Annually awarded parody of the Nobel Prize
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The Ig Nobel prizes were awarded recently – for science that makes you laugh and then think – and the peace prize was given to a cheeky study testing the link between alcohol and language proficiency. Does a drink really help us to converse more convincingly in another tongue, or does it just give us inflated confidence? To find out, Madeleine Finlay speaks to a member of the winning team, Dr Fritz Renner, a researcher in clinical psychology and psychotherapy at the University of Freiburg in Germany. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/sciencepod
Avec Matt, François, Guillaume, Karim et Gaëlle !
Az AI-hoz kötik a halálukat – mind ugyanazt a kísérteties üzenetet hagyták Budapesten járt Tito egykori gépe, a repülés gyönyörű matuzsáleme A fogkeféktől a laptopokig minden elektronikai terméket megvámolna az USA A büdös cipők nagyon is valós problémáját oldották meg indiai kutatók, meg is kapták az Ignobel-díjat Mesterséges intelligencia bevezetés a kkv-knál – mit mond a McKinsey? AI a munkahelyeken – egyelőre sokan csak arra használják, hogy kiszúrjanak a kollégáikkal Rekordáron vásárolhatják fel az Electronic Arts-ot Érkezik a Windows 11 új Start menüje Nem csak ravasz, de esztétikus megoldást mutatott be a 12VHPWR megégési problémákra az MSI Az ír adatvédelmi hatóság a mobilhely-adatok értékesítését vizsgálja Sötét gyárak: eljött az ember nélküli gyártás korszaka Kínában Sam Altman elárulta, mire lesz képes a mesterséges intelligencia a közeljövőben Magyarország nem mondhat le a mesterséges intelligenciában rejlő lehetőségeiről - jelentette ki Palkovics László A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Az AI-hoz kötik a halálukat – mind ugyanazt a kísérteties üzenetet hagyták Budapesten járt Tito egykori gépe, a repülés gyönyörű matuzsáleme A fogkeféktől a laptopokig minden elektronikai terméket megvámolna az USA A büdös cipők nagyon is valós problémáját oldották meg indiai kutatók, meg is kapták az Ignobel-díjat Mesterséges intelligencia bevezetés a kkv-knál – mit mond a McKinsey? AI a munkahelyeken – egyelőre sokan csak arra használják, hogy kiszúrjanak a kollégáikkal Rekordáron vásárolhatják fel az Electronic Arts-ot Érkezik a Windows 11 új Start menüje Nem csak ravasz, de esztétikus megoldást mutatott be a 12VHPWR megégési problémákra az MSI Az ír adatvédelmi hatóság a mobilhely-adatok értékesítését vizsgálja Sötét gyárak: eljött az ember nélküli gyártás korszaka Kínában Sam Altman elárulta, mire lesz képes a mesterséges intelligencia a közeljövőben Magyarország nem mondhat le a mesterséges intelligenciában rejlő lehetőségeiről - jelentette ki Palkovics László A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
The 2025 Ig Nobel awards have been revealed, with drunk bats, pizza-eating lizards and painted-up zebra cows among this year's nominees. Dr Michelle Dickinson's gone through the nominees - and outlined her top three. Does painting a cow to look like a zebra mean it's bitten less by flies? Scientists have long wondered why zebras are not bitten by flies as much as other animals. Researchers who were looking into how to prevent cows from being bitten by flies decided to test if had something to do with the stripes, so they painted cows with black and white stripes and measured how many bites they had, and lo and behold the striped cows had half the number of bites than the non-painted cows did! Does eating garlic when breastfeeding change the smell of your breastmilk? Garlic is known to have a very potent odour - but it's also delicious, and so scientists wanted to know if the odour could be passed on to breastmilk and if it bothered the babies who were drinking the milk. Breastfeeding mothers were either given garlic capsules or asked to eat a sulphurous-free diet (emitting garlic, onion and asparagus) and their breastmilk was then sniffed by adults to see if they could detect any difference between them. The milk from the garlic consuming mothers was reported to have a much more intense odour which peaked at 2 