Search Results: "The New York Times"
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11:14
Cooking in the Future Will Require Creativity. Here's One Solution. | NYT Opinion
154 views / 0 likes - addedThis is part three in “We’re Cooked,” a three-part series from NYT Opinion. Watch part one here: https://youtu.be/kOcLyyVyb6o , and part two here: https://youtu.be/m6xE7rieXU0 Mealworm soup. Chile-lime cricket tacos. Charred avocado tart
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16:19
In a Galaxy Far, Far Away, I Was Almost Anakin Skywalker | 'Almost Famous' by Op-Docs
229 views / 2 likes - addedIt was the late 1990s, and 3,000 young actors around the world were scouted for the role of a lifetime. On the ride home from school, Devon Michael’s mom told him he’d be auditioning for one of the most anticipated movies ever. “The Phan
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10:28
Meet the Ranchers Who Claim the Brazilian Amazon is Theirs to Burn | The Dispatch
372 views / 0 likes - addedWelcome to the lawless heart of the Brazilian Amazon. Here, cattle ranchers and loggers emboldened by President Jair Bolsonaro are clearing huge swaths of rainforest every minute. All in the name of progress.Assista ao vdeo com traduo selecionando legenda
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07:36
Secrets of Sesame Street Songwriting (Featuring Usher) | NYT
401 views / 0 likes - addedSesame Street has been teaching the ABCs for 50 years with music. Elmo, Usher and the writing team tell us how they create some of the best-known songs in educational media.Subscribe: http://bit.ly/U8Ys7nMore from The New York Times Video: http://nytimes.
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10:50
Where Are All the Bob Ross Paintings? We Found Them.
505 views / 3 likes - addedBob Ross painted more than 1,000 landscapes for his television show so why are they so hard to find? Solving one of the internets favorite little mysteries. Read more about Bob Ross: https://nyti.ms/2xIsshbWatched the video? Here are a few more details on
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02:19
Spinning Water Droplets That Seemingly Defy Physics | ScienceTake
361 views / 0 likes - addedChinese researchers have discovered a new way to make water droplets spin, creating a potential new kind of hydropower. Read the story here: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/26/science/water-droplets-dance.html Subscribe: http://bit.ly/U8Ys7n More from The
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08:03
Billie Eilish Makes Music Differently, Here's How | Diary of a Song
689 views / 1 likes - addedThe fastest-rising pop star of the moment is 17 and writes off-kilter hits with her older brother from their parents’ house. Breaking down Billie Eilish’s “Bury a Friend,” we show a new model for making it big. Subscribe: http://bit.ly/U8Ys7n More from Th
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02:56
Watch Zachary Levi Discover Superpowers in ‘Shazam!’ | Anatomy of a Scene
379 views / 0 likes - addedSo, you’ve discovered you’re a superhero. Now what? Many a comic-book origin story movie has had to answer this question, and “Shazam!” approaches it with both a light touch and a heavy splat. In this scene, Zachary Levi plays Billy, a boy recently imbued
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09:03
We’re Losing the War Against Bacteria, Here’s Why | NYT
325 views / 0 likes - addedBacteria are rebelling. They’re turning the tide against antibiotics by outsmarting our wonder drugs. This video explores the surprising reasons. Read the full story: https://nyti.ms/2G7LzXa Subscribe: http://bit.ly/U8Ys7n More from The New York Times Vid
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02:36
To Survive, This Bug Builds a House of Bubbles | ScienceTake
370 views / 0 likes - addedSpittlebugs feed on watery sap from plants and then excrete bubbly foam to create a protective fortress around themselves. Later, they emerge as adult froghoppers. Find out more in this week's episode of ScienceTake. Read the story here: https://www.nytim
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02:33
How ‘The Lego Movie 2’ Envisions the Apocalypse | Anatomy of a Scene
552 views / 0 likes - addedEverything is chaos. An early scene from “The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part” takes us far from the cheery, friendly and yes, awesome world of the first movie. Bricksburg has become Apocalypseburg, under attack by Duplo invaders shooting adorably destructi
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02:00
These Geckos Can Run on Water (Sort Of) | ScienceTake
363 views / 2 likes - addedThe list of animals that can race across water is short, but it has a new entry: the Asian house gecko. It uses a half-running, half-swimming motion to propel itself across water at great speeds. Scientists from the University of California, Berkeley, tes
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14:16
This Man Spends His Life Diving in Sewage — and Loves It | Op-Docs
430 views / 0 likes - addedThis week’s Op-Doc is “The Diver,” by Esteban Arrangoiz. Part four in “A Moment in Mexico,” our special six-part series of Op-Docs by Mexican directors, “The Diver” profiles a man who has found long lasting contentment in a dirty job: diving into the sewe
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01:28
Crickets Can Jump 50x Their Body Length, Here's How | ScienceTake
511 views / 0 likes - addedThe spider cricket, also known as the camel cricket, can leap 50 to 60 times its body length, but how? Researchers at Johns Hopkins University set up a series of high-speed cameras to find out. Read the story here: https://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/02/scien
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01:53
The Cockroach Karate Kick | ScienceTake
386 views / 1 likes - addedCockroaches deploy a stunning, and largely unstudied, karate-style kick to prevent wasp attacks. To find out more, scientists set up high-speed cameras and then set the two insects loose. Read the story here: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/27/science/coc
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01:08
How the Hummingbird Wields Its Snake-Like Tongue | ScienceTake
452 views / 1 likes - addedScientists at the University of Connecticut used high-speed cameras to investigate the mechanics of a hummingbird's tongue, which is forked at the end and works like a pump for retrieving nectar. Watch this 2015 episode of ScienceTake for more. Read the s
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01:32
Harnessing the Power of Gecko Feet | ScienceTake
