What Happened to the Truth? – aish.com Personal Growth, Featured, Spirituality – Aish.com

Destroying lives through false accusations, innuendo and distortions has never been easier.

In his book Other Peoples Money and How Bankers Use It, Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis famously wrote, Publicity is justly commended as a remedy for social and industrial diseases. Sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants. Shining a spotlight on an issue can expose and reveal corruption, dishonesty, fraud or abuse that otherwise might go unnoticed, ignored, or even excused. Brandeis wrote these words well before the Internet was a thought in anyones mind and he likely could not have even dreamt of the sunlight it would shine and the accountability it would generate.

The capacity for instant access to information also makes us better informed, allows us to think more critically, and empowers us to ask crucial questions that make us safer, healthier, and stronger. If you want to know more about your doctors education, read reviews of your landscaper, or see what your childs teacher posts on Facebook, the endless information is now just a click away.

Unfiltered sunlight can also be harmful, toxic, and cause cancer.

Brandeis was absolutely correct. Sunlight is indeed a great disinfectant. The internet has sanitized our world by holding people accountable for their behavior, choices, actions, positions, and writings. But what Brandeis didnt mention is that unfiltered sunlight can also be harmful, toxic, and cause cancer.

There has never been a greater vehicle to disseminate gossip and slander than the internet. Lives have been literally destroyed because of false accusations, innuendo, distortions, and untruths. Once upon a time thoughts, ideas, and opinions were only printed if they had merit and were deemed worthy and carefully screened by a publisher. Journalists had to vet their stories and fact checkers confirmed all assertions before an article went to print. While the system wasnt perfect, the result was authors gained credibility and readership based on their education, expertise, experience, and peer review.

Today, anyone can publish his or her ideas and opinions and even his or her version of facts with no expertise or credentials and with no consequence or accountability. Readership and popularity are often a function of salaciousness and sensationalism, not truth and accuracy.

Readers have an enormous burden to be vigilant and judicious before blindly accepting everything.

In his book, The Death of Expertise: The Campaign Against Established Knowledge and Why it Matters, Thomas M. Nichols elucidates this concept: People are now exposed to more information than ever before, provided both by technology and by increasing access to every level of education. These societal gains, however, have also helped fuel a surge in narcissistic and misguided intellectual egalitarianism that has crippled informed debates on any number of issues. Today, everyone knows everything: with only a quick trip through WebMD or Wikipedia, average citizens believe themselves to be on an equal intellectual footing with doctors and diplomats. All voices, even the most ridiculous, demand to be taken with equal seriousness, and any claim to the contrary is dismissed as undemocratic elitism.

All of this places an enormous burden on us, the readers and consumers of information, to be vigilant and judicious before blindly accepting everything we come across in print, online, or in person. Especially in the information age, we must ask ourselves, who is the author or speaker of these words? What authority or credibility do they have? How does what they are saying match up with what I know about the person, place, or issue being discussed? Is there another side to this story? Do I have all the facts and information to draw a conclusion?

The Torah instructs us to distance ourselves from falsehood. The Talmud says that Gods insignia is truth. To be Godly one must have ferocious loyalty and fidelity to the truth. Exaggerating, distorting and bending the truth distance us and alienate us from the Almighty.

When it comes to lying, it isnt enough to be committed to the truth and devoted to never lying, but one must distance themselves completely from lies and from liars.

The burden of making sure that the internet functions as a disinfectant and not as a toxin is on the readers and consumers of its content. We must be judicious, careful, and extremely vigilant, not only in what we write, but in how we process and accept what we read.

There is another danger of non-judicious consumption of what is available on the internet. Even when what is being reported is true, is it our business, do we need to know, will the knowledge help us or hurt others? The craving for salacious details and the appetite to know the story emanates from a unhealthy sense of inquisitiveness and our insatiable need to be in the know.

This phenomenon expresses itself in many scenarios. When some hear about a couple getting divorced, their first response is what happened? as if they are entitled to a report about the most personal and private details of a couple and often children going through a difficult time.

Many pay a shiva call and feel a need to ask, How did he or she die? Certainly the mourner is free to volunteer the cause of death if they like, but is it really our business and do we truly need to know?

When we ask, Why did he lose his job? or why did they break their engagement? or why is she still single? are we asking because we care about them, or is finding out somehow satisfying something in ourselves?

Judaism places great value on peoples right to privacy.

For some, the need to know stems from a sense of information is power. Information is social currency and the more we know, the richer and more powerful we are. For others, the need to know stems from an inability to live with tension or mystery. And yet, for others, the need to know is similar to whatever draws us to slow down and look at the accident on the highway even though it has nothing to do with us at all and only creates traffic for others.

Judaism places great value on peoples right to privacy. Jewish law demands that we conduct ourselves with the presumption that all that we are told even in pedestrian conversation is to be held in confidence unless it is explicitly articulated that we are free to repeat what we heard. We are forbidden to look into a neighbors property in a way that violates their privacy. We are instructed not to spread gossip, even if the information is absolutely true and entirely accurate. The Talmud (Bava Metzia 23b) goes so far as to tell us that we are permitted to distort the truth in circumstances that someone is prying for information that is none of their business and that they are not entitled to have.

The internet can be a great resource and blessing in our lives but the burden is on us to remain vigilant not to assume everything we read is true, or to read even things that are true, just because they are available to us.

Excerpt from:

What Happened to the Truth? - aish.com Personal Growth, Featured, Spirituality - Aish.com

IT SEEMS TO ME: In support of the right to decide – Leader-Telegram

Country

United States of AmericaUS Virgin IslandsUnited States Minor Outlying IslandsCanadaMexico, United Mexican StatesBahamas, Commonwealth of theCuba, Republic ofDominican RepublicHaiti, Republic ofJamaicaAfghanistanAlbania, People's Socialist Republic ofAlgeria, People's Democratic Republic ofAmerican SamoaAndorra, Principality ofAngola, Republic ofAnguillaAntarctica (the territory South of 60 deg S)Antigua and BarbudaArgentina, Argentine RepublicArmeniaArubaAustralia, Commonwealth ofAustria, Republic ofAzerbaijan, Republic ofBahrain, Kingdom ofBangladesh, People's Republic ofBarbadosBelarusBelgium, Kingdom ofBelizeBenin, People's Republic ofBermudaBhutan, Kingdom ofBolivia, Republic ofBosnia and HerzegovinaBotswana, Republic ofBouvet Island (Bouvetoya)Brazil, Federative Republic ofBritish Indian Ocean Territory (Chagos Archipelago)British Virgin IslandsBrunei DarussalamBulgaria, People's Republic ofBurkina FasoBurundi, Republic ofCambodia, Kingdom ofCameroon, United Republic ofCape Verde, Republic ofCayman IslandsCentral African RepublicChad, Republic ofChile, Republic ofChina, People's Republic ofChristmas IslandCocos (Keeling) IslandsColombia, Republic ofComoros, Union of theCongo, Democratic Republic ofCongo, People's Republic ofCook IslandsCosta Rica, Republic ofCote D'Ivoire, Ivory Coast, Republic of theCyprus, Republic ofCzech RepublicDenmark, Kingdom ofDjibouti, Republic ofDominica, Commonwealth ofEcuador, Republic ofEgypt, Arab Republic ofEl Salvador, Republic ofEquatorial Guinea, Republic ofEritreaEstoniaEthiopiaFaeroe IslandsFalkland Islands (Malvinas)Fiji, Republic of the Fiji IslandsFinland, Republic ofFrance, French RepublicFrench GuianaFrench PolynesiaFrench Southern TerritoriesGabon, Gabonese RepublicGambia, Republic of theGeorgiaGermanyGhana, Republic ofGibraltarGreece, Hellenic RepublicGreenlandGrenadaGuadaloupeGuamGuatemala, Republic ofGuinea, RevolutionaryPeople's Rep'c ofGuinea-Bissau, Republic ofGuyana, Republic ofHeard and McDonald IslandsHoly See (Vatican City State)Honduras, Republic ofHong Kong, Special Administrative Region of ChinaHrvatska (Croatia)Hungary, Hungarian People's RepublicIceland, Republic ofIndia, Republic ofIndonesia, Republic ofIran, Islamic Republic ofIraq, Republic ofIrelandIsrael, State ofItaly, Italian RepublicJapanJordan, Hashemite Kingdom ofKazakhstan, Republic ofKenya, Republic ofKiribati, Republic ofKorea, Democratic People's Republic ofKorea, Republic ofKuwait, State ofKyrgyz RepublicLao People's Democratic RepublicLatviaLebanon, Lebanese RepublicLesotho, Kingdom ofLiberia, Republic ofLibyan Arab JamahiriyaLiechtenstein, Principality ofLithuaniaLuxembourg, Grand Duchy ofMacao, Special Administrative Region of ChinaMacedonia, the former Yugoslav Republic ofMadagascar, Republic ofMalawi, Republic ofMalaysiaMaldives, Republic ofMali, Republic ofMalta, Republic ofMarshall IslandsMartiniqueMauritania, Islamic Republic ofMauritiusMayotteMicronesia, Federated States ofMoldova, Republic ofMonaco, Principality ofMongolia, Mongolian People's RepublicMontserratMorocco, Kingdom ofMozambique, People's Republic ofMyanmarNamibiaNauru, Republic ofNepal, Kingdom ofNetherlands AntillesNetherlands, Kingdom of theNew CaledoniaNew ZealandNicaragua, Republic ofNiger, Republic of theNigeria, Federal Republic ofNiue, Republic ofNorfolk IslandNorthern Mariana IslandsNorway, Kingdom ofOman, Sultanate ofPakistan, Islamic Republic ofPalauPalestinian Territory, OccupiedPanama, Republic ofPapua New GuineaParaguay, Republic ofPeru, Republic ofPhilippines, Republic of thePitcairn IslandPoland, Polish People's RepublicPortugal, Portuguese RepublicPuerto RicoQatar, State ofReunionRomania, Socialist Republic ofRussian FederationRwanda, Rwandese RepublicSamoa, Independent State ofSan Marino, Republic ofSao Tome and Principe, Democratic Republic ofSaudi Arabia, Kingdom ofSenegal, Republic ofSerbia and MontenegroSeychelles, Republic ofSierra Leone, Republic ofSingapore, Republic ofSlovakia (Slovak Republic)SloveniaSolomon IslandsSomalia, Somali RepublicSouth Africa, Republic ofSouth Georgia and the South Sandwich IslandsSpain, Spanish StateSri Lanka, Democratic Socialist Republic ofSt. HelenaSt. Kitts and NevisSt. LuciaSt. Pierre and MiquelonSt. Vincent and the GrenadinesSudan, Democratic Republic of theSuriname, Republic ofSvalbard & Jan Mayen IslandsSwaziland, Kingdom ofSweden, Kingdom ofSwitzerland, Swiss ConfederationSyrian Arab RepublicTaiwan, Province of ChinaTajikistanTanzania, United Republic ofThailand, Kingdom ofTimor-Leste, Democratic Republic ofTogo, Togolese RepublicTokelau (Tokelau Islands)Tonga, Kingdom ofTrinidad and Tobago, Republic ofTunisia, Republic ofTurkey, Republic ofTurkmenistanTurks and Caicos IslandsTuvaluUganda, Republic ofUkraineUnited Arab EmiratesUnited Kingdom of Great Britain & N. IrelandUruguay, Eastern Republic ofUzbekistanVanuatuVenezuela, Bolivarian Republic ofViet Nam, Socialist Republic ofWallis and Futuna IslandsWestern SaharaYemenZambia, Republic ofZimbabwe