hours after ingestion. Interestingly, it seems that the garlicky-smelling milk was actually more desirable and babies who were fed after their mothers ate garlic not only breastfed for longer, but consumed more milk! Are you more fluent in a second language if you are drunk? Alcohol is known to have detrimental effects on memory and inhibitory control, but there has been a belief among bilingual people that their foreign language fluency improves after a few drinks. To test this, 50 native German speakers who also spoke Dutch were tested with one group receiving a vodka and bitter lemon drink and the other group just water. After they were asked to rate their own self-perception of their skill in Dutch and the Dutch speakers they were talking to were also asked to rate them. The results showed that intoxication did actually improve the Dutch fluency of the participants according to the sober Dutch speakers. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Nous commencerons la première partie de notre émission par quelques réflexions sur le discours du président Trump à l'Assemblée générale des Nations unies. Le président a choqué beaucoup de monde en s'en prenant à l'ONU, aux politiques migratoires dans l'UE et au changement climatique, qu'il qualifie de « canular » et d'« escroquerie ». Nous parlerons ensuite de l'ancien président philippin Duterte, qui a été accusé de crimes contre l'humanité. Notre section scientifique sera consacrée à un article sur le lien qui a été établi entre la consommation de caféine et la vivacité des rêves. Et enfin, nous parlerons de la cérémonie de remise des Ig Nobel, qui récompense des travaux de recherche à la fois insolites et innovants. Le reste de l'émission d'aujourd'hui sera consacré à la langue et à la culture françaises. Cette semaine, nous terminerons notre série de leçons sur l'imparfait. La dernière leçon sera : Les verbes du 3e groupe : aller, avoir, croire, être, fuir, voir et les verbes qui se conjuguent comme pouvoir. Nous nous intéresserons aux Journées européennes du patrimoine qui ont eu lieu le week-end dernier sur le thème du patrimoine architectural, et plus particulièrement à un institut de recherche célèbre dans le monde entier : l'institut Pasteur. Pour terminer, nous verrons comment employer l'expression de la semaine, Se croire sorti de la cuisse de Jupiter. Les Journées du patrimoine nous donneront l'occasion d'évoquer la vie au château de Versailles, qui propose désormais des visites en réalité virtuelle. Alors, êtes-vous prêts à découvrir la vie au temps du Roi-Soleil ? - Donald Trump prononce un discours offensif à l'ONU - L'ancien président philippin Duterte est accusé de crimes contre l'humanité - Réduire la consommation de caféine pourrait augmenter la vivacité de nos rêves - Prix Ig Nobel : Les bienfaits nutritionnels du téflon et la physique appliquée à la sauce des pâtes - Les journées du patrimoine 2025 - Le Château de Versailles permet à ses visiteurs de revivre le passé
Apriamo la prima parte del programma con alcune riflessioni sul discorso del Presidente Trump all'Assemblea delle Nazioni Unite. Le sue parole hanno suscitato profondo scalpore per le critiche rivolte all'ONU, alla gestione europea della migrazione e per aver definito il cambiamento climatico una “bufala” e una “truffa”. Proseguiremo con la notizia sull'ex presidente filippino Duterte, accusato di aver commesso crimini contro l'umanità. La nostra sezione scientifica sarà dedicata a un articolo che mette in relazione la riduzione del consumo di caffeina con la possibilità di fare sogni più vividi. Infine, parleremo della cerimonia di premiazione degli Ig Nobel 2025, che celebra le ricerche più insolite e, al tempo stesso, ingegnose. La seconda parte della puntata è dedicata alla lingua e alla cultura italiana. L'argomento grammaticale di oggi è Personal Pronouns: Introduction to the Combined Forms. Ne troverete numerosi esempi nel dialogo che seguirà, ispirato alla notizia della scomparsa di Giorgio Armani, leggenda della moda del Made in Italy. Nel finale ci soffermeremo sull'espressione idiomatica di