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2012/04/12

Neatorama

Neatorama


Buses Loaded With IV Drip Dispensers Make The Rounds In Las Vegas

Posted: 12 Apr 2012 04:31 AM PDT

Taking a trip to Las Vegas can result in gamblers losing the shirt right off their back at the game tables, and that feeling of loss often leads to bouts of binge drinking and self loathing.

Good thing the Hangover Heaven buses have come to town! Equipped with IV drip dispensers and a soothing air conditioned atmosphere, Hangover Heaven is both the result of, and answer to, Sin City’s excessive lifestyle.

So don’t be afraid to drink up when you visit the Vegas Strip, because the Hangover Heaven will pick you up off the floor and put you back on your feet again!

Link

Man Breaks Up Subway Fight By Calmly Eating A Bag Of Chips

Posted: 12 Apr 2012 04:09 AM PDT

(YouTube Link)

You know you’ve seen some stuff go down on the subway when you don’t even bother to stop eating a bag of chips when a fight erupts right in front of you.

You’re officially the Fonzi of snack food when you break up a fight while keeping a cool head and continuing to chomp down on said chips. I smell an endorsement deal in this guy’s future!

(NSFW due to coarse language)

–via Best Week Ever

The Hulk Makes The Cover Of Muscle And Fitness Magazine

Posted: 12 Apr 2012 03:22 AM PDT

The Hulk might seem like the perfect cover model for a magazine like Muscle and Fitness, but consider this-do you really want the guys that read your magazine getting even more jacked up on “supplements” in an attempt to look like Marvel Comics’ raging tower of muscle?

And isn’t this cover a bit misleading, considering that Bruce Banner (The Hulk’s human alter-ego) is a scientist with the muscle mass and strength of, well, a scientist?!

Although the Hulk aspect seems a bit silly, I am intrigued by the article entitled “Bulletproof Your Knees”, so I’m gonna ask around and see if anyone I know has picked up this issue. Well played Muscle and Fitness, well played indeed…

Link

Short Film-Blow Out Sale

Posted: 12 Apr 2012 02:15 AM PDT

(YouTube Link)

This silly short film is called Blow Out Sale, and it features some familiar Hollywood faces, including Danny Pudi from the hit TV series Community, hamming it up like guys who don’t give a damn if people judge them for having a good time while the camera’s rolling.

The story plays out like a scene from Abed’s imagination, maybe it helped shape/inspire Danny’s character on Community?

–via Tastefully Offensive

The Rotoscoped Evil Dead

Posted: 12 Apr 2012 12:08 AM PDT

(YouTube Link)

Rotoscoping is a tedious process that involves animating over a live action film frame by frame, which means it took waaaaaay too long to rotoscope this trailer for the horror classic The Evil Dead.

And, while the end result is pretty cool looking and fun to watch, it’s highly unlikely that PFR Studios will be rotoscoping any more of the film, because this bit is almost three years old!

–via Topless Robot

The Dogs Aboard the Titanic

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 10:11 PM PDT

Of all the coverage of the 100th anniversary of the Titanic disaster, has anyone thought about the dogs? There were a dozen canines aboard the ship when it sank. J. Joseph Edgette, professor emeritus of education and folklorist emeritus at Widener University is curating an exhibit devoted to the dogs of the Titanic.

Those that were saved included a baby Pomeranian named Lady, owned by Margaret Hays of New York City, who kept the puppy in the cabin with her, Edgette said. When passengers were evacuated, Hays wrapped it in a blanket. Crew members allowed her to get in a lifeboat with the puppy. "Because they assumed it was a baby, it survived," he said.

Others that lived were Sun Yat-sen, a Pekinese belonging to Henry and Myra Harper (of Harper & Row publishing fame), also of New York City, and a small Pomeranian owned by Elizabeth Rothschild from Watkins Glen, N.Y.

All surviving dogs were small and were kept in the first-class cabins of their owners, Edgette said. "The crew was very respectful of first-class passengers and usually gave them what they wanted to make them happy." The nine dogs kept in the onboard kennel perished, though the kennel was well-kept and the dogs were well taken care of, he said, by crew who fed and walked them.