Read more:

IT SEEMS TO ME: In support of the right to decide - Leader-Telegram

David Halvini’s Great Light | David Novak – First Things

Any Jew who survived the Holocaust is a brand plucked from the fire (Zechariah 3:2). That is especially true of any European Jew, and even more so of any European Jew who survived the worst of the Holocaust: Auschwitz and then the Death March to Mauthausen in 1945. One such survivor was a sixteen-year-old youth named David Weiss from Sighet, Romania. Some of his fellow townspeople might have anticipated that this boy prodigy might become the world-renowned Jewish scholar that he did become. But in 1944 (the year he was brought to Auschwitz), they could not be sure that he would live at all, let alone live and remain even more devoted to the Torah and its attendant Jewish tradition than he had been in childhood. But he not only survivedhe prevailed. He became the great light of many lives.

He arrived in America in 1947 as a refugee and eventually found his way to the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York. Immediately upon receiving his second rabbinical ordination and his doctorate, he joined the Talmud faculty there. He eventually hebraized his surname Weiss to Halivni (both meaning white), though he retained Weiss as his middle name. After leaving the seminary in the 1980s due to its serious departure from normative Jewish tradition (Halakhah), he held a chair especially established for him at Columbia University. He also founded the Union for Traditional Judaism, and became the dean of its rabbinical school, the Institute of Traditional Judaism. Upon his retirement from Columbia, he emigrated to Israel, where many came to consult him and benefit from his profound wisdom and empathy. On June 29, he died in Jerusalem at age 94..

Two points stand out in his remarkable life and career. In his scholarly career, Professor Halivni revolutionized the study of the Talmud by uncovering its complicated editing, whereby original sources were reworked, sometimes radically, by later, anonymous editors. More and more students of the Talmud (and they are legion) have adopted and employed his method in their study of this often difficult, even enigmatic, text. Indeed, a Jesuit friend of mine once called the Talmud the most layered text he had ever studied.

In his life, though, Rabbi Halivni was much more than an extraordinary academic. As an instructor of the Torah, and personally committed to its teaching, he showed that not only did his body survive the Holocaust, his soul survived it, too. Indeed, he more than survivedhe flourished. His light ignited many other souls as well. His faith, to be sure, was complex and sometimes involved intense struggle. Of course, there is plenty of precedent for this in Jewish tradition (a l Genesis 32:28, Israel means one who struggles with God). Rabbi Halivni was constantly troubled by why God hadnt rescued so many Jews (including his entire family) during the Holocaust. Nevertheless, he was always convinced that his survival in particular was for the sake of the Torah. His raison dtre was always to plumb the depths of Gods Torah and share his insights with his fellow Jewsand with interested gentiles as well. He did all this with exceptional grace and warmth.

I treasure every one of my many encounters with this great man over the more than sixty years that I knew him. During this period of mourning, I am trying very hard to recall as many of them as possible. His mark on my life and work is indelible. And My servant David is a prince in their midst (Ezekiel 34:24). Who David Weiss Halivni was for us in this world, we hope he will also be for us in the world-yet-to-come. For now, we have to be somehow content with only the memory of him.

David Novakholds the J. Richard and Dorothy Shiff Chair of Jewish Studies at the University of Toronto.

First Thingsdepends on its subscribers and supporters. Join the conversation and make a contribution today.

Clickhereto make a donation.

Clickhereto subscribe toFirst Things.

Photo by Thaler Tamas via Creative Commons. Image cropped.

Excerpt from:

David Halvini's Great Light | David Novak - First Things

The 125 greatest Jewish movie scenes of all time (101-125) – Forward

Scenes from "Inglorious Basterds," "Funny Girl" and "Der Dybbuk" capture a Jewish je ne sais quoi. Photo by Angelie Zaslavsky

By PJ GrisarJuly 01, 2022

Bar mitzvah boy Danny is stoned, but has navigated his rite of passage successfully and, as the movie approaches its bleak climax, he is allowed into old Rabbi Marshaks inner sanctum. There, the old, white-bearded rabbi, with an almost inscrutably European accent delivers a koan-like statement on life: When the truth is found / to be lies / and all the joy within you / dies / dont you want somebody to love? Its a gorgeous bit of old world wisdom except that its not really. The rabbi, with a transistor radio in his ear, is quoting Jefferson Airplane and goes on to list, with Dannys help, the members of the band as if Marty Balin and Paul Kantner were Talmudic sages. (DF)

Danielle (Rachel Sennott), spends much of this films hour-and-a-half runtime slowly breaking down as she grapples with her impending college graduation, her queerness and her parents expectations. But toward the end, when she has a breakdown and knocks a stack of prayer books onto the floor, stunning the roomful of mourners into silence, she finally seems to realize the gravity of the moment, kissing each siddur as she carefully replaces it onto the table. After spending the film lashing out against her community, the moment makes it clear that Danielle is still deeply rooted in her Judaism. (MF)

Kaveh Nabatians feature debut is a sensory overload in the best way possible, melding orange-tinted Bolex footage, ballet and extreme close-ups of chickens about to be killed in a Santeria ritual. In the middle of the vertiginous tale of Afro-Cuban ballerino Leonardo and the Iranian-Jewish Canadian Nasim, whom he exploits for a visa, is something rarely committed to film: a Mizrahi brit milah with ululating women and more than a smattering of Farsi from the crowd. Leonardo, despite his own Santeria practice, appears taken aback by this display. In interviews, Nabatian emphasized the importance of showing Iranian Jewish customs in the film, and cast his own father as Nassims dad (and the sandek).

Its a funny tidbit that a Harvard Jewish frat party played a pivotal role in the development of Facebook. A side effect of it is that the movie The Social Network recreates for all eternity what an early 2000s AEPi Caribbean night was like. Otherwise, the awkward dancing to calypso music and creepy banter of Jewish comp cci majors ogling Asian coeds would be lost forever. Most cringeworthy is when Brazilian Jewish Facebook founder Eduardo Saverin explains why Jewish men are attracted to Asian women: Theyre hot, smart, not Jewish and can dance. (AS)

Rebuked by his people, abandoned by his allies, and sold out by his worthless brother Adonijah, Israels deposed King Solomon (Yul Brynner) prepares to make his final stand against the advancing Egyptian army. With his forces severely depleted and outnumbered, Solomon faces what looks like certain defeat. But as the Egyptians begin their westward charge, Solomons soldiers raise their polished shields to the rising sun in the east, blinding their opponents and sending them plummeting en masse into a massive chasm in front of the Israeli lines. Never underestimate the wisdom of Solomon! (DE)

Toward the end of Alain Resnais biopic about the infamous Russian-born Jewish conman Serge Alexandre Stavisky (Jean-Paul Belmondo), the well-connected swindlers associates reveal their true colors. Learning the police are searching his Paris apartment and that his grift will soon come undone, Staviskys right-hand man, Borelli, doesnt mince words about their future together. We dont know you anymore, he says, going on to growl that Staviskys crimes prove you should never trust foreigners refugees Jews. As this disavowal proceeds with a rare film score by Stephen Sondheim the camera turns around Stavisky, the weight of his outsider status finally dawning on him. He is the Jew on display and, now that hes outlived his usefulness, he will become the scapegoat.