oggi: Tenere/lasciare in sospeso. Il dialogo in cui la useremo prende spunto dalla presentazione, alla Mostra del Cinema di Venezia, di una serie televisiva diretta da Marco Bellocchio. La serie racconta la storia di Enzo Tortora, uno dei casi giudiziari più controversi e dolorosi della cronaca italiana. - Donald Trump ha pronunciato un discorso intriso di rancore e attacchi all'ONU - L'ex presidente filippino Duterte accusato di crimini contro l'umanità - Ridurre l'assunzione di caffeina provoca sogni vividi e colorati? - I benefici nutrizionali del teflon e la fisica del sugo per la pasta agli Ig Nobel Awards - Il futuro senza Giorgio Armani - Portobello: la nuova serie di Bellocchio sul caso Tortora
Send us a textLa antigua tradición humana de entregar premios tiene a esta altura ceemonias recurrentes, las que esperamos cada año con entusiasmo. En el episodio de hoy revisaremos la historia de esta tradición y nos sumergiremos –una vez más– en una de las ceremonias de premios más esperadas del año.Support the show
Donald Trump e il suo segretario alla Salute, Robert Kennedy Jr, hanno organizzato un evento alla Casa Bianca per raccomandare alle donne in gravidanza di non usare il paracetamolo, che secondo loro potrebbe causare l'autismo nei bambini. Lo hanno fatto senza fornire prove e citando studi noti da anni, sui quali si discute ancora molto nella comunità scientifica proprio per la mancanza di prove convincenti. Ne è nata una grande confusione e ci sono preoccupazioni per la salute delle donne in gravidanza, che potrebbero rinunciare a uno dei farmaci più diffusi proprio durante la gestazione. C'è invece una notizia molto incoraggiante sul primo trattamento contro la malattia di Huntington, grazie a una terapia genica. E finiamo con una premiatissima cacio e pepe. Il link per abbonarti al Post e ascoltare la puntata per intero. Sul Post – Vertigine, il nuovo libro di Beatrice Mautino – Ci siamo già visti, il libro di Sadie Dingfelder – L'ingiustificato allarme di Trump sul paracetamolo in gravidanza – L'azienda dietro Tylenol cerca di superare la sua ultima crisi – La FDA punta ad ampliare l'uso del leucovorin mentre RFK Jr lo promuove come trattamento per l'autismo – C'è un primo trattamento promettente contro la malattia di Huntington – Il tempo perso con Stamina e quello guadagnato con la ricerca – Se vuoi vincere un Ig Nobel dipingi le vacche a strisce – Una cosa nuova per Indagini di Stefano Nazzi Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Investigadores japoneses pintaram vacas com listas de zebra para evitar picadas de moscas. Resultou.
Estudo de americanos e israelitas, publicado em 2024, conclui que uma dieta com teflon ajuda a perder peso e aumentar a saciedade.
Send us a textIn this episode Matt and Matt discuss The beauty and infrastructure of Japan, Anime trends, God's FanDuel wagers, and more religion.Weird News including Disney bandits, Ancient cousins, Don't stand so close to me, Ignobel time, and The wrong trip.It's weird being out here again after so long...
O que acontece quando dizemos às pessoas que são inteligentes? Sentem-se únicas e especiais e têm delírios narcisistas. Os pais têm papel fundamental no processo de auto confiança e desenvolvimento narcísico
Alan discusses who has featured in this year's satirical Ig Nobel Awards for scientists and researchers from around the world.
Estudo conclui que a ingestão de doses moderadas de alcóol facilita a aprendizagem de línguas estrangeiras
Episode 675: Neal and Toby discuss the impact of the new $100K annual fee for H1-B Visas that has tech companies scrambling. Plus, details emerge from the pending TikTok deal that could bring ownership to the US. Also, Hamburger Helper sales are boosted by Americans trying to save money on food. Meanwhile, prizes are handed out to the quirkiest scientists in the world. Finally, what you need to know in the week ahead. 00:00 - Get your MBD live show tickets! 