536 views / 1 likes - addedFor ages, humanity has envied the gecko – at least its feet – which enable it to climb just about anything. A team at Stanford brought gecko power to the world with a climbing rig built around synthetic gecko-inspired adhesive pads. Watch this 2014 episod
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07:41 Popular
Sinking Islands, Floating Nation: Can Artificial Islands Save This Country? | Op-Docs
738 views / 0 likes - addedMatthieu Rytz’s “Sinking Islands, Floating Nation,” which paints a visually stunning portrait of Kiribati, an island nation in the central Pacific that is facing an existential threat from rising sea levels. The Op-Doc is a companion piece to Rytz’s featu
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09:14
How China Creates Cancer Refugees | NYT News
581 views / 0 likes - addedA rural resident in China is 30 percent more likely to die after a cancer diagnosis than an urban resident. Three rural families trying to beat these odds — “cancer refugees” — share their stories of battling the disease far from home and the financial ru
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02:00
How to Give a Spider an Eye Test | ScienceTake
474 views / 0 likes - addedJumping spiders have excellent vision. To test it, scientists attach a tiny hat to the spider's head and then set it in front of a special machine of which there are only two in the world. What they discovered is that the four sets of eyes all serve a dif
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01:20
This Snail Has a Jump on Climate Change | ScienceTake
424 views / 0 likes - addedThe humpback conch, known as a jumping snail, is great at sniffing out underwater predators and avoiding them. The creature’s sensitivity to danger led researchers to see how the snails might fare in warmer, more acidic seas that are predicted because of
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03:24
How Nancy Pelosi Became the Most Powerful Woman in U.S. Politics | NYT News
470 views / 0 likes - addedFor more than 15 years, Representative Nancy Pelosi has been a powerhouse fund-raiser for her party and a lightning rod for the right. Here’s how she’s done it. Subscribe: http://bit.ly/U8Ys7n More from The New York Times Video: http://nytimes.com/video -
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01:12
Harnessing the Power of 'Firenadoes' | ScienceTake
358 views / 1 likes - addedThis small, swirling blue flame, inspired by naturally occurring “firenadoes,” could one day help clean up oil spills. Find out more in this 2016 episode of ScienceTake. Read the story here: https://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/29/science/firenado-fire-whirl.h
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02:13
How Ants Sniff Out Food | ScienceTake
439 views / 0 likes - addedAnts use their antennas to sniff out food, and other ants. It’s how they make sense of the world. But how exactly do they use them? Find out in this week's episode of ScienceTake. Read the story here: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/22/science/ants-naviga
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02:24 Popular
‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ and How a Scene Crawled to Life | Anatomy of a Scene
739 views / 0 likes - addedIf you’ve seen a “Spider-Man” origin movie (there are plenty to choose from), you’ll know the scene. Boy meets spider. Spider bites boy. Boy becomes Spider-Man. But in the animated and Oscar-nominated hyperactive fantasia that is “Spider-Man: Into the Spi
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01:25
How Balloons Pop | ScienceTake
455 views / 1 likes - addedScientists analyzed how balloons explode by watching cracks spread through a bursting balloon in slow motion. Find out more in this 2015 episode of ScienceTake. Read the story here: https://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/23/science/a-side-serving-of-science-for-
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02:12
How These Hummingbirds Turned Their Beaks Into Swords | ScienceTake
391 views / 0 likes - addedIn the South American tropics, where hummingbirds must compete for food, evolution has drastically reshaped their bills. They are thicker and more rigid, often with a hook on the end. In some cases, they have jagged points, like rows of teeth — all the be
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02:23
The Science of Exploding Lava | ScienceTake
453 views / 0 likes - addedTo better understand the explosive reaction between water and lava, scientists from the University at Buffalo brewed their own lava. Here’s how they did it. Also, do not try this at home. Read the story here: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/08/scien
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02:16
Why Climate Change Is Making Hurricanes Worse | NYT News
588 views / 0 likes - addedRising ocean temperatures have fueled some of the most devastating storms in recent years. Kendra Pierre-Louis, a reporter on The New York Times’s climate team, explains how. Follow Hurricane Florence live updates: https://nyti.ms/2p72Bev Subscribe:
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01:32
The Strange Life of Garden Eels | ScienceTake
430 views / 0 likes - addedGarden eels live a strange life. They anchor themselves to the ocean floor using their own mucus, and contort into strange shapes and positions to catch plankton. Find out more about these weird and wonderful stay-at-home fish. Read the story here: https:
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04:55
Cassini Burns into Saturn After Grand Finale | Out There
663 views / 3 likes - addedNASA’s Cassini spacecraft will plunge into Saturn on September 15, incinerating itself after 20 years in space. Subscribe on YouTube:http://bit.ly/U8Ys7n Nasa's Cassini grand finale ends on September 15th as it will burn into Saturn. It's photos of
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07:32
What Happens Just Before Show Time At the Met Opera | The New York Times
595 views / 0 likes - addedWe walked through the Met with a steadicam on the busiest week of the year. Featuring: Misty Copeland, Toscanini’s head, wigs, harps and a snow yak. Read the story here: http://nyti.ms/2sZSpas Subscribe to the Times Video newsletter for free and get
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02:37 Popular
Step Into An Igloo For The First Day Of Summer | The Daily 360 | The New York Times
776 views / 0 likes - addedOn the first day of summer, watch an igloo being built in 360. Adami Sakiagak and Tiisi Qisiiq, Inuit in northern Canada, build igloos to teach the next generation the disappearing craft. By: Craig S. Smith, Kaitlyn Mullin, Maureen Towey Read the story he
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