Dr. Felix Klauber (Ricardo Cortez) has left the old neighborhood to treat Park Avenue hypochondriacs in a swanky office with a battery of receptionists. His childhood sweetheart, Jessica (Irene Dunne), walks into Felixs new practice like shes entering the Land of Oz, baffled by how far hes come from his principles and shocked when shes told he never sees anyone except by appointment. When she manages to get an audience, she berates him in biblical terms for selling his birthright (a family clinic) for a mess of pottage. Youve forgotten the ghetto, all your fine promises, she says. (CR)

The marked difference of the Israeli protagonist of Nadav Lapids film is noted almost immediately by his new neighbors in Paris. When the pair find him unconscious in the tub, one of them does a quick appraisal: circumcised. As Forward contributing film critic Daniel Witkin noted in his review, this is but one of the films phallocentric instances of wherever you go, there you are.

When you think of Golden Age stars who knew some Yiddish, Jimmy Cagney may not seem like a top-line candidate. He should. In an immediately iconic moment in Roy Del Ruths film, Cagneys Matt Nolan offers a ride (in the mameloshn) to a frustrated Yiddish-speaker asking an Irish cop for directions. What part of Ireland did your folks come from? asks the gobsmacked policeman. Delancey Street, thank you, Cagney answers with a smirk.

Yiddish Art Theater founder Maurice Schwartz, who wrote, directed and starred in this adaptation of Sholem Aleichems Tevye stories, brought a certain anti-gentile animus to bear on the story of Chavas interfaith marriage. And given the timing 1939 who could blame him? In this telling, Chava leaves her husband and cruel in-laws when an antisemitic edict forces Tevya to leave the village. Petitioning her father to rejoin the family, she cries, Your old belief is truer, deeper. Now I finally know my soul belongs to you. Where you are, I am. Of course the old softie takes her back.

Moses and the Israelites observe a proto-Passover Seder in Cecil B. DeMilles second crack at Exodus. Its a chilling sequence. Outside the huts of the Hebrew camp, the angel of death is killing the Egyptian firstborns. The cries of their parents can be heard as Moses nephew Eleazar questions his uncle about the unleavened bread on the table. Moses explanation is interrupted by the frantic whinnying of a horse outside. The horrors of the scene beyond these walls recalls the countless Jews who risked death to observe their Seders only at this one point in history are they the safe ones. A stoic Moses tells Eleazar to always remember, He passed over your house.

Ernst Lubitschs uproarious backstage comedy culminates in a feat of stunning stagecraft as Jack Bennys Joseph Tura places a fake beard on a corpse and passes for a dead Nazi double agent. As Jackson Arn notes in his essay, the sequence is delightful for reducing a Gestapo officer from from swagger to pathetic groveling in under three minutes, and all it takes is a theater prop.

No one has ever enjoyed making fun of Hitler as much as Mel Brooks. Both in his award-winning movie/musical/musical-movie, The Producers and in this remake of the Ernst Lubitsch comedy of the same name, Hitler is a ridiculous, yet pivotal, character. In a musical comedy sketch, Brooks, as the leader of a Polish theater ensemble, plays Hitler as a singing, dancing, insecure dictator who wants a little peace. Of Poland that is.

The only way to get even with anybody is to ridicule them. So, the only real way I could get even with Hitler and company was to bring them down with laughter. Mel Brooks on Inside Comedy

Its one of the most famous pieces of writing by one of the quintessential Jewish writers: A traveler comes to a gate and asks the gatekeeper to let him pass; the gatekeeper refuses, and years pass, the traveler refusing to accept that hell never be allowed further. For his interpretation of Kafkas Before the Law parable, Orson Welles had the brilliant idea of using pin-screen animation instead of actors,to make the parables meaning even more inscrutable (the exclusion of Jews from a Christian society? the torturous, Talmudic maze of Judaism itself?). Maimonides wrote that he believed in the coming of the mashiach, and though he may tarry, still I await him every day. In the prologue to The Trial, Kafka and Welles seem to ask, What if he tarries forever? (JA)

In the middle of Josh and Benny Safdies white-knuckler, theres a moment of reprieve as overleveraged jeweler Howard Ratner (Adam Sandler) smokes cigars with his father-in-law (Judd Hircsh) after a Seder, talking basketball and the price of an opal. Suddenly, a column of children files into the room darting around the furniture. This ritual blurs by without explanation, but Jews know. These kids are looking for the afikomen and are on the make just like their dad.

In a chilling sequence, a Jewish doctor (Yiddish-Soviet actor Veniamin Zuskin) and his gentile friends part ways. The non-Jews go in the direction of a cemetery, with a casket; a column of countless Ukrainian Jews wend their way to a mass grave. Filmed on site at Babyn Yar, director Marc Donskoi shows the massacre by machine gun in unflinching detail. Men, women and children fall in the ravine as storm clouds roll overhead. Several years after this was shot, Babyn Yar would be filled with waste from a brick factory; in 1952, the films star, Zuskin, would be executed on the Night of Murdered Poets.

Gidi Dars drama, written by and starring Shuli Rand and his wife, Michal Bat-Sheva Rand, was Shtisel before Shtisel and without all the fake payot. In a transcendent moment, the childless Moshe confides to God that he is profoundly sad. He is, in fact, a lump of sadness. He cant afford to celebrate Sukkot. He wonders aloud why God hasnt repaid his devotion and, even more so, that of his wife, Mali. Moshe sits on a park bench, clapping his hands for his lucky day. His fervent prayers are intercut with a scene in an office, where we learn a charity has 1,000 spare shekels meant for a man who died. Its a Sukkot miracle. Too bad that convicts will interrupt Moshe and Malis chag.

From the early days of Yiddish talkies, this film, helmed by Sidney Goldin, is a thrilling display of some of the greatest cantorial voices of the time including Mordechai Hershman, Joseph Shlisky, Yoselle Rosenblatt (the film was released the year after he died) and more. The most compelling scene and, sadly, one which has long been missing from surviving prints is of legendary cantor/composer Zeidel Rovner, who, at the age of 78, was one of the oldest professional hazzanim. He is joined by Shaya Engelhart, the youngest cantorial sensation, in a beautiful rendition of Rovners setting of a Tisha Bav prayer. (HS)

Midway through Christopher Guests mockumentary about community theater, dentist-turned-actor Dr. Allan Pearl reflects on the entertaining bug he inherited from his grandfather Chaim Pearlgut, an erstwhile star in New Yorks Yiddish theater scene. Black and white lithographs flash across the screen, filled with noses the size of grapefruits and costumes straight from the shtetl. But what was the production that made Chaim a star? It was, of course, the sardonically irreverent play Dybbuk, Shmybuck: I Said More Ham. (JZ)

Ill have what shes having, says Estelle Reiner, the directors mom.

Its always a volatile moment when the bride and groom are lifted up in chairs at a Jewish wedding. In this Argentinian movie by Jewish screenwriter Damin Szifron, the bride suspects her new husband of infidelities and its when the klezmer band starts playing that everything spins out of control. (AS)

Barbra Streisand wrote, directed, and stars in this musical about the girl whose father gives her a Talmudic education reserved for men. After his death she continues her study dressed as Anshel, a male Yeshiva student, secretly in love with classmate, Avigdor (Mandy Patinkin). During Shabbat dinner at the home of Avigdors fiancee, Hadas (Amy Irving), Yentl/Anshel has a rare moment of double consciousness: She is both a woman admiring another woman and a man appreciating that womans submissiveness. No wonder, he loves her, she sings in an inner monologue. The moment she sees him, her thought is to please him. (CR)

While this justly celebrated musical rom-com, featuring the irrepressible gamine Molly Picon, is brimming with memorable scenes, with songs penned by her and musical collaborator Abe Ellstein, the most underrated sequence features co-star Dora Fakiel. Fakiel is in the street, singing Oy, hert zikh ayn, mayne libe mentshn (Please Hear Me Out, Good People), a heartbreakingly poignant and metaphoric ballad, oozing with lush modal movement whose lyrics ask, How such a small fiddle can contain so much pain? (HS)

In this parody of the Universal monster movies, Gene Wilder plays the grandson of Dr. Frankenstein, and corrects people when they mispronounce his last name. Its not Franken-stein, but rather the more Anglo-sounding Fronk-en-steen. Brooks gag highlights the trend in which American Jews changed their last names to avoid prejudice and to better their social position. (JK)

In a scene that became instantly iconic, soldier Daffi (Nelly Tagar), hoping to leave her remote outpost, holds a stapler to her temple. Thats the only way Ill get any attention, she insists. No one at her base is impressed and the stapler is empty. Kill yourself first and then well report it, says one of her comrades, as Daffi moves on to attempt suicide with even more office supplies.

Thus concludes our list of the 125 greatest Jewish movie scenes. But as with so many Jewish texts, there is room for vigorous debate, commentary and supplements. If you think we missed something (and were certain we did) feel free to send an email to Grisar@Forward.com.

Go here to see the original:

The 125 greatest Jewish movie scenes of all time (101-125) - Forward

In Defense of Wasting Time: On C. Thi Nguyen’s Games: Agency As Art – lareviewofbooks

I PLAY GAMES: video and board games. Im ashamed of it, and ashamed that Im ashamed ashamed because such games carry an air of childishness and frivolity, and ashamed at my shame because, well, why should anyone care? But I do care, so I play my games in private, sitting in my bowl of feelings, engaged but discreet.

C. Thi Nguyens Games: Agency As Art is about games, and about why nobody should be ashamed of them playing them, designing them, or discussing them with other adults. I read the book, and I stopped being ashamed. Unfortunately, I dont know what a game is anymore. This is a review about that.

