrier calls you? How do you know it’s safe to yak all day without using up any minutes?

    “In the iPhone address book, change the ‘mobile’ label for the caller’s contact info to ‘AT&T mobile,’ and that’s what will show up on your phone when she or he calls. Once you make this change for one contact, ‘AT&T mobile’ will show up as a custom label option for any contact.”

    Link

    Replica antique sub busted near cruise ship

    Police arrested three people after spotting a replica of the Bushnell Turtle, a submarine invented at the end of the 18th century, semi-submerged near the docked Queen Mary II in the New York City Harbor.
    Oldsub Police held (the sub's pilot Philip) Riley, and two other men, both from Rhode Island, for questioning. But there was no indication the trio meant any harm with the replica of the 1776 "Turtle submarine."

    One of the Rhode Island men claimed he was descendant of David Bushnell, the inventor of the original one-man vessel that inspired the replica, police said.

    The self-propelled submarine was escorted by police and Rey was issued a Coast Guard violation for operating an unsafe vehicle and violating the security zone around the Queen Mary II.
    Link (Thanks, Jason Tester!)

    UPDATE: Much more background on Duke Riley and his submarine, along with great photos, over at the New York Times City Room blog. Link And here's a feature titled "The Artist, His Sub and the Brooklyn Standoff" in the NYT's Art & Design section. Link Also, BB reader Brian Short points to this post at the Bald & Effective blog with a photo of a beautiful tattoo by Riley. Link Last but not least, here's Riley's site. Link

    How to make a kombucha "mushroom"

    Here's an article from CRAFT Vol.2, written by Arwen O'Reilly -- How to make your own kombucha tea.
     Blog KombuchaKombucha is on its way to being the new "it" drink. This fermented tea is so popular that several brands are available at upscale grocery stores, and its Wikipedia entry has tripled in length since I first checked. I've heard the tea's culture -- which looks like a rubbery pancake -- called a "mother," "mushroom," "starter," and most accurately, a "scoby" ('symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeasts').


    Whatever it is, kombucha is entering a renaissance after millennia of use in China and centuries in Eastern Europe, from whence all good fermented things come. Its loyal following claims health benefits of all ilk, citing vitamins, minerals, enzymes, and probiotic microorganisms present in the tea. I just like it because it tastes good (like a sweet-sour sparkling apple cider).

    Link

    Skull-a-Day: A new mixed media skull every day

    Skull-A-Day is a project to create a new and cool skull every day, using a variety of materials. The creativity on display is hot -- I love the styro cup skull and the nail skull! Link (Thanks, Spencer!)

    Henry Rollins rants about Internet freedom

    Former Black Flag frontman and inveterate ranter Henry Rollins did a serious tear on the systematic attacks on the Internet from government and corporations. The video is fantastic, profane and inspiring. Link (Thanks, Steve!)

    French sf podcast: Utopod

    And now an unpaid plug for Utopod, a kick-ass French-language sf podcast, from editors Lucas Moreno and and Marc Tiefenauer.

    Utopod is a new podcast (or rather a literature podzine) that provides its listeners with readings of science fiction and fantasy short stories written by the best French-speaking authors of the moment, from Africa, America, Europe and elsewhere. It is the first such podcast ever in French, with high quality standards. It audio-published acclaimed writers such as Joël Champetier, Jean-Pierre Andrevon, Xavier Mauméjean and Ugo Bellagamba. You can listen to new episodes once every 2 or 3 weeks. Subscription is totally free and available through iTunes or through the site. It is very similar to Escape Pod and aims to make good literature available for everyone throughout the world. So even if you understand little or no French, don’t think twice about it: subscribe to utopod to support its two producers Marc Tiefenauer and Lucas Moreno, who work for free.

    (click below for summaries of recent stories)

    Continue reading French sf podcast: Utopod.