The exhibit at the Widener University Art Gallery in Chester, Pennsylvania, will run through May 12. Admission is free. Link -via Time

Alien Egg Ice Tray

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 08:03 PM PDT

Alien Egg Ice Tray – $10.95

Easter may be over, but that doesn’t mean the egg-stravaganza has to end. Party on with the Alien Egg Ice Tray from the NeatoShop. This fantastic ice tray is made of food-safe silicone. It also works great for making delicious Alien egg shaped chocolates.

Alien Big Chap Ice Tray also available.

Be sure to check out the NeatoShop for more unusual Ice Trays.

Link

An Igloo for Book Lovers

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 07:51 PM PDT


Miler Lagos’s installation at the MagnanMetz Gallery in New York City is entitled simply “Home”. After he finished it, the dome was completely enclosed and self-supporting. Just imagine if you had one of these, consisting entirely of the books that you have read over the course of your life.

Link -via Colossal

Rowing a Boat with an Excavator

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 07:27 PM PDT


(Video Link)

Paddle down the Saigon River in Vietnam. You don’t need a boat engine. You don’t need a propeller. You don’t even need oars. All you need is an excavator.

-via Gizmodo

Halloween Costume for a Tall Guy: A Short Man on Stilts

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 06:56 PM PDT

The idea was a long shot, but it worked. Redditor firstclass_scamp, who is seven feet tall, altered a pair of pants so that he looks like a short man standing on top of a pair of stilts.

Link

Cheesecake-Stuffed Strawberries

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 06:41 PM PDT

To maintain a healthy diet, you need to eat five servings of fruit or vegetables a day. Strawberries are a fruit. Ergo, these wonderful bite-sized delights are a healthy choice. You can find the recipe by Natalie of The Sweets Life at the link.

Link -via Briannah Munoz

Non-Latin Versions of Famous Logos

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 05:55 PM PDT

Can you guess what which companies two logos above belong to?

Designer Daily has a neat post showcasing non-latin versions of some of the world's most famous logos (I really like how they preserve the arrow in the logo on the left!): Link

Previously on Neatorama: The Evolution of Tech Companies' Logos | Evolution of Fast Food Logos | Evolution of Car Logos and The Stories Behind Ten Famous Food Logos

Kids Birthday Parties … at the Airport

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 03:25 PM PDT

In the post-9/11 era of tight security, Americans usually avoid going to the airport unless they absolutely have to, but in Europe, the halcyon days of aviation are still here:

Kids at Learta Sinani's 10th birthday party here ate cake, played games and faced a thorough security screening. It's all part of celebrations at one of Switzerland's hottest tourist spots: Zurich Airport.

When Ms. Sinani's mother first proposed taking friends to the airfield, "I wasn't so sure," recalled the birthday girl during her recent festivities, as friends climbed in a child-sized control tower. "Now I think it's really exciting." [...]

Hospitality is proving so successful that these airports are increasingly pitching themselves as party venues. Revelers are climbing onboard. Zurich's three weekly birthday slots for youngsters are booked into next year.

"You should reserve before your child is born," jokes Rahel Kindermann-Leuthard, manager of visitor services and events at Zurich Airport.

Guests still have to clear security, but the upside of that is you can use the X-ray machines to guess the party gifts!

Daniel Michaels of The Wall Street Journal's The A-Hed column explains: Link

Draco Malfoy, The Hottest Bachelor in Wizarding

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 02:24 PM PDT

Forget Harry Potter! The Hottest Bachelor in Wizarding is none other than Draco Lucius (Luscious? Oh my!) Malfoy.

It must be true! I read it on The Witch Weekly ... I mean, Rita Skeeter doesn't lie, does she? Via Hearts Should Be Unbreakable

It Doesn’t Get Any More Hipster Than This

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 01:23 PM PDT

All that's missing is some PBR and keffiyeh ... Found at Accordion Guy.

See also: I Blame Hipsters

Sleeping Seal

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 12:22 PM PDT

Photographer Alex Mustard noted that even though seals are "grumpy and sluggish" on land, they're quite graceful in the water. Even when they're sleeping:

The serene pose adopted by this Atlantic grey seal (Halichoerus grypus - the name means "hooked-nosed sea pig") makes it look as if it is meditating, or performing some kind of underwater yoga. In fact it is probably "bottling", sleeping with its nose pointing upwards. [...]