The first thing that struck me about Nguyens book is what it did not say, the place where it did not begin. For more than half a century, games video games especially have been blamed for everything from hooliganism to school shootings. Studies to the contrary notwithstanding, the weight of these accusations is felt in every serious conversation about the activity; despite the artistry in modern game design, non-gamers still dont ask, Are they good? but only, Are they safe? For all of the industrys users and the numbers are indeed massive this flavor of pastime is still stuck on the far side of respectability. At work you might talk about Succession, but not Animal Crossing.

Nguyen, a philosopher at the University of Utah, is not interested in engaging in this debate. Instead, his book addresses a critique that seems more minor but is ultimately harder to shake: that even if games arent bad, they are certainly a waste of time; they are simply a voluntary attempt to overcome unnecessary obstacles in the words of Bernard Suits (quoted early in the book) the operative word being unnecessary. Furthermore, games offer nothing that could not be provided through some more worthy pursuit.

Now, even amateur gamers will intuit that this cant be true, but Nguyens philosophical firepower is directed at explaining why it is not true. If you think games are a waste of time, argues Nguyen, it is only because you have fundamentally misunderstood how humans decide to spend their lives. Specifically, you have forgotten about interactive experiences, and it is the creation of exquisitely personal interactive experiences that separates games from all other pursuits.

It is in shoring up the human desire for experiences that Nguyen makes his most profound observation: yes, humans think in terms of means and ends, but the latter is sometimes just an excuse for the former. Sure, sometimes our ends dictate our means I go to the store so I can satiate my hunger but just as often we select ends because the means themselves are appealing. A person who sets forth on a long hike through a national park, on a trail that will deposit them exactly where they started, is clearly using get to the end as a thin excuse to have a glorious day. A college student playing the board game Settlers of Catan only ever cares about acquiring sheep and wheat cards because those goals allow her to have an experience with friends. Many modern board games are more fun if youre bad at them, and a father playing Checkers against his child might not be trying to win at all. Goals, argues Nguyen, can be enduring I brush my teeth because I want them to remain healthy but they can just as easily be conveniences, assumed to enable an experience, and quickly discarded once the experience concludes.

But Nguyen then takes it a step further: if games are enjoyable experiences propped up by flimsy objectives, and if games are judged by their enjoyability, then game design is the art of engineering paths to success that make for a pleasurable, beautiful experiences. The game designers special tool to do this is the rule, which confines the player to a particular set of choices and win conditions. Because of this, games arent always pleasant to observe; some, like those that make you strap a VR headset to your face, are downright off-putting. But this is fine; unlike music or film, the aesthetics of games unfold through doing, not looking (though millions of Twitch streams might disagree on this point). Sometimes you just have to be there.

Its the intentional use of well-crafted goals to create unique experiences that makes games special. Every game, from Candy Land to Call of Duty, places the gamer in the position of agent, responsible to perform, to choose. We adore games because we adore being agents; we like making choices, we like sitting in someone elses chair, and we especially like the rule-based constraints that force our choices to be blissfully less complicated than actual life. Nguyen also makes the keen insight that we like our games to be just hard enough to make us feel that we have used our all to win; it is games like these that grant us the ever-elusive sense of achievement.

Good books have a funny way of making trouble for themselves. As I read Games, I found myself agreeing; as I read more, I found myself agreeing too much. The core problem of Games is that Nguyens answer is stronger than his question, and as the book proceeds it becomes more and more difficult to understand why the book should focus on the things we traditionally call games in the first place. With the concept aesthetic striving play, Nguyen gives us a way of finding games in all corners of our lives and if its no longer shameful to do so, why not call those things games, too?

Im asking this question abstractly, but Im thinking about it in terms of one text, a passage derived from the Talmud that celebrates the righteousness of Jewish pastimes above all others.

We are thankful to you, our God, for putting our lot among those who sit in the study hall and not among those who sit on the corners. We get up early and they get up early: we get up early for Torah, and they get up early for frivolous things. We work and they work. We work and are rewarded; they work and are not rewarded. We run and they run. We run to a life in the World to Come, and they run to an empty chasm.

But why should this be so? Following Nguyen, the cacophony of the beit midrash, the study hall, is not much different from a busy night at the board game caf: both are forms of aesthetic striving, both involve friendly competition, and neither is designed to make anything. Indeed, the idea that Torah study is a form of play helps example both why it is so beloved in certain Jewish communities and why people who are not engaged in that learning find it so hard to appreciate; it is, in the parlance of the Talmud, supposed to be done lshma, for its own sake. To take it further: Why not imagine all religious ritual as a kind of game or even all secular ritual? Why should we not situate ourselves in a world full of games?

Nguyen acknowledges this extension but seems hesitant to pursue it. Toward the beginning of the book he gestures at Johan Huizinga, whose 1938 book Homo Ludens did in fact make the case that games are genetically linked to rituals, performances, and all sorts of activities that take place within the so-called magic circle, in which the normal rules of life are suspended and we enter what the book Ritual and Its Consequences calls an as if or could be universe. Nguyen says that he thinks games are different, but he never really gets around to explaining how. If anything, Nguyen acknowledges the fuzziness of his category: late in the book he warns against companies that gamify employee work goals, providing a fantasy of value clarity that obscures the essential messiness of the real world. In an interview with Ezra Klein, he notes that QAnon and other conspiracy theories have turned American politics into research that serves as a kind of self-fashioned puzzle box. If we are willing to admit it, life is full of games. The people who worry that games will remove us from reality need not be concerned; in the modern world, there is no unified reality from which we can be removed.

This actually strengthens Nguyens case for the categorys importance because it addresses the books other major fault: its inability to recognize that the reversal of means and ends is never permanent, that the two run into each other constantly and that this confusion of means and ends is a basic element of our emotional lives. Consider it: the football player whose college scholarship is riding on the outcome of a match. The almost comical number of video games that are metaphors for depression. The trauma survivor who plays Candy Crush to ease his symptoms. The concept of the sore loser. Such messiness has already motivated more than one academic critique of the book, and while Nguyen tries to accommodate them by putting up taxonomies, the simpler solution is simply that games are porous to reality and will always be so.

Of course, it is still possible to waste ones time. Ironically, Nguyens defense of unnecessary obstacles allows us to evaluate whether the particular unnecessary obstacle weve selected is well chosen. No defense of games will shake off the idea that some people are getting up early for frivolous things, are running toward an empty chasm. There will never be agreement on how best to live life; life, as Nguyen tells us, is too complicated for that. In a game, for once in my life, I know exactly what it is that Im supposed to be doing, he says. I feel this. There is never any shame in finding ones purpose.

Follow this link:

In Defense of Wasting Time: On C. Thi Nguyen's Games: Agency As Art - lareviewofbooks

Inheriting America, then choosing America | Jon Spira-Savett | The Blogs – The Times of Israel

This week, I printed out a copy of the declaration of intent to become a United States citizen made by my great-grandfather, Wolf Landsman, in the city court of Utica, New York. My sister Ellen found this document a few years ago, which is dated July 8, 1893.

In it, my great-grandfather declares that he renounces all allegiance to the czar of Russia, which I cant imagine was very difficult for him. What was difficult for him was English. The document is filled out in beautiful handwriting, but not his; it belongs to Clarence Stetson, a court clerk who, a couple of decades later, became president of the Common Council, Uticas city council. Mr. Stetsons impeccable penmanship records Wolf Landsmans city of birth in Russia, though it looks to me like the clerk just made up some approximation of what he heard my great-grandfather say. All my great-grandfather could do was mark an X.

Wolf Landsman was 18 years old when he landed in New York City, and he was 21 years old when he came to the court in Utica for this declaration, and thanks to him and my other seven great-grandparents, 130 years ago, give or take, I am a citizen of the United States of America.

When I was 21 years old, I decided to leave the United States, and while I was still 21, I decided once and for all not to. I turned 21 in Israel, living for a year in fulfillment of an intention I declared when I was just about to turn 18. On July 8, 1988, 95 years after Wolf Landsmans declaration of intent to become an American citizen, I was in between, just back to the States and with a plan to spend the next seven years studying before I would make aliyah. But sometime in the last two months of my age, I realized I still wanted to be American.

Two things happened that fall when I returned to college from my year away. One was I met a girl, who is now my wife.

The other is a bit harder to describe, because it has to do with ideas. I realized that the ideas I found most compelling, even after a year in Israel, were American ideas, and the questions that I couldnt stop talking about were American questions.

The life of my mind was American. What I found engrossing was: freedom and individuality, and how freedom and individuality are the biggest challenges to community and the soil in which community grows or does not grow. And how freedom and individuality are the biggest challenges to figuring out how much we are responsible for one another, which is the fundamental question of politics and government.

I was utterly surprised to discover that I was still American deep down, after a year in Israel immersed in Talmud, which I had never studied before, and after working so hard to become a fluent speaker of Hebrew, and finally being comfortable in the yeshivish banter that makes religious Jewish college students feel like one of the crowd. My ratio of non-Jewish to Jewish friends had dropped rapidly. That was the 21-year-old who decided he was permanently American. That guy was studying Talmud in his free time, with Thoreau and Emerson and Tocqueville and Carol Gilligan sitting on his shoulder and stuck in his head.

