Monday, October 7, 2013
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
Who owns the Moon and Property Rights
As usual, Vsauce brings us another awesome video about who owns the moon, interesting facts about ownership in space and the absurdity that lies at the heart of the UN and governments around the world, dictating intergalactic law... Maybe these folks should focus on getting planet Earth in shape before worrying about who can own what outside of our pale blue dot.
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Pale Blue Dot by Carl Sagan
You Live Here
Labels:
animation,
artwork,
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Chris Hadfield,
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Harrison,
Harrison Fischberg,
Human Action,
International Space Station,
ISS,
Jeffrey Tucker,
market,
media,
morality,
morals,
outer space,
short film
Thursday, July 11, 2013
Drop Culture
A great clip by Tragedy and Hope, with message taken from Terence McKenna speech. Enjoy and be.
Labels:
animation,
artwork,
cgi,
Harrison,
Harrison Fischberg,
Human Action,
Jeffrey Tucker,
love story,
market,
media,
morality,
morals,
outer space,
philosophy,
romance comedy,
short film
Monday, June 17, 2013
I Loved It... I Loved it All
Essay by Edward Abbey "I Loved it...I Loved it All" from Ned Judge on Vimeo.
A fantastic short film that shows the Arches National Park through the eyes of Ed Abbey, a thoughtful and curious man, all with a beautiful life lesson tied in. Enjoy it.
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An eight minute film essay that I co-produced and directed with Ed Abbey in 1985. At the time I was working for a network magazine show. The executive producer took me to lunch one day. He told me that he was having trouble with his son who was 18. The son thought his dad was a corporate whore. He had told his father if he had any balls at all he’d put Ed Abbey on his show. That’s why the EP was talking to me. Would I see if it was possible? I had an acquaintance who knew Ed and he passed the request along. Ed responded that he’d give it a try. He signed the contract and wrote a script. We met in Moab and went out to Arches National Park to shoot some practice sessions with a home video camera. We would review them at the motel in the evening. After a day or two, Ed was feeling pretty comfortable on camera so we scheduled the shoot. We were all happy with the way it went. But then we ran head-on into network reality. Roger Mudd, the show’s host, was extremely negative about putting an “eco-terrorist” on the show. The executive producer caved (his son was right about him apparently). So this Abbey essay was put on the shelf and never aired. Abbey died 3 years later in March 1989.
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