Mustard took this shot while snorkelling. He designed a large plastic dome for his underwater camera to allow him to photograph above and below the water at the same time.

Link

How to Wash a Chicken

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 12:07 PM PDT


(YouTube link)

Watch Zach as he shows you all the necessary steps to chicken bathing. Link -via Swiss Miss

The Big Bang Theory Soft Kitty Hoodie

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 11:45 AM PDT

The Big Bang Theory Soft Kitty Hoodie - $47.95

Attention The Big Bang Theory fans! Are you looking for the purr-fect springtime hoodie? You need the Big Bang Theory Soft Kitty Hoodie from the NeatoShop. This great zippered hooded sweatshirt comes complete with tail, ears, and paw mittens. This hoodie is so comfy it will make you want to sing about your favorite little ball of fur.

Be sure to check out the NeatoShop for more fantastic Apparel & Accessories!

Link

Retro Mosaic Pac-Man Table

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 11:40 AM PDT

Kiran Hungin designed and crafted this Pac-Man mosaic in glass tile on top of a 1960s-era Formica table. It’s one-of-a-kind, for sale at Folksy, which is a British craft market. Link -via Boing Boing

The Army of Luck

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 11:21 AM PDT

If one waving Maneki Neko or Japanese Lucky Cat brings you luck, then hundreds of them should be enough to win the Mega Millions, right?


[Vimeo Link]

For his art installation The Global Pursuit of Happiness, or The Army of Luck, Boris Petrovsky enlisted the aid of 520 Lucky Cats, synchronized to wave us a luck tsunami. Best of all, viewers can command the cats to wave at will:



The material element of the installation»The Global Pursuit of Happiness, or: The Army of Luck« is the »Lucky Cats' Matrix«. It contains 520 shiny golden XXL Lucky Cats made of plastics which are arranged in 40 rows and 13 columns on a ramp-like stand made of aluminum (W 8 m, H 3 m, D 2 m).

Visitors experience the Lucky Cats' Matrix as a dot-matrix display which consists of 520 waving paw grid points as its »pixels«. In each cat a servomotor is built in to control the paws move exactly in position and speed.

The visitors are requested imaginarily by the cats to interact as users: "Your concept of happiness is our lucky command. Write it on the keyboard".

Words and sentences up to 40 characters can be put in and are displayed clearly visible with the paws letter by letter as sliding text marquee. So to say, the users »choreograph« the Lucky Cats performance wordwise. Literally it is the »inscription« of an idea of happiness or a wish in the Lucky Cats' bodies by moving their paws forward and backward.

Someone enter 4 8 15 16 23 42 for me! Link - via Animal

Distant Star May Have Nine Planets

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 11:04 AM PDT

Maybe we should have kept Pluto! A star 127 light-years away shows evidence of having a record (as far as we know) nine planets revolving around it. The star is designated as HD 10180, in the southern constellation Hydrus. The discovery is the culmination of ten years of data crunching. See, we can’t see these planets.

Instead, astronomers detected the planets by measuring their gravitational tugs on the host star using the High Accuracy Planet Searcher (HARPS) instrument on the European Southern Observatory’s 3.6-meter telescope at La Silla, Chile.

The five established planets are between 12 and 25 times the mass of Earth and are all around the sizes of Uranus or Neptune, meaning the worlds are most likely icy gas giants.

Of the two newly confirmed planets, one is about 65 times the mass of Earth, and it orbits farther beyond the main group. The other planet is a super-Earth 1.3 times the mass of our home world that circles very close to the host star.

The two new, unconfirmed planets also have tight orbits: A planet thought to be 1.9 times the mass of Earth completes its orbit in 10 days, while the other world is likely 5.1 Earth masses with an orbit lasting 68 days.

Scientists believe the planets, if they actually exist, are too close to the star to ever support life. Link

(Unrelated image credit: NASA)

Stop-Motion LEGO Proposal

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 10:35 AM PDT


(vimeo link)

Flimmaker Walt Thompson asked Nealey to marry him, by showing her this stop-motion video! Star Wars characters showed up as witnesses.  -via Geeks Are Sexy

The Titanic was a Real Ship!