Obviously the girlfriend was a factor, since she had no interest in aliyah but we had just started dating, so how big a factor could that have been? What I think actually happened is that I noticed how little sleep I was losing about this difference between us. That was surprising too, since I was a brooder by nature. But I didnt feel any inner tension, like this was an argument we were going to have to have one day about the future of our relationship. Thats what I noticed, thats what clinched it for me: This isnt hard for me. I really am going to stay here in America.

My candidate for president got destroyed that year; my political philosophy was repudiated nationally, which is to say my own interpretation of these ideas about freedom and individuality and community that were all I could think about and talk about. But I didnt say to myself: See, you dont belong here. Just the opposite.

I was coming to realize that I was addressing the American ideas at the core of my life in a Jewish way, on all kinds of levels.

In my mind, this is how I think about freedom and individuality: Henry David Thoreau, who would not compromise one bit with conventional society and went off to live in the woods all on his own, who went to jail rather than pay taxes that would help fund what he thought was an unjust war he is talking to Rabbi Eliezer ben Hyrcanus, who in the Talmud was banished after he couldnt persuade the rest of the rabbis to set the law his way, even when God sent miracles and a voice down from Heaven to back him up. Ralph Waldo Emersons essay on individualism talks to Rav Yosef Soloveitchiks essay on shlichut, on finding ones unique individual mission in the world.

I think about how freedom is the basic, precious truth we learn from the Exodus, and how much more precious that freedom is than what John Locke or Thomas Jefferson ever wrote about. How that freedom compels us to stop at Mt. Sinai and enter into covenant, and what that teaches about the kinds of covenants free people in America have to make or ought to make.

I think about how freedom is what allows us to think new thoughts and be wrong without being thrown in jail, and what forces synagogues to be compelling or wither away, instead of just being the thing your parents did so you do too.

I think about how freedom is also the fundamental challenge to our humanity, even the basic idol. It was free people who chose the make a golden calf and worship a thing made of gold. It was free people who imagined themselves trading the challenge of rising spiritually for the fleshpots back in Egypt and the thought of a life free of difficult decisions and moral agency. That Torah about freedom talks to the challenges today, of freedom that opens up to mere materialism, to unrestrained competition and social competitiveness. A freedom that can make everything a commodity, including ourselves allowing our interests, our time, even our unique talents to be valued in our own eyes by what they are worth in the short-term to others. Freedom can overwhelm us with the present moment, with all the choices right now of what to do or buy or think or be outraged about. All of which can disconnect us from the larger and longer stories we are part of, which we author and co-author.

I think about how the tradition that views tzedakah more as taxation than charity wants us to understand the blessing we say first thing in the morning, praising the Divine sheasanu bnai chorin, who has made us free people. How does the person who wakes up into freedom also wake up into responsibility? I want to know how in talmudic detail and philosophical detail and political detail how do we deal with the question of freedom and mutual responsibility.

Some look at the phrase Jewish American, or American Jew, and see a space between the words, a gap between two aspects of consciousness. Or they see a dash like a minus sign, where one word or maybe both take something away from the other. I see rather a chemical bond, not ionic, but covalent. A sign of the energy that flows uniquely when two entities are bound together, and something new emerges that is different from either atom on its own.

The hyphen in Jewish-American is one of the most exciting things I know. What made me decide to be American, to file my own declaration at the age of 21, just as my great-grandfather had, is that hyphen. Being Jewish is how we understand being American; being American is how we find the greatness in Judaism.

Ive been talking about ideas in my head, but those ideas are tied up with stories, about my past and the teachers and role models related to those ideas, and the projects and mitzvahs and failures around those ideas, and the communities made possible around those ideas. I teach regularly that we each need to reconnect to our own ideas about freedom and individuality and community and responsibility, and to the stories of our lives and our legacies. It has soothed me this past week to do this; it has soothed me whenever America has been hard to celebrate.

But its about more than soothing. Our environment of free press and free expression, which are great freedoms that environment can also take our breath away quite literally. The only way we reclaim the capacity to act freely is to reconnect ourselves to our ideas and to the stories around those ideas. We become bigger than the difficulty of the moment we get more breath and breathing room when we think about freedom, and when we tell the kinds of stories I am telling, and bring all the characters in those stories to our side again.

There is nothing more practical in this moment. We need our ideas, and we need all those stories. We need them in our minds and we need to share them in conversations, our partners in action and the people who matter to us the most. The people who get things done, who make a difference in our country, are people who know in depth what they think about freedom and responsibility, and why.

You may think this doesnt matter, that someone has decided what the official answer is to all these questions, and what difference does it make what you think. But freedom isnt just about what the Supreme Court says. Its about our culture. Its about what we teach and model for our young people. Its about how freedom and community are expressed in our cities and towns, which are very much under our control. Its about how we build community in conditions of great freedom and individuality among Jews. And its about how we understand ourselves, in every way we have agency.

I pulled out my great-grandfathers citizenship declaration this week because I was invited to say some words at an event this week about immigration issues. At the last minute, I found out that our talks would be translated on the fly for those whose English is comparable to my young great-grandfathers. And when the evening was over, I thought about how remarkable that Wolf Landsmans American declaration could be read out 129 years later almost to the week by his great-grandson, the rabbi, in a New England church, his Russian-speaking X and the court clerks beautiful English becoming a story retold extemporaneously in Spanish. Then, in the hour that followed, I listened to familiar themes and to new stories, from people and groups I dont know well enough, who are new to this country in our generation. Now their ideas about individual freedom and the potential for community join the mix in my head, and remind me that I have to keep engaged in thinking and working on the same ideas and the same questions. And so too must we all.

Thats hard work, but good work. It has been a difficult couple of weeks and more, but still we deserve a celebration. To help us look back, and look around, and look in our minds to locate ourselves again on this weekend of celebrating American freedom. We will find ourselves and become larger again. This is where we are supposed to be. Right here, in the United States of America. Choose America, again. Find yourself here, and you wont find yourself alone.

Link:

Inheriting America, then choosing America | Jon Spira-Savett | The Blogs - The Times of Israel

Ex-Tesla Employee Says He Was Fired by Phone Call, While on Vacation

A Tesla employee said the company mishandling his firing when it recently let him while he was on vacation — and he's not the only one. 

Getting Laid (Off)

A Tesla employee says the company mishandled his firing when it let him go while he was on vacation — and he's not the only one.

As Insider reports, Reno, Nevada's Roosevelt Jointer had been a Tesla maintenance supervisor from 2017 until last month, when he got a phone call from his boss while he was on vacation telling him he was "going to be let go effectively immediately."

"I did not receive any advance notice that I would be losing my job," Jointer wrote in a legal declaration seen by Insider. "Up to that point, no one at Tesla ever raised any issues with me regarding my performance"

The ex-Tesla employee added that he was told during the call that if he signed his severance offer, he would receive a mere one week of pay and two months of health insurance. He declined to sign.

Suit Supply

Jointer's declaration was filed as evidence in a lawsuit against the company by two other former Tesla employees, John Lynch and Daxton Hartfield, who are suing over allegedly mishandled terminations.

Along with Jointer's sworn declaration, five other former Tesla employees plus Hartfield and Lynch recounted in the suit, filed this week in Texas, the various ways the company allegedly mishandling their sackings.

The suit also claims that Tesla has attempted to control ex-employees using the language in their severance offers, which, if signed, bars former workers from suing the company.

"If left unchecked," their suit reads, per Insider, "Tesla may succeed in cutting off the rights of thousands of potential class members... without them even knowing about this case and their rights."

Trouble in Paradise

This lawsuit comes after the latest round of Tesla layoffs, which CEO Elon Musk said are due to a "super bad feeling" he had about the economic downturn. In an internal announcement about the layoffs, obtained by Reuters in early June, Musk said that he would be letting go about 10 percent of the company's salaried staff, accounting for roughly three percent of the company's total workforce.

In the Texas suit, the plaintiffs are asking that Tesla make laid off workers whole by providing them with at least 60 days of pay and benefits.

Tesla's a huge company with, one would except, a veritable army of lawyers. But given that it's been sued dozens of times over at this point, a settlement may be in the cards.

READ MORE: A Tesla employee of nearly 5 years says he was sacked over the phone while on vacation [Business Insider]

More on Tesla layoffs: As Crisis Deepens, Tesla Rescinds Job Offers To People Who'd Already Accepted Them

The post Ex-Tesla Employee Says He Was Fired by Phone Call, While on Vacation appeared first on Futurism.

More here:
Ex-Tesla Employee Says He Was Fired by Phone Call, While on Vacation

Mars Rock Samples Probably Won’t Infect Earth With Deadly Martian Plague, Scientist Says

If you're worried about NASA's plan to bring Mars rocks back to Earth to study them, you probably don't need to be, scientists say.

If you're worried about NASA's plan to bring Mars rocks back to Earth to study them, you probably don't need to be.

In interviews with The Philadelphia Inquirer, scientists maintained that there's very little risk involved in bringing samples from Mars back home.

As Rutgers' Nathan Yee, a former NASA official who teaches astrobiology, reminded the Inquirer, Mars rocks have already fallen to Earth in the form of meteorites "without any adverse effects to our biosphere."

Yee noted that because Mars' current atmosphere is very inhospitable to life as we know it — not to mention that it lacks a magnetic field to deflect solar radiation, and is therefore bombarded constantly with harsh rays — it would be hard enough for life to survive on the red planet, much less make it alive to Earth.

"There has to be a long, long time of evolution for microbes to learn how to interact and attach onto animal cells, enter animal cells, and use the machinery of an animal cell to replicate," he told the newspaper. "That’s a very complex choreographed dance."