2:50 - Costly H1-B Visa fee 7:20 - TikTok deal imminent 11:30 - Hamburger helper booms 17:00 - Ig Nobel prize winners 21:00 - Week Ahead You can try reMarkable Paper Pro Move for 100 days for free. If it's not what you're looking for, get your money back. Get your paper tablet at https://www.remarkable.com today Get your MBD live show tickets here! Presale code LETSRIDE Subscribe to Morning Brew Daily for more of the news you need to start your day. Share the show with a friend, and leave us a review on your favorite podcast app. Listen to Morning Brew Daily Here: https://www.swap.fm/l/mbd-note Watch Morning Brew Daily Here: https://www.youtube.com/@MorningBrewDailyShow Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Chegou o momento do já tradicional episódio duplo sobre o IgNobel, que tem como missão "honrar estudos e experiências que primeiro fazem as pessoas rir e depois pensar", com as descobertas científicas mais estranhas do ano.Esta é a primeira de duas partes sobre a edição 2025 do prêmio, com as categorias Literatura, Psicologia, Nutrição, Biologia e Química.Confira no papo entre o leigo curioso, Ken Fujioka, e o cientista PhD, Altay de Souza.> OUÇA (52min 22s)*Naruhodo! é o podcast pra quem tem fome de aprender. Ciência, senso comum, curiosidades, desafios e muito mais. Com o leigo curioso, Ken Fujioka, e o cientista PhD, Altay de Souza.Edição: Reginaldo Cursino.http://naruhodo.b9.com.br*APOIO: INSIDERIlustríssima ouvinte, ilustríssimo ouvinte do Naruhodo,sabe qual a minha peça coringa no guarda-roupas?É a Camiseta Oversized T-Shirt da INSIDER.Trampo? Ela cai bem.Lazer? Ela cai muito bem.É macia.É elástica.É anti-odor.Não desbota com o tempo.Não precisa passar.Regula a temperatura corporal.Entendeu por que ela é minha peça coringa?E, em Setembro, o Mês do Cliente, você tem a melhor oportunidade para começar a comprar INSIDER: combinando o cupom NARUHODO com os descontos do site, o seu desconto total pode chegar a até 50%!Isso mesmo: sua compra pode sair até pela metade do preço.Mas tem que acessar pela URL especial:creators.insiderstore.com.br/NARUHODOOu clicar no link da descrição deste episódio:o cupom será aplicado automaticamente no carrinho.INSIDER: inteligência em cada escolha.#InsiderStore*REFERÊNCIASThe 35th First Annual Ig Nobel Ceremony (2025)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z1cP4xKd_L4PRÊMIO DE LITERATURA [EUA]O falecido Dr. William B. Bean, por registrar e analisar persistentemente, durante 35 anos, a taxa de crescimento de uma de suas unhas. “A Note on Fingernail Growth,” William B. Bean, Journal of Investigative Dermatology, vol. 20, no. 1, January 1953, pp. 27-31. “A Discourse on Nail Growth and Unusual Fingernails,” William B. Bean, Transactions of the American Clinical and Climatological Association, vol. 74, 1962; pp. 152-67. “Nail Growth. Twenty-Five Years' Observation,” William B. Bean, Archives of Internal Medicine, vol. 122, no. 4, October 1968, pp. 359-61. “Nail Growth: 30 Years of Observation,” William B. Bean, Archives of Internal Medicine, vol. 134, no. 3, September 1974, pp. 497-502. “Some Notes of an Aging Nail Watcher,” William B. Bean, International Journal of Dermatology, vol. 15, no. 3, April 1976, pp. 225-30. “Nail Growth. Thirty-Five Years of Observation,” William B. Bean, Archives of Internal Medicine, vol. 140, no. 1, January 1980, pp. 73-6. Vreeman, R. C; Carroll, A. E (2007). "Medical myths". BMJ. 335 (7633): 1288–9. doi:10.1136/bmj.39420.420370.25PRÊMIO DE PSICOLOGIA [POLÔNIA, AUSTRÁLIA, CANADÁ]Marcin Zajenkowski e Gilles Gignac, por investigarem o que acontece quando você diz a pessoas narcisistas — ou a qualquer outra pessoa — que elas são inteligentes. “Telling People They Are Intelligent Correlates with the Feeling of Narcissistic Uniqueness: The Influence of IQ Feedback on Temporary State Narcissism,” Marcin Zajenkowski and Gilles E. Gignac, Intelligence, vol. 89, November–December 2021, 101595. PRÊMIO DE NUTRIÇÃO [NIGÉRIA, TOGO, ITÁLIA, FRANÇA]Daniele Dendi, Gabriel H. Segniagbeto, Roger Meek e Luca Luiselli, por estudarem em que medida um certo tipo de lagarto escolhe comer certos tipos de pizza. “Opportunistic Foraging Strategy of Rainbow Lizards at a Seaside Resort in Togo,” Daniele Dendi, Gabriel H. Segniagbeto, Roger Meek, and