Yes, cynicism is the stuff of skeptics, and skeptics tend not to write articles associating the physics community being "afire" - on fire; aflame; ablaze; eager and excited - about anything. Not to say they are not...
Wireddotcom |
OK, I'll give you "eager and excited." But trust me: your eager and excited is not the typical labs' "eager and excited." I assume "keenly interesting data" would not sell good copy, nor take public interests off the NBA finals or the latest singing/dance off.
Kevin Durant needs about 10 - 20 lbs to contest LeBron, or any other man mountain's 60 lb advantage. That's just physics (for next season)...The rest is coaching, and for tonight, the miraculous...
Postman's commentary (link to book follows) is described as a "21st century description in the 20th century." Published in 1985 - post the Orwell demarcation - cable news with CNN was just five years old. The Internet (not mentioned) was Zenith computer screens - big and bulky - sending the equivalent of what a teen can do with their thumbs and text messaging. There was no Facebook, Twitter, and blogging would have been the equivalent of exposing your diary to the world, of telling a freezing caveman about fire - Prometheus.
Kevin Durant needs about 10 - 20 lbs to contest LeBron, or any other man mountain's 60 lb advantage. That's just physics (for next season)...The rest is coaching, and for tonight, the miraculous...
Postman's commentary (link to book follows) is described as a "21st century description in the 20th century." Published in 1985 - post the Orwell demarcation - cable news with CNN was just five years old. The Internet (not mentioned) was Zenith computer screens - big and bulky - sending the equivalent of what a teen can do with their thumbs and text messaging. There was no Facebook, Twitter, and blogging would have been the equivalent of exposing your diary to the world, of telling a freezing caveman about fire - Prometheus.
And: if there was such a thing as "reality TV," its impact was not as great as a superbly written and engaging book.
From ― Neil Postman, Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business
Wired: Physics Community Afire With Rumors of Higgs Boson Discovery
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