NASA itself has repeatedly reiterated that the Mars Sample Return Mission, which it's undertaking in tandem with the European Space Agency, is safe and that there is a "low likelihood of risk" given Mars' arid, UV-blasted climate.

Nevertheless, at least one ex-government official is hellbent on highlighting what he considers the safety concerns of the mission.

"We won’t know if it’s sterile or not," retired Federal Aviation Administration and Mars aficionado Thomas Dehel told the Inquirer of the samples. "We should know if we bring something back to Earth whether it’s sterile or not, to do some sort of crude test up front to see if there’s any kind of biological life."

Dehel, who runs a blog criticizing NASA and some news outlets for purportedly "covering up" Mars sample safety concerns, posited that a good way to figure out whether the rock samples contain lethal or dangerous pathogens would be to test them remotely on the International Space Station.

NASA, however, shot down that concept because, as the agency told the newspaper, the ISS doesn't have equipment sensitive enough to glean all necessary info from the Martian rock samples.

While Rutgers' Yee is not himself concerned about some sort of deadly pathogen from Mars running rampant from space rocks brought to Earth, he is curious to see what NASA will do if, as he told the Inquirer, the samples turn up "remnants of past life."

On our end, we'll definitely be watching closely, popcorn at hand.

READ MORE: NASA says its plan to bring Mars samples back to Earth is safe, but some people are worried [The Philadelphia Inquirer]

More on the Mars rock blues: Scientists Worried NASA Will Infect Earth With Deadly Martian Pathogens

The post Mars Rock Samples Probably Won't Infect Earth With Deadly Martian Plague, Scientist Says appeared first on Futurism.

Originally posted here:
Mars Rock Samples Probably Won't Infect Earth With Deadly Martian Plague, Scientist Says

AI Referee Will Track Players’ Individual Limbs at World Cup

FIFA — international overlord of soccer-slash-football — will be implementing a complex offsides-detecting AI system at the forthcoming World Cup.

PlAI Ball

FIFA — the international overlord of soccer-slash-football — has revealed that it'll be implementing a complex offsides-detecting AI system at the upcoming 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

The assistive technology takes into consideration a dizzying array of data points. A dozen strategically-placed, AI-connected cameras continuously collect data from 29 specific points on players' bodies, while a sensor, which sits at the center of the ball, relays its exact location approximately 500 times per second.

The system alerts a control room team if it catches a player offsides, who then validates the AI "call" and relays the info back to the on-field refs.

FIFA is no stranger to referee-supporting tech, having introduced a controversial video assistant referee (VAR) at the World Cup back in 2018.

But this latest addition to the game is a lot more complex than that, with referees handing AI an unprecedented degree of control over the game — and, in the competitive and moneyed world of professional sports, it could well be a sign of things to come.

Robot Ref

The organization also really wants you to know that human refs aren't out of a job — yet.

"I know that someone called it 'robot offside;' it's not," said Pierluigi Collina, chairman of the FIFA Referees Committee, in a press release. "The referees and the assistant referees are still responsible for the decision on the field of play."

According the statement, FIFA believes that the integration will simply assist game speed and referee accuracy. Players won't have to wait around for decisions to be made, and refs will have plenty of supplemental information with which to make notoriously difficult offsides calls, as FIFA's trials have already proved.

Plus, with AI on their side, oft-heckled referees could face less sideline harassment from coaches and fans — though, of course, we'll find out at the upcoming World Cup.

It'll be fascinating to see how well the technology functions in real time. For better or worse, seeing the world's number one sport embrace this new degree of AI-integration — on the game's biggest stage, no less — feels like a significant step in the future of athletics.

More on robot refs: Robot Umpires Make Professional Baseball Debut

The post AI Referee Will Track Players' Individual Limbs at World Cup appeared first on Futurism.

See original here:
AI Referee Will Track Players' Individual Limbs at World Cup

Cell Providers Are Apparently Gonna Put Ads on Your Phone’s Lock Screen

According to TechCrunch, Glance, a Google-backed subsidiary of Indian advertising company inMobi Group, is set to launch its lockscreen platform on US-based Android smartphones within the next two months.

Lock Screen Ads

Google's Android smartphone platform could soon be getting flooded with ads — right on the lock screen.

According to TechCrunch, a Google-backed subsidiary of Indian advertising company inMobi Group called Glance is in talks with US-based wireless carriers to launch several smartphone models, which could feature ads on the lock screen.

If your reaction to that is "hell no," you're not alone. It's an unusually pervasive and intrusive ad strategy even by the already-heavy standards of the web. After all, the lock screen is the first thing we see when we pick up our phones. Let's just hope it's not a sign of things to come.

More Distractions

Glance's "dynamic" lock screen trickles content including news, videos, and games — and ads — to the user before they even unlock their phone, a feature that's already caught on in a big way overseas. The startup's services are already being used on 400 million smartphones in Asia, according to TechCrunch.

Fortunately, there are a couple of workarounds to disable Glance lock screen ads, as 9to5Google points out, but users will have to dig around deep in their phones' system settings to do so.

Even Apple is opening up to the idea of stuffing content on the lock screen. As part of an upcoming iOS software update, iPhone users will be able to customize their phone's lock screens with informational widgets — but there's no indication ads will be included as well.

At a glance, the plan isn't great. As if modern smartphones weren't distracting enough, stuffing the lock screen with even more dynamic content, let alone ads, is bound to make the experience of using a smartphone even more annoying and obtrusive than it already is.

READ MORE: Google-backed Glance to launch in US within two months [TechCrunch]

More on ads: Crypto Exchanges Lay Off Thousands, Months After Uber-Expensive Super Bowl Ads

The post Cell Providers Are Apparently Gonna Put Ads on Your Phone's Lock Screen appeared first on Futurism.

Read the original here:
Cell Providers Are Apparently Gonna Put Ads on Your Phone's Lock Screen

Weird Storm Turns Sky Green

Before yesterday's powerful derecho storm, the sky in Sioux Falls, South Dakota turned an eery shade of Powerade-colored neon green.

Spooky Skies

Nothing quite says "apocalypse" like Melon Powerade-colored heavens. Case in point, before a bout of severe weather yesterday, the sky in Sioux Falls, South Dakota turned a shade of green akin to that of the gamma radiation that turned Bruce Banner into the Hulk.

The ominous occurrence took place as a massive thunderstorm system called a derecho swept through the region, injuring several people and wreaking havoc on the property and power supplies of thousands of others.

Derechos are powerful and destructive, known for hurricane-like winds, heavy rains, and a knack for traveling hundreds of miles. But while these mighty weather events have occasionally been known to cause this viridescent phenomenon, The Washington Post reports that the neon hue witnessed yesterday is extremely uncommon.

The approach. @NWSSiouxFalls @keloland @dakotanews_now pic.twitter.com/NOl35jIlpt

— jaden ? ? (@jkarmill) July 5, 2022

Green Machine

There are a few theories as to why these green skies occur, with the predominant hypothesis having to do with the way heavy raindrops and hail are able to scatter and reflect light.

As Scientific American explains, thunderstorms often happen in the late afternoon and evening, when the setting sun casts shades of yellow and red across the daytime's blue sky. Water is exceptionally good at holding the color blue, and it's thought that raindrops of a certain diameter can disperse all but cerulean light. Thus, meteorologists posit that if a storm has enough liquid power behind it and hits at the perfect time of day, competing yellow and blue light will combine into green.

Yesterday's storm, however, pushed this conjecture to the brink.

"Even by that metric," WaPo meteorologist Matthew Cappucci wrote, referring to the prevailing theory, "the colors exhibited by storms over Siouxland and along the Interstate 29 corridor of South Dakota, the James River Valley and northwestern Iowa were unlike any in recent meteorological memory."

READ MORE: Derecho turns sky green, sweeps through 5 states with 90 mph winds [WaPo]

More on bizarre weather events: Startup Says Its Tech Can Kill Hurricanes Before They Get Strong

The post Weird Storm Turns Sky Green appeared first on Futurism.

Read the original post:
Weird Storm Turns Sky Green

Elon Musk Reportedly Had Two More Secret Children This Year

Insider reports that Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk's brood of children is even larger than previously known, with two twins been born last year.

Neuralink Daycare

An eyebrow-raising scoop from Insider found that Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk's brood of children is even larger than previously known, with two new twins having been born last November.

For those keeping score, the infants are not Musk's first secret offspring that have come to light. Back in March of this year, it emerged in a Vanity Fair profile that Musk had had a second baby with his on-again-off-again girlfriend, the acclaimed musician Claire "Grimes" Boucher — a revelation that came about accidentally when the reporter working on the story heard a baby crying upstairs. All in, the billionaire now has nine known children.

The mother of the latest infants, whose names have not been revealed, is also a notable individual. But in a fraught twist, according to Insider's reporting, it turns out that this women — by the name of Shivon Zilis — is a highly-accomplished employee of Musk who has worked at several of his ventures including OpenAI, Tesla, and currently Neuralink.

Ethical Minefield

Needless to say, it's very widely frowned on for executives to maintain romantic, sexual or parental relationships with their subordinates, a norm in the business world that Musk seems to be flagrantly violating here.

That transgression is especially noteworthy because of another notable Insider scoop, this one in May of this year, which quoted legal documents claiming that Musk had made improper sexual advances toward a flight attendant working in a SpaceX private jet. According to the documents reviewed by Insider, SpaceX paid the woman $250,000 in a severance agreement after the allegations came to light. And that's just the beginning of the criticism of Musk's treatment of women.