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 10:04 AM PDT

 

Sunday will be the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the RMS Titanic. Some people are just finding out that this was a real historical event, and not just a figment of James Cameron’s fertile imagination. See the full graphic at TwitPic. Link -via Breakfast Links

Henri 2, Paw de Deux

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 09:03 AM PDT


(YouTube link)

Do you recall The Ennui of Henri? Years later, the existential French cat is back with a sequel. And the angst-ridden Henri is still bemoaning the banality of his existence. -via Daily Picks and Flicks

Architectural Criticism Translated

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 08:50 AM PDT

When you come across an architectural criticism, relax, the critic may well be thinking the same thing you are. Grant Snider of Incidental Comics consulted his twin brother the architect about this comic. All these buildings are within a two blocks of each other in Denver and are listed at his site. Link -via Laughing Squid

Blood Diamond

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 08:02 AM PDT


(vimeo link)

The artist known as simply ABOVE has been making headlines with his social and political street art for years. His latest installation is painted on a wall in Jewel City, the diamond trade area of Johannesburg, South Africa. The shenanigans involved in getting permission for the paint job ensure that it probably won’t last long, but the project is documented both in video and in pictures. Continue reading for the story of how he pulled off this stunt and see photographs of the finished work.

Africa has had a devastating history of blood diamond wars. Blood
diamond refers to a diamond mined in a war zone and then sold to
finance an invading army’s war efforts, usually in Africa where more
than two-thirds of the worlds diamonds are extracted. This site
specific social / political word play was painted on the exterior wall
of Johannesburg’s largest diamond trader Jewel City. Jewel City is a
six-block mega-precinct that serves as a base for some 300 diamond
traders as well as South Africa's Diamond Board and State Traders
Association. Jewel City is the largest diamond exporter in the
southern hemisphere with over R7-Billion worth of Diamonds being
exported every year.

I was able to get away with this diamond wall heist because I told the
owners I would paint in big letters “Diamonds are a woman’s best
friend” on the exterior of their building. The owners loved the idea
and all quickly agreed. The next day I had started painting but what
the owners didn’t know is that I lied to them and was hijacking their
wall. Like any premeditated robbery, situations are not what they seem
and shit can flip from best friends to worst enemies in a few moments.

I assume the owners were too busy trading diamonds inside the mega
centre they never took the time to come out and see I was painting a
controversial word play about the diamond trade and how it’s fueled so
much bloodshed in wars making it one of man’s worst enemies.

Find out more at ABOVE’s website. Link -Thanks, ABOVE!

Previously at Neatorama: 10 Facts About Diamonds You Should Know

Thanks a Lot, Robot Friend

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 07:19 AM PDT


(Flickr video link)

Aren’t robots supposed to help us? This Japanese beer-pouring robot seems to have had a few too many himself. And just keeps talking. -via Boing Boing

Kidnap Victim Saved by Twitter Followers

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 07:04 AM PDT

Lynn Peters of Johannesburg, South Africa, sent out a Tweet that her boyfriend had been kidnapped Sunday night. He was put in the trunk of his own car by armed carjackers! However, the unnamed man was able to contact Peters via phone. Her alert sent the Twittersphere into action.

RT they did, including Peters’ friend, Tanisha Reddy. From her it was picked up by well-known SA Twitterer, @pigspotter, who retweeted it to his 100,000-plus followers. @pigspotter specializes in identifying and sharing the location of police roadblocks. The police forces in South Africa have frequently been accused of graft and violence, so it does not seem to be criminals alone who make a point of avoiding roadblocks.

Because @pigspotter’s followers include a large number of private security forces, whose vehicles are spread around the country, the Golf was located. Units were notified and in many cases sent out, each team and company retweeted the specifics of their search and kept each other apprised and informed on Twitter.

@afritrack asked if the car was equipped with electronic tracking (it was not.) A volunteer security group called Riga Rescue offered to track the victim’s cell signal. The security company K9 Security eventually visually identified the car. The kidnappers were ultimately stopped at a police road block in Ventersberg, 150 miles from where he was taken.