Luca Luiselli, African Journal of Ecology, vol. 61, no. 1, 2023, pp. 226-227. PRÊMIO DE BIOLOGIA [JAPÃO]Tomoki Kojima, Kazato Oishi, Yasushi Matsubara, Yuki Uchiyama, Yoshihiko Fukushima, Naoto Aoki, Say Sato, Tatsuaki Masuda, Junichi Ueda, Hiroyuki Hirooka e Katsutoshi Kino, por seus experimentos para descobrir se vacas pintadas com listras semelhantes às de zebras podem evitar ser picadas por moscas. “Cows Painted with Zebra-Like Striping Can Avoid Biting Fly Attack,” Tomoki Kojima, Kazato Oishi, Yasushi Matsubara, Yuki Uchiyama, Yoshihiko Fukushima, Naoto Aoki, Say Sato, Tatsuaki Masuda, Junichi Ueda, Hiroyuki Hirooka, and Katsutoshi Kino, PLoS ONE, vol. 14, no. 10, 2019, e0223447. PRÊMIO DE QUÍMICA [EUA, ISRAEL]Rotem Naftalovich, Daniel Naftalovich e Frank Greenway, por experimentos para testar se comer Teflon [uma forma de plástico mais formalmente chamada “politetrafluoretileno”] é uma boa maneira de aumentar o volume do alimento e, portanto, a saciedade sem aumentar o conteúdo calórico. “Polytetrafluoroethylene Ingestion as a Way to Increase Food Volume and Hence Satiety Without Increasing Calorie Content,” Rotem Naftalovich, Daniel Naftalovich, and Frank L. Greenway, Journal of Diabetes Science and Technology, vol. 10, no. 4, July 2016, pp. 971–976. “Use of Nondigestible Nonfibrous Volumizer of Meal Content as a Method for Increasing Feeling of Satiety,” Rotem Naftalovich and Daniel Naftalovich, U.S. Patent 9,924,736, issued March 27, 2018. *APOIE O NARUHODO!O Altay e eu temos duas mensagens pra você.A primeira é: muito, muito obrigado pela sua audiência. Sem ela, o Naruhodo sequer teria sentido de existir. Você nos ajuda demais não só quando ouve, mas também quando espalha episódios para familiares, amigos - e, por que não?, inimigos.A segunda mensagem é: existe uma outra forma de apoiar o Naruhodo, a ciência e o pensamento científico - apoiando financeiramente o nosso projeto de podcast semanal independente, que só descansa no recesso do fim de ano.Manter o Naruhodo tem custos e despesas: servidores, domínio, pesquisa, produção, edição, atendimento, tempo... Enfim, muitas coisas para cobrir - e, algumas delas, em dólar.A gente sabe que nem todo mundo pode apoiar financeiramente. E tá tudo bem. Tente mandar um episódio para alguém que você conhece e acha que vai gostar.A gente sabe que alguns podem, mas não mensalmente. E tá tudo bem também. Você pode apoiar quando puder e cancelar quando quiser. O apoio mínimo é de 15 reais e pode ser feito pela plataforma ORELO ou pela plataforma APOIA-SE. Para quem está fora do Brasil, temos até a plataforma PATREON.É isso, gente. Estamos enfrentando um momento importante e você pode ajudar a combater o negacionismo e manter a chama da ciência acesa. Então, fica aqui o nosso convite: apóie o Naruhodo como puder.bit.ly/naruhodo-no-orelo
Australia, Canadá, Reino Unido y Portugal reconocen oficialmente el Estado de Palestina, esperando que Francia y otros países sigan pronto. Hoy llega el otoño con un descenso de temperaturas y lluvias en Cataluña que causaron cortes de carreteras y retrasos en aeropuertos. Se celebra la entrega de los premios Ig Nobel, destacando una investigación sobre la eficacia de pintar vacas con rayas de cebra para reducir las picaduras de mosca y un estudio de 35 años sobre el crecimiento de las uñas. Fernando Martín reflexiona sobre las despedidas y los tipos de amigos que no sienten frío. Se juega un concurso de noticias reales, confirmando el caso de un "supermatador" en Ciudad Real y un futbolista expulsado que recupera su camiseta tras anularse su expulsión. Se subraya la importancia de invertir tiempo en las amistades, citando un estudio que cuantifica las horas necesarias para diferentes niveles de amistad. También se debate sobre las "compras arrepentidas" y el uso de objetos que ...
You've heard of the Nobel prize, but have you heard of the Ig Nobel prize? The Ig Nobel prize awards serve as a lighter counterpoint to the Nobel Prizes. This year's prizes included one on painting zebra stripes on cows to see if it would reduce insect bites.. Greg and Holly discuss.