Musk, who along with the other people named in Insider's story declined to comment, is a fabulously powerful, wealthy and famous individual — and with a hairline that only money can buy. If he wanted to, there are almost certainly unfathomable number of people he could date who are not his employees. In fact, he's dated and been married to several in the past, including Boucher.

What this latest revelation underscores is a side of Musk that seems to emerge regularly, and perhaps more frequently as he ages: a talented executive who's accomplishing extraordinary things in the fields of space travel, electric vehicles, and beyond — but who has astonishingly poor impulse control.

More on Elon Musk: Elon Musk Deletes Sexist Tweets

The post Elon Musk Reportedly Had Two More Secret Children This Year appeared first on Futurism.

See the original post:
Elon Musk Reportedly Had Two More Secret Children This Year

YouTube Marked Horror Video as "For Kids," Wouldn’t Let Creator Reverse It

YouTube is once again screwing up its content moderation after designating a horror video as

Horror Struck

YouTube is once again screwing up its children's programming after designating a found footage horror video as "for kids" and not allowing the creator to change the erroneous rating manually.

The issue apparently began over the holiday weekend, when, as YouTuber Kris Straub tweeted, the social network sent him an email informing him that it had auto-designated a video from his horror channel, Local58TV, as being a "show for children."

As Straub noted, this bizarre change came "despite my having set it as inappropriate for kids," and he added that he couldn't "change it voluntarily" without an appeal, which he then filed.

18+

Local58TV is, as its creator maintains, decidedly not for children, though as Ars Technica noted in its write-up of the since-reversed decision, the company's AI moderators may have gotten their wires crossed because there is an episode called "Show For Children."

In spite of the title, it takes just a couple of seconds of watching the eerie episode to see that the title is tongue-in-cheek. It features a cartoon skeleton walking around a graveyard looking for love, only to encounter a number of much creepier monsters before laying down to "die" and become one of them.

Reversal

A couple days after Straub tweeted about the erroneous designation, and a day after Ars wrote about it, YouTube finally reversed the "for kids" designation. As the channel's creator noted, however, account owners should always be able to designate their videos as not for children. It also doesn't appear that YouTube has explained why the video's designation was switched to "made for kids" in the first place.

Given the major issues that YouTube has had with people labeling extremely-sketchy content as being children's programming, it's especially bizarre that the company wouldn't allow someone to change their own rating to being not for kids.

At the end of the day, it's just the kind of thing that happens when you employ AIs to moderate your content.

READ MORE: YouTube flags horror video as “for kids,” won’t let creator change rating [Ars Technica]

More YouTube shenanigans: YouTube Channel That Hunts Scammers Falls For Scam, Deletes Itself

The post YouTube Marked Horror Video as "For Kids," Wouldn't Let Creator Reverse It appeared first on Futurism.

Link:
YouTube Marked Horror Video as "For Kids," Wouldn't Let Creator Reverse It

Scientists Predict That The Solar System Could Collapse If a Star Flew Too Close

After running nearly 3,000 simulations, scientists found that a minor change in Neptune's orbit caused by a passing star could disrupt our system's orbits.

Cosmic Collapse

Have you ever indulged the depths of your intrusive thoughts and wondered how the universe is going to smash and chew up our little planet over billions of years?

Well, that’s more or less what scientists Garett Brown and Hanno Rein at the University of Toronto have done for their recent study on what would happen if a neighboring star flew just a little too close to our solar system.

While they're not expecting a neighboring star to come cruising through the middle of our system, they looked at the potentially devastating effects of minor shifts in the orbits of the solar system's planets, triggered by a star getting a little too close to comfort — some billions of miles away.

Solar Simulations

Brown and Rein ran nearly 3,000 simulations with varying degrees of perturbation caused by a possible stellar fly-by, examining the subsequent effects up to 4.8 billion years later.

"Up to," because some simulations ended early when a planet was jettisoned from the solar system or was destroyed. Yikes!

The results are pretty shocking. The scientists found that just a 0.1 percent change in Neptune’s distance to the Sun could plunge the entire solar system into complete chaos — all because a star came within 23 billion miles of the Sun.

To put that number into perspective, Proxima Centauri, our closest neighboring star, is about 24.8 trillion miles away.

Reining It In

While a complete collapse of the solar system sounds like a pretty catastrophic event, that kind of demise could stretch out over billions of years.

"These weak perturbations don’t destroy the solar system immediately, they just wiggle it around a little bit, and over the next millions or billions of years something goes unstable," Rein told New Scientist.

Perhaps a little more optimistically, 960 of the simulations resulted in insignificant changes.

Besides, as the researchers themselves concluded, this kind of stuff only happens in our corner of the universe once every 100 billion years or so, with the effects taking millions of years to come into play.

In short, it's an interesting scenario to think about, but not one you'll have to worry about —unless you plan on living forever.

READ MORE: A passing star shifting Neptune’s orbit could wreck the solar system [New Scientist]

More on neighboring stars: Scientists Spot Dying Star Brutally Tearing Up Its Unfortunate Planets

The post Scientists Predict That The Solar System Could Collapse If a Star Flew Too Close appeared first on Futurism.

View original post here:
Scientists Predict That The Solar System Could Collapse If a Star Flew Too Close

Area Residents Express Dismay As SpaceX Looks Poised To Downgrade “Starbase” R&D Facility

While the Starship looks set to launch after FAA approval, the future of the facility's role as its main launch site isn't as clear.

As the current testing grounds and launch site of SpaceX’s massive Starship — a fully reusable rocket that very well may be the most powerful in the world — "Starbase" near Brownsville in South Texas, attracts plenty of space enthusiasts that want to catch a glimpse of the titanic rocket in action.

But to their dismay, that privilege could soon end, National Geographic reports, with SpaceX CEO Elon Musk hinting that the space company could eventually move operations to the Florida Space Coast.

"Everybody down here, Brownsville and the whole valley, was expecting to see that this was going to be the Gateway to Mars," Louis Baldera, a local resident known to his tens of thousands of online followers as LabPadre, and who has closely been following SpaceX's operations, told the publication.

"As far as anything being launched directly to space to the moon or Mars, that’s more than likely not going to happen here," he added. "I think that’s going to bum some people out."

Employees at the facility, who chose to remain anonymous, also told Dallas Express News this week that they no longer believe that Starbase will be the "Gateway."

That's in large part because SpaceX and the Federal Aviation Administration have been embroiled in an ugly battle over granting approval for orbital test flights for Starship, with the FAA citing environmental concerns and delaying their decision on multiple occasions.

"I guess our worst-case scenario is that we would be delayed for six to eight months to build up the Cape launch tower and launch from there," Musk said at a February press conference, when asked what would happen if the FAA required a more extensive environmental review.

Permission was eventually granted last month to carry out the inaugural orbital test flight — as long as SpaceX complies with over 75 environmental provisions.

If operations were to move to Florida, that's not a prospect that’s likely to sit well with Brownsville residents, especially given the potential consequences on the local economy such a decision could have.

After all, SpaceX is the biggest employer in the city.

"I didn’t know any of those plans beforehand," Jessica Tetreau, the Brownsville city commissioner, told National Geographic. "What startled us was when we heard the timeline and how they would have to start moving things to Florida."

SpaceX already started building a Starship launch tower in Florida last December and more recently added its second segment in June.

With the FAA breathing down their neck and dismay from local environmental groups growing, Starbase could be losing its desirability as a launch location.

Of course, that wouldn't mean a complete pull-out. The facility would most likely be used for less glamorous research and development purposes, as Musk stated at the February conference.

While it's still mostly speculation at this point — it's still not a given that SpaceX will move operations — hopefully it won't have too much of an economic impact on the region.

More on SpaceX: SpaceX Slaps Logo On Starship, Drags Prototype to Launchpad

The post Area Residents Express Dismay As SpaceX Looks Poised To Downgrade "Starbase" R&D Facility appeared first on Futurism.

See more here:
Area Residents Express Dismay As SpaceX Looks Poised To Downgrade "Starbase" R&D Facility

NASA Shows Off Mesmerizing First Images From James Webb Telescope

NASA's James Webb Space Telescope has given us a first glimpse into the awe-inspiring power of the images it will produce.

Deep Deep

Scientists behind NASA's James Webb Space Telescope have given us a first glimpse into the awe-inspiring power of the images it will produce — and what we're seeing is only a test run.

As NASA proudly notes on its website, the calibration test image that was composited together from 32 hours and 72 exposures,  "is among the deepest images of the universe ever taken" — and the telescope is only getting started.

Talk about an overachiever!

Gaze at this test image — an unexpected & deep view of the universe — captured by Webb’s Fine Guidance Sensor (FGS) in May. Built by @csa_asc to point Webb precisely at targets, taking glamour shots isn’t even FGS’s main job: https://t.co/aQUAFHcNV5 pic.twitter.com/uYoh4t8PX2

— NASA Webb Telescope (@NASAWebb) July 6, 2022

Testing 123

Almost as fabulous as the image itself is the fact that this photo was taken as part of an early test of the telescope's Fine Guidance Sensor (FGS). Its task is to make sure the cameras and mirrors are all aligned correctly.

"Even when capturing unplanned imagery during a test," NASA wrote with a flourish on its blog, "FGS is capable of producing stunning views of the cosmos."

Originally taken in May and not released to the public until now, this stunning image is just a precursor for the real thing. In about a week's time, NASA will release the first full-color images of deep space taken by the JWST.