    Coloring Wikipedia entries by "reputation"

    UC Santa Cruz researchers are developing a program that color codes phrases in Wikipedia according to "reliability" based on the the "reputation" of the writer. The software calculates a Wikipedian's reputation score by analyzing the individual's editing history. If the individual's previous contributions have stood the test of time without being edited, her reputation score is higher. Computer scientist Luca de Alfaro created a demonstration site with a few hundred Wikipedia pages colored according to the "trustworthiness" of the writer. From a press release:
    The program works from a user's history of edits to calculate his or her reputation score. The trustworthiness of newly inserted text is computed as a function of the reputation of its author. As subsequent contributors vet the text, their own reputations contribute to the text's trustworthiness score. So an entry created by an unknown author can quickly gain (or lose) trust after a few known users have reviewed the pages.

    A benefit of calculating author reputation in this way is that de Alfaro can test how well his reliability scores work. He does so by comparing users' reliability scores with how long their subsequent edits last on the site. So far, the program flags as suspect more than 80 percent of edits that turn out to be poor. It's not overly accusatory, either: 60 to 70 percent of the edits it flags do end up being quickly corrected by the Wikipedia community.
    Link to press release, Link to Wikipedia trust coloring demo

    Warner TV person: I deliberately leaked our pilot episode

    An unnamed production person on Pushing Daisies, a new TV show, has admitted to deliberately leaking the show to his neighbor's kid, an inveterate uploader, in order to promote the show. Though this was done without the source's boss's approval, he says that it's understood that this is widely done by the studios on a don't ask, don't tell basis. All your TV has an interview with the leaker.
    Q: So what made you decide to pass along the file? Was this your idea, or did your boss approve it?

    A: MY boss? Oh, God no. I mean…look, I think a lot of people….it's a bit like the military's 'Don't' Ask Don't Tell' rule. I think a lot of people think in theory that getting a show out there ahead of time is a good idea. Especially a show (like "Pushing Daisies") that generally gets a lot of excitement from people after they watch it.

    But it's not like anyone I know would admit to that while they're on the clock, and it's not even something you would bring up seriously as a suggestion.

    Link (Thanks, Rick!)

    Save a Renaissance science fiction painting and church

     Poster Pianello Section
    Seen here, detail of an incredibly strange Renaissance painting inside the Church of San Pietro located in Montalcino, Italy. Painted by the artist Bonaventura Salimbeni (1567-16130), the artwork, titled "Glorification of the Eucharist," looks like the cover of a science fiction novel. Indeed, it's been nicknamed "Sputnik" based on the globe's similarity to a satellite. The church is in dire need of restoration and an international campaign is underway to raise funds to save it, and the painting inside. The organizers printed 1000 posters of the painting and are selling them for US$270 with proceeds going to the restoration funds. Link (via Fortean Times)

    Astronaut: Flickr-generated music + image project


    Felix Jung says,

    I recently launched a project entitled "Astronaut," which is basically a visualization of my friend's song, with random Flickr photos dynamically appearing at set keyframes. The images I'm pulling in come from Flickr photos whose tags match the lyrics of the song.

    Every viewing should be different, as the Flash piece pulls in a new set of images each time. I've seen a few breathtaking photo combinations; I've seen several humorous combinations as well, that end up subverting the song entirely. I think the neatest part of the project is its randomness and its fluctuation. This was a lot of fun to work on, and I hope you find it fun to watch.

    Link.

    Mueck's giant foetus sculpture and other works being installed


    Flickr user The Modern has posted this eerie set of photos from the installation of Ron Mueck's giant sculptures (a foetus and various huge adults) at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth. Link

    See also:
    Surrealiste!
    Galley of Ron Mueck sculptures
    Ron Mueck show in Edinburgh

    Mantelpiece art-deco PC is a universal photo

    Jeffrey Stephenson, a PC builder, designed and executed this incredible mantelpiece PC in a stained-wood cabinet. The cabinet is fronted by a vertically oriented LCD and the housing is modelled on an art-deco, 1931 Hammond Gregory clock. The net effect is of a mantelpiece painting that will display any image in your photo-library, or the live web. Stephenson has posted a detailed build-log from the project. Link (via Gizmodo)