Entre os prémios Ig Nobel deste ano está o da Paz, atribuído a um estudo que mostra como o consumo de álcool ajudar a falar línguas estrangeiras.
Each week Hot off the Wire looks at a variety of stories in business, science, health and more. This week's headlines include: Hurricane Helene displaced thousands of students. Some struggled to get back on track with school. The world nearly beat polio. But fake records, an imperfect vaccine and missteps aided its comeback. Move over, green lawns. Drier, warmer climate boosts interest in low-water landscaping. Who qualifies for 'no tax on tips' and what counts as a tip Here are the new rules. Senate rejects competing bills to fund government, increasing risk of shutdown on Oct. 1. US attorney whose office is investigating Letitia James is told he's being removed, AP source says. What to know after President Trump suggested federal regulators go after networks that criticize him. Late-night shows address Jimmy Kimmel suspension with humor and solidarity. Trump says he and Xi will meet at APEC and he'll go to China, says TikTok deal approved. Senate confirms Mike Waltz as Trump's ambassador to the United Nations after months of delays. Florida federal judge tosses Trump's $15B defamation lawsuit against The New York Times. Mudslides trap drivers, bury roads and damage homes in southern California. Packers coach Matt LaFleur talks Jordan Love’s leadership and more. RYDER CUP '25: The recipe for what Justin Thomas calls the 'biggest golf event ever'. Many sports fans are unhappy with how much it costs to watch their games, an AP-NORC poll finds. On this week's AP Religion Roundup, support from faith-based groups helps stabilize Scouting America. Frida Kahlo portrait could sell for $60 million and shatter records at Sotheby's. Trivial Pursuit, Furbies and even snow might join the Toy Hall of Fame. Following Kirk's assassination, Republicans sour on direction of the country, new AP-NORC poll finds. It's 'do or die' for electric vehicle maker Rivian as it breaks ground on a $5 billion plant. More Americans say Israel has 'gone too far' in the Gaza conflict, according to new AP-NORC polling. Takeaways from AP's report on a boom in mercury mining in central Mexico. Notre Dame’s towers reopen after six-year restoration. Estonia says 3 Russian fighters entered its airspace without permission and stayed for 12 minutes. Haitians yearn for home as gangs welcome them while police warn it's too dangerou. West Africans deported by US to Ghana have all been sent to their home countries. Does painting cows with stripes prevent fly bites Researchers who studied this win Ig Nobel prize. —The Associated Press About this program Host Terry Lipshetz is managing editor of the national newsroom for Lee Enterprises. Besides producing the daily Hot off the Wire news podcast, Terry conducts periodic interviews for this Behind the Headlines program, co-hosts the Streamed & Screened movies and television program and is the former producer of Across the Sky, a podcast dedicated to weather and climate. Theme music The News Tonight, used under license from Soundstripe. YouTube clearance: ZR2MOTROGI4XAHRX
If you've ever been on holiday and found yourself speaking the local language with the waiter a little too well, it may be because of the few drinks you had before that…University of Bath Researcher, Inge Kersbergen, has put to the test the possibility that a little tipple makes you more efficient at speaking a new language, and she's been awarded the Ig Nobel prize for her work!She joins Seán to discuss.
Diesmal: Nachtrag zu Polen, Streiks in Frankreich, KI-Ministerin in Albanien, Umerziehung in Russland, UN-Kommission zu Gaza, Meinungsfreiheit nach Charlie Kirks Tod, Studie zu Rechtspopulisten, Sham Jaff zu Global Witness, Katharina Reiches Klimapolitik. Mit einem Faktencheck von Nándor Hulverscheidt und einem Limerick von Jens Ohrenblicker.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
If you've ever been on holiday and found yourself speaking the local language with the waiter a little too well, it may be because of the few drinks you had before that…University of Bath Researcher, Inge Kersbergen, has put to the test the possibility that a little tipple makes you more efficient at speaking a new language, and she's been awarded the Ig Nobel prize for her work!She joins Seán to discuss.
Els IgNobel.. els premis a les investigacions més absurdes
Voici La Petite Histoire des prix Ig Nobel, ces récompenses scientifiques insolites qui célèbrent des recherches aussi absurdes qu'ingénieuses. Du biscuit trempé au thé jusqu'aux wombats et leurs crottes cubiques, un univers où l'humour rencontre la science et fait réfléchir autrement.