Until then, we're waiting with bated breath to see how the telescope, two decades in the making, can outdo itself.

READ MORE: Webb’s Fine Guidance Sensor Provides a Preview [NASA]

More on the JWST: Scientists Say New James Webb Images Are So Powerful That It Was Emotional Just Looking At Them 

The post NASA Shows Off Mesmerizing First Images From James Webb Telescope appeared first on Futurism.

Read more here:
NASA Shows Off Mesmerizing First Images From James Webb Telescope

"Anti-Hangover" Pill Could Take All The Fun Out of Drinking — If It Actually Works

A purported miracle cure for hangovers is not only dubiously researched, but its results seem to take all the fun out of drinking alcohol.

Swedish firm Myrkl claims to have developed a new pill that breaks down the alcohol in your blood to stop you from experiencing a deadly hangover after a wild night out.

But on closer inspection, the company's ostentatious claims start to look a little suspect — not only is the company's study, on which it bases its claims, dubiously researched — the pill could also take all the fun out of drinking alcohol in the first place.

That is, if it works at all.

The purported hangover cure, advertised as "the pre-drinking pill that works," just went on sale in the United Kingdom.

But as University of Plymouth clinical scientist and hepatologist Ashwin Dhanda points out in a new piece for The Conversation, there are some serious caveats to the company's claims.

Myrkl claims that if you take two of its pills 12 hours before drinking, it will prevent a hangover by absorbing up to 70 percent of the alcohol before it enters your bloodstream and subsequently dehydrates you — which is a major source of hangovers.

The pill makes use of two types of probiotics commonly found in the health food aisle called Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus coagulans to break down the alcohol.

But there's one huge catch.

As Dhanda wrote in his piece for The Conversation, "this reduction in the amount of alcohol absorbed by the body is mirrored by a reduction in the short-term effects of alcohol, such as euphoria and reduced anxiety."

Translation: this pill claims that it will stop you from being drunk — which is the general point of drinking alcohol — to prevent a hangover.

Beyond the simple fact that probiotic supplements are already for sale under different labels in the UK, Dhanda notes that the single peer-reviewed study backing this alleged hangover cure has issues, too.

Published in the journal Nutrition and Metabolic Insights last month, the study tracked blood alcohol levels following either active or placebo dosage of 24 white adult subjects. But only 14 of those subjects' results were included in the study, because the other ten had lower blood alcohol levels at the beginning of the study.

Somewhat unsurprisingly, "results varied between different people, which reduces the accuracy of the study," as Dhanda notes. Additionally, the timing and dosing was off, too, given that " the researchers tested seven days of treatment before a single drink of alcohol, but the company recommend only two pills one to 12 hours before drinking any amount."

These results leave a number of questions, from whether the results were different for men and women, which the study did not denote, how non-white people respond to the probiotic cocktail, and, perhaps most importantly, whether people with gastrointestinal issues can take it given that many who suffer from GI issues get sick from probiotics.

This is far from the first pill claiming to be a hangover cure and it certainly won't be the last.

While it's not an overall bad idea to take probiotics, the best way to avoid a hangover is to rein in your binge drinking — or at least staying hydrated while drinking alcohol.

READ MORE: Myrkl: new anti-hangover pill said to break down up to 70% of alcohol in an hour – what you need to know [The Conversation]

More on snake oil: Hangover "Cures" Are Total Nonsense, According to Science

The post "Anti-Hangover" Pill Could Take All The Fun Out of Drinking — If It Actually Works appeared first on Futurism.

Link:
"Anti-Hangover" Pill Could Take All The Fun Out of Drinking — If It Actually Works

Scientists Discover That Being "Hangry" Is a Real Phenomenon

According to a new study by a team of psychologists, being "hangry" — hungry and angry — is a very real thing, something anyone who's ever substituted breakfast with coffee before heading to work has known for years.

While it's not the first study on being hangry, it's the first to examine the effects of being hangry in a real world environment instead of a lab.

Professor Viren Swami of Anglia Ruskin University in the UK, the study’s lead author, was inspired to conduct the study after repeatedly being told that he was acting "hangry," Swami told The Guardian.

So he decided to investigate if being hangry is a scientifically verifiable phenomenon.

In a study, Swami and his colleagues looked at 64 adults in Central Europe between the ages of 18 and 60. For three weeks, the subjects recorded their hungriness and emotional states in a smartphone app five times per day.

While it may not be the largest sample size, the researchers were able to get over 9,000 responses thanks to the frequent logging of the study’s participants.

The app provided the participants with a Visual Analogue Scale, which is commonly used for evaluating pain, of 0 to 100 to log their emotional states. In effect, this translated to a scale of "not hungry at all" to "very hungry" for their hungriness, and "not at all" to "very" for angriness and irritability.

The results showed that "greater levels of self-reported hunger were associated with greater feelings of anger and irritability," according to the study.

In other words, as you get more and more hungry, you tend to get more angry, too.

There are plenty of other interesting observations in the study, like only 58 percent of participants eating breakfast, or only 23 percent knowing when they were full.

"It’s really important to be able to identify emotions like being hangry so we can mitigate against the negative effects," Swami told The Guardian, expressing concern about children going to school hungry.

So while the findings of this study seem like a no-brainer, it could help us address "hangriness" more productively. Don't underestimate the power of getting a good meal in first, folks.

More on psychological studies: Dyslexia Actually Grants Special Powers, Researchers Say

The post Scientists Discover That Being "Hangry" Is a Real Phenomenon appeared first on Futurism.

Follow this link:
Scientists Discover That Being "Hangry" Is a Real Phenomenon

WHO "Concerned" Over Skyrocketing Monkeypox Cases

It's looking more and more like, above all, a Hot Zone Summer: On Thursday, the World Health Organization reported the number of confirmed monkeypox cases to be skyrocketing — to the tune of a whopping 77 percent increase week-over-week worldwide, CNBC reports.

There are now over 7,000 cases of the mysterious disease, spanning 60 countries — while the world continues reeling from a resurgence of COVID-19 cases. While monkeypox has been circulating in parts of Africa for decades, outbreaks across much of the rest of the globe are causing officials to ring the alarm bells.

In an official statement this week, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that he continues to be "concerned by the scale and spread of the virus." Over 80 percent of these cases were observed in Europe, making it the epicenter of the new outbreaks.

And the number of actual cases might be even worse than what we know. "Testing remains a challenge and it’s highly probable that there are a significant number of cases not being picked up," said Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

The symptoms of the disease include fever, body aches, fatigues, and itchy lesions that can spread over the body. Fortunately, there's already a tested, proven, and manufactured vaccine to protect against monkeypox, with US president Joe Biden announcing last week that his administration will make the vaccine broadly available.

New York City officials started administering thousands of doses today, with appointments filling up almost immediately. But there's only a limited supply of shots, undermining future vaccination efforts.

Meanwhile, scientists are racing to understand what's driving these outbreaks, precisely. Their efforts will hopefully produce methods to circumvent further contagion — methods that don't exclusively involve an already short-stocked vaccine supply.

READ MORE: Monkeypox cases rise 77% in a week, WHO reports: "Concerned by the scale and spread of the virus" [CBS]

More on monkeypox: Scientists Warn of International Monkeypox Outbreaks

The post WHO "Concerned" Over Skyrocketing Monkeypox Cases appeared first on Futurism.

Follow this link:
WHO "Concerned" Over Skyrocketing Monkeypox Cases

Elon Musk Rivals Snatch Up Laid-Off Tesla Employees

In the wake of Elon Musk's latest round of widespread Tesla layoffs, several big name tech organizations are employing newly ex-Teslians left and right.

Gold Rush

One billionaire's "super bad feeling" about the global economy is another billionaire's hiring spree.

In the wake of Tesla's latest round of widespread layoffs, several big tech companies — including both Microsoft and Amazon, led respectively by vocal Tesla CEO Elon Musk nemeses Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos — are snatching up ex-Tesla employees left and right, Business Insider reports.

OMW

According to LinkedIn data sourced by a private network of Fortune 500 executives called Punks & Pinstripes, rival electric vehicle manufacturers Rivian and Lucid picked up 90 of 457 recent Tesla departures between them.

Amazon and Apple — the latter of which has been trying to get a secretive and cursed autonomous car project off the ground for years — snagged 51 former Tesla employees each. Others migrated to other tech giants including Meta and Microsoft.

WFH

The hiring sweep comes on the heels of Musk's anti-remote work decree, after which several companies — Amazon and Microsoft in particular, according to Insider — began to cast some pretty targeted recruiting nets.

"If the Emperor of Mars doesn't want you, I'll be happy to bring you over to [Amazon Web Services]," read a simmering LinkedIn post by Zafar Choudhury, a recruiter at Amazon, in response to the work from home drama, as quoted by Insider.

The surprise Tesla layoff announcement came just a few days later.

The EV company has had a rotten year so far. Tesla's controversial, semi-automated driving tech is facing a massive government recall, while Musk is trying to rein in spending, referring to the company's factories as "gigantic money furnaces."

Clearly, Tesla's got plenty of stuff to figure out — and its competitors are reaping the benefits.

READ MORE: Rivian, Amazon, and Apple are snapping up laid-off Tesla employees amid Elon Musk's workforce-reduction plans [Business Insider]

The post Elon Musk Rivals Snatch Up Laid-Off Tesla Employees appeared first on Futurism.

View original post here:
Elon Musk Rivals Snatch Up Laid-Off Tesla Employees