The victim was rescued unharmed. The perpetrators fled on foot, and have not yet been apprehended. Link -via Gizmodo

“Don’t Stop Believing” Sung By the Movies

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 06:23 AM PDT


(YouTube link)

YouTube member dondrapersayswhat assembled movie clips to sing the Journey song “Don’t Stop Believin,” which has somehow become a classic in the blink of an eye (really? has it been 30 years? oh, 31!) in this supercut. Some of the clip selections are a real delight! -via The Daily What

Yummy Pockets PB&J

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 06:21 AM PDT

Yummy Pockets PB&J – $8.95

Have you been endlessly searching for a way to declare your undying love and devotion for the peanut butter and jelly sandwich? You need the Yummy Pockets PB&J bag from the NeatoShop. This great 2 compartment pouch is your perfect everyday companion. Fill it with supplies, money, and other life necessities. The Yummy Pockets PB&J pouch is a great way to stay close to your true love without subjecting anyone else to serious food allergies.

Be sure to check out the NeatoShop for more deliciously funny Wallets, Purses & Coin Bags.

Link

Teacup Chandelier

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 06:17 AM PDT

Chris of La Petite Nymphéa spotted this chandelier in a shop in Valencia, Spain. It would look absolutely charming in a parlor.

Link (Google Translate) -via Offbeat Home

Gun Safe/Bed

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 05:39 AM PDT

With room for 35 rifles and 70 handguns, the BedBunker can hold a substantial portion of your gun collection. The vault replaces a set of box springs, so it doesn’t take up a lot of room in your house. When you need a gun, just push the mattress off and open the door.

Product Page -via DVICE (where there’s a video)

An Interview (and book giveaway) with Maggie Koerth-Baker

Posted: 11 Apr 2012 05:22 AM PDT

Maggie Koerth-Baker, the science editor at BoingBoing, has just published an amazing new book called Before the Lights Go Out: Conquering the Energy Crisis Before it Conquers Us, about the very hard choices we face in powering our lives without doing ourselves in. It's adroitly written with wonderful research behind it and some very warm, yet no-nonsense Midwestern charm, as she ties many of the problems our society is facing with personal stories from growing up and living in and around the real farmvilles.

We’re going to give away TWO autographed copies of the book at the end of the interview, so be sure to read it thoroughly to better your chances of scoring one of them. Believe me: This is a book you want on your shelves, packed with insight into, perhaps, the biggest problem facing the modern world.

 

Q: Throughout the book, I found myself becoming incredibly depressed about the future and then, alternately, incredibly optimistic about it. Is this sort of how you felt, both in the research and writing of the book? I mean, talk of doomsday scenarios due to global warming and massive energy shortages can't be too uplifting to study, yet the realm of possibilities surrounding alternative energy are way exciting to think about, especially as you get further into them. You even write in the book: "I have to admit that when I think about all of the coordination, education, and nonpartisan (not only bipartisan) decision making that needs to happen, I get the urge to go back to bed and hide under the covers." Have you been on an emotional roller coaster these past couple years working on the book?

A: Oh, definitely. Or, rather, I'm not sure I'd call it an emotional roller coaster, because it's not linear like that. It's more like an emotional scrambler. I'd find myself collecting all this information–knowing that every possible solution was going to have downsides and risks, and that the risk of doing nothing were even worse–and then kind of had to sift through it all and figure out a way to talk about it that emphasized both sides of that coin. And that's hard. There are lots of times when you feel both deflated and optimistic at once. And it really goes against the dominant narratives on energy: Which are either that we don't need to change anything, or that we need to change and that those changes are inherently ideal things that will have no risks or downsides whatsoever. Both perspectives are wrong.

Q: In the intro, you write: "This is a book about what we'll have to deal with and the changes that will have to happen, because we really have no other choice." What does the choice to do nothing result in?

A: The choice to do nothing will result in change. The choice to do nothing is risky, riskier I think than trying to do something even if that something is flawed and imperfect. I can't emphasize this enough. We have aging infrastructure that wasn't built in any ideal way to begin with. We have climate change playing out in front of our faces. We have limited supplies of fossil fuels so that, even the stuff we have lots of still–natural gas and coal–are projected to only be enough for 100 or 200 years. (And that's at current levels of demand. And if you don't change anything, then demand always goes up.)

All those things are happening, whether we ignore them or not. As they play out, they will force changes to the way we use energy, the way we make it, and the way we live. They will force us to spend lots and lots of money.

So what we have isn't a choice between spending a ton of money or not, between changing or not. It's a choice between different kinds of changes. Do we want the kind of change where we spend money upfront to save it in the long run and have some control over how we address these issues? Or do we want the kind of changes that just happen to us, whether we like them or not, and cost us dearly down the road? I know my answer.