En El Faro 'revés' hablamos con la investigadora María José Torres-Prioris, que se llevó el IG Nobel que entrega la Universidad de Harvard por su estudio sobre las capacidades lingüísticas de las personas que hablan al revés.
Esta noche hablamos con María José Torres, investigadora de la Universidad de Málaga y ganadora de un premio IG Nobel de la universidad de Harvard por su trabajo sobre el funcionamiento del cerebro de las personas que dominan el habla inversa, es decir, que pueden comunicarse al revés. La trapecista y cofundadora de la compañía 'Punto Cero' Zenaida Alcalde, nos confirma que en España se puede vivir del circo y que los espectáculos circenses actuales poco tienen que ver con los de antaño. Nuestro colaborador Igor Paskual nos trae cuatro reveses que marcaron la historia de la música. Hoy también recordamos la entrevista de Gatopardo a la cantante La Mari de Chambao.
Chaque année, depuis 1991, des prix sont remis par des lauréats de prix Nobel à des chercheurs qui ont fait des recherches le plus sérieusement du monde sur des sujets le plus souvent scientifiques, mais pas que... PRÉCISION: 7:03 Jacques Chirac en 1996 président de la République en était à la première fois. Merci à un fidèle abonné qui a noté l'imprécision. (@erictisserand2135) Script: Françoise Dulong et Laurent Turcot Adhérez à cette chaîne pour obtenir des avantages : https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCN4TCCaX-gqBNkrUqXdgGRA/join Pour soutenir la chaîne, au choix: 1. Cliquez sur le bouton « Adhérer » sous la vidéo. 2. Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/hndl Musique issue du site : epidemicsound.com Images provenant de https://www.storyblocks.com Abonnez-vous à la chaine: https://www.youtube.com/c/LHistoirenousledira Les vidéos sont utilisées à des fins éducatives selon l'article 107 du Copyright Act de 1976 sur le Fair-Use. Sources et pour aller plus loin: Les prix IGNOBEL, la science qui fait rire et réfléchir, marc Abrahams, Éditions Orion, Londres, 2002 Improbable research www.improbable.com Les prix Ig-Nobel, Le double tranchant de l'humour scientifique, Yves Gingras et Lionel Vérin, p.66 à 71 https://shs.cairn.info/revue-actes-de-la-recherche-en-sciences-sociales-2002-1-page-66?lang=fr “The Ig Nobel Prizes” de Marc Abrahams Christophe, 26 avril 2008 https://www.coindeweb.net/blogsanssujetprecis/index.php?post/2008/04/26/503-the-ig-nobel-prizes-de-marc-abrahams Best of des IG Nobels… de médecine24 novembre 2014 par La rédaction dans Insolite http://www.techniques-ingenieur.fr/actualite/articles/best-of-des-ig-nobels-de-medecine-2813/ Measurement and quantification of cadaveric nasal hairs Christine T. Pham MD, Kiana Hashemi BS, Bobak Hedayati MD, Ella Csuka BS, Arash Babadjouni BA, MSc, Tiana Mamaghani BS, Jamie Wikenheiser PhD, Margit Juhasz MD, MSc, Natasha Atanaskova Mesinkovska MD, PHD , 12 October 2021 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ijd.15921 le prix IG-Nobel 2024 sur la chaîne « le pointGenius » https://youtu.be/MZ02hsi9GDQ?si=h-aPU9mrDbDpNgpu Épisode 47 - Gaffes, hasards et Nobel du bizarre, 8 Feb 2025 https://baladoquebec.ca/petites-obsessions/episode-47-gaffes-hasards-et-nobel-du-bizarre Autres références disponibles sur demande. #histoire #documentaire #nobelprize #ignobel #scienceexperiments
Summary: In this first episode of Season 7, Laura A. Rodriguez O'Dwyer, member of the SPD podcast and secretary of the New York Circle of Translators, interviews Dr. Adolfo Garcia, a neuroscientist, musician, translator, and language teacher whose PhD dissertation focused on a Neurolinguistic Model on Translation Equivalence and whose postdoctoral research was centered on cognitive neuroscience on bilingualism. He is the creator of the “International Conference on Translation, Interpreting, and Cognition series”. His contributions have been recognized by the Linguistic Association of Canada and the United States, the