    Defcon's hackable badges

    The attendee badges at Defcon 15 can be programmed to display arbitrary words and phrases via their built-in LEDs using nothing but the on-board hardware -- once you figure out how to hack them.
    I just got my wife's badge for Defcon (they're not giving out press badges 'till tomorrow) and it is totally and completely awesome. At first when I put the batteries in, the LEDs lit up and then nothing happened. I tried shorting a few pins together on the back to no avail and then by accident I figured out that the front has two buttons, which are the smiley skull and the dial. After pressing the buttons it scrolled some text about Defcon, and then I hit the buttons a few more times and saw POV, which stands for persistence of vision. I swung the badge around and saw the word defcon, just like the cool spoke POV kits. Then I pushed the buttons a few more times and it displayed: TEXT. I held both buttons at once and I was able to program in 15 characters of text using the buttons to navigate and pressing them both at once to select a letter. I choose: "EECUE[HEART]PENELOPER^" with the heart being an actual heart symbol. The badge offers a full upper and lowercase alphabet along with an assortment of symbols and punctuation. After adding the 15 characters the text began to scroll in a marquee fashion. This is the dopest badge ever. Hell yeah and way to go Defcon!
    Link (Thanks, Dave!)

    Dr. Bronner defends Germs' drummer against GHB charge

    Drugnerd has a video about the arrest of Germs drummer Don Bolles. Police searched his van earlier this year and found a bottle of Dr. Bronner's liquid soap, which tested positive for the drug GHB.
    Picture 13-3 This is the incredible true story of the Germ and Soap Company that teamed up to fight drug charges. David Bronner President of Dr. Bronner’s Magic Soaps shows how natural soaps test positive for the date rape drug GHB using police field kits while detergent based fake soaps always test negative.
    Link

    Reader comment:

    Stefan says:

    Saw, last Saturday, a wonderful documentary called Dr. Bronner's Magical Soapbox.

    It is about the Emil Bronner, the German emigrant behind the liquid soap that comes in bottles whose labels are packed with bizarre religious ranting. If you've never been in a health-food store or knew counter-culture types you may never have seen the stuff, but here's a sample:

    Quote: "2nd, every body in God's tremendous Universe must eat or there is no body! To shine on, eat must even the sun, consuming every second 4 million metric ton! To shine on, eat must even the sun! Exceptions eternally? Absolute none!"

    and

    Quote: "8th: God's Eternal Discipline, save! 9th: Nine lives, self-reliant, brave! 10th: Dignity, beauty, relaxation, fun! 11th: Tenacity gets it done! 12th: Perfect sense of direction, ESP!"

    "Doctor" Bronner was nuts. In fact, he was committed to an asylum in the late 40s. (In his delusional universe, it was a communist concentration camp.) He got away (when his sister checked him out for a few hours so they could have lunch) and left his kids behind (well, they were in orphanages and foster homes anyway) to go to California and start his soap company. Apparently, his work ethic was as strong as his desire to rant, and his liquid soap became a hit with counter-culture types.

    Bronner's kids and their families eventually took over the business. They're an interesting bunch too; hard working and off-beat.

    The digitally-shot movie is low budget but well crafted. It combines old documentary and interview footage, visits to the Dr. Bronner factory, and excerpts from old documents and letters. There are also comments from Dr. Bronner fans, interviewed at a health food trade show.

    The real star of the show is Ralph Bronner, who is the company's goodwill ambassador. He's kind of nuts too, but in a really nice way. He travels around putting on a one-man tribute show to his dad, dispenses free samples of soap, and offers hugs. He is unworldly, saintly nice. Like a Health Store guru version of Mister Rogers.

    Drunk Astronaut Hall of Fame: Besotted Communist Spacepig


    Before cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first human in space, Russian scientists experimented with animals. We've blogged before about some of them, like the two doggies, but Drunk Russian Space Pig is somewhat less well known. They boozed him up "to relax him," as the story goes. Let it be known that we at BoingBoing do not condone the forced intoxication of animals in spaceflight, or cruelty to critters. But pork does pair nicely with a smooth merlot. Link 1, Link 2. Warning: may not be entirely true. My co-editor David Pescovitz says, "Many places online say that those shots are from the 2005 Russian mockumentary "First on the Moon." (Thanks, Cassaro)