Q: With regard to energy solutions in the future, you write: "Nobody gets everything he or she wants." Of all the interested parties, who gets most of what s/he wants and who gets the short end of the stick?

A: Depends on the specific thing. There's not an overall answer to that, because the parties, and what they want, shift and morph depending on what aspects of this you're looking at. And there is tons of room for reasonable people to disagree and to have to compromise. To give you some big-picture examples of the kind of compromises I'm talking about: If we take action on this, we're probably going to have energy that is, at least somewhat, more expensive than it is right now. And we're going to have to figure out how to deal with that so it doesn't excessively burden the poor. At the same time, if we take action on this–even if we have all the political willpower you could want–we aren't going to get completely off of fossil fuels. Not in my lifetime, anyway. When I talk about "short term" changes, I'm talking about stuff that happens over 30 or 40 years. That's the timescale infrastructure works on. You have to change the infrastructure, you can't just add wind and solar power to what's already there. So that's going to take time. And money. And that means we can't just shut down all our nuclear power and coal power anytime soon. Not if we also want to have reliable electricity supply.

Q:  Talking about our individual efforts to attack the problems (putting solar panels on our roofs, driving hybrids, recycling, etc.) you write: "you can't do this yourself. Coordinating lots of different solutions on the level of systems, as fast as we possibly can is something that requires a group effort directed by policy, not volunteerism." So why should we even bother recycling if it doesn't really make a dent in the big picture?

A: Because it's a little more complicated than that. One of the things I tried to point out in the book is that policies are important, systems are important. But that doesn't mean you have to sit around waiting for politicians to act.

I think that most of us would agree that we should act out our values. I recycle because I think recycling is important. On my own, I don't really matter much. The world is not going to end if I miss a week. And it's not going to be saved if I recycle 10x better than my neighbors. But I recycle, because I believe that it's important to reduce waste and to reuse what we can.

Here's why I think systems are important, though. It's easy for me to recycle. Minneapolis has curb-side recycling. Every other week, I just stick the bags out there and somebody takes care of it. That's not the case in a lot of places in America. In fact, I was just talking to some friends in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, where most of the city has curb-side recycling, but the neighborhood they live in–which is poor and pretty rough–doesn't. Their neighbors don't recycle. I do recycle. That's not because I'm a better person. It's because recycling is easy for me, and it's really, really hard for someone who doesn't have curb-side recycling, and maybe doesn't even have reliable personal transportation to drive to a recycling center with all their stuff. That's why systems matter.

Obviously, big changes are made up of individuals making small changes. But the systems and the policy influence who can make those small changes, how easy it is to make those small changes, and what those small changes cost you. Individual decisions don't matter at all, except as a way to play you personal beliefs. BUT, if you can aggregate those individual decisions, enable huge groups of people to do small changes all at once, then what individuals do does matter. Policy is what makes your choices really powerful. It's not bottom-up, or top-down. It's both. Bottom-up influences top-down. Top-down enables more bottom-up.

Q: Throughout the book, you take little trips to different parts of the country to research energy solutions, BETA programs and various tests in the sector. Of all the trips, which was your favorite? Why?

A: Oh, man. "What's your favorite?" is always the hardest question anyone can ask about anything. I think the trip that made the biggest impact on me was the one I took to Florida to visit the Naval Air Station at Jacksonville. That was a really eye-opening trip. Partly because it brought me face-to-face with how much work the military is doing on efficiency, conservation, and alternative generation. But partly, it was because that trip really drove home for me how important systems and infrastructure really are, and put the relationship between policy and personal choice into context for me.

In the book, I talk about driving by the Station's new energy efficient aircraft hanger, and seeing how they didn't need to have electric lights on in the hanger bays because the inside was painted white, so that light from outside could reflect off the walls and keep the space feeling bright and comfortable for the people working there. And then we drove past an old aircraft hanger, where the interior was painted a dingy beige. That building had tons of electric lights on and it still felt dark. So a simple paint job made it easy for a lot of people to choose to use less energy. In fact, it made using less energy a better option than using more.

That was the trip that really helped me start to understand that energy isn't just sources, it's systems.

Q: One of the things I loved about the book was how you wove your own personal family history and stories into the narrative, which clearly help us understand why you're so interested in this subject. The book has a wonderful, local, homespun feel to it – very Bill Bryson, yet the version of him that married the Freakonomics guys. This excerpt is a perfect example:

In the winter, my thermostat is programmed to make sure that my house is warm before I get up. I spend, at most, twenty minutes a year making sure that happens—just enough time to pay my bills every month and turn the boiler on or off with the season. Contrast that to my paternal grandparents' old house, which was heated with a wood stove. To make sure the house was warm in the morning, my Grandpa had to chop wood every week—after first either cutting down a tree of his own or buying wood from someone else and hauling it home. There was no such thing as waking up to an already-warm house.

Whoever got up first, either Grammy or Grandpa, had to bring in chopped wood from the back porch and get the fire going. They had to keep it going throughout the day. There were ashes to haul every day, and a stovepipe to clean. When they moved into a retirement townhouse with central electric heating, my Grammy was ecstatic.

By all of the accounts I've read, that's how most of our ancestors responded to the new convenience of centralized energy generation. If the energy is made by someone else, all you have to do is sit back and enjoy the benefits.

Yet you do lose a certain amount of control. If my Grandpa's stove burned through all of the wood he'd put in it, he could go chop some more wood. If I wake up some morning and my gas or electric service isn't operating, then I have to put in a call to the utility and find someplace more comfortable to spend my day.

Before you started working on the book, did you know you'd be writing a lot about your own, personal experiences, and your hometown and other towns you've lived in or did that sort of evolve naturally as a logical narrative to help make your points and deliver the story? And how does your very real family feel about appearing in book of this nature?

A: I didn't know that I was going to talk about that going in. It's something that kind of evolved as I tried to come up with ways to talk about energy and how it works in the context of real people. A writer can always fall back on the hypothetical "you", but I don't think that's as relatable as we think it is. If I use the hypothetical you, you can say, "Well, that's not something I would do." And then, as the writer, I lose you. Or, if I use it too much, the hypothetical you just starts to feel clichéd. It loses its power to connect people to an issue. And then it's worthless. I think that telling stories is a better way to help people think about an abstract concept like energy. Where I didn't have stories from other people, I filled in the gaps with stories from my own life and my own family.

As to how my family feels about it, I've honestly not talked to anyone about it much really. The stories that I used are real, and they're personal, but they aren't really personal information, if you know what I mean. For instance, I used my Dad's progression from a typewriter to a word processor to an internet-enabled computer as a way of describing smart grids. That's not really divulging anything really private about my Dad. It's just using him as a way to talk about what is now an almost universal experience in this country. He recently told me that he really loved the book, so I assume he was okay with that.

Some of the most emotionally intimate stuff was really about my grandparents, and I couldn't run that by them. By the time the book was going through edits and the text was being finalized, all of my grandparents had passed away. My Grammy died in February of 2011. My maternal Grandfather, who also comes up in the book, died in August of the same year. So, to me, those stories have also become kind of a memorial, a way of honoring these people who I love and sharing my memories of them with the rest of the world.

Q: Lastly, what are you working on next? Besides the wonderful blog posts on BB, what's your next big project?

A: I'm really excited about getting back to being able to do some long-form stories, both on BoingBoing and in magazines. I've got a ton of ideas that have been pretty much on hold because of the book and it's going to be great to be able to finally tackle them.

One thing I'm really interested in right now is the future of agriculture. In particular, how we're adapting the plants we grow for food to meet the challenges of climate change. There's some really cool work being done, for instance, where researchers are breeding food crops with ancient, wild plants that are related to them. Those wild plants are, essentially, weeds. And weeds are really tough, they can survive stuff that domesticated crops can't. So what the scientists are trying to do is breed some of that toughness into our food plants without losing the traits that make the food plants good for feeding so many people.

Want to win an autographed copy of Maggie’s new book? Answer the following questions correctly in the comments below and also tell us why YOU deserve to win! We’ll pick two winners at random and pop the book in the mail to you!

1. Which research trip made the biggest impact on Maggie while working on the book?

2. When was Maggie’s Grammy “ecstatic?”

3. Why do you deserve a copy of Maggie’s new book?

 

See also: More articles by Maggie Koerth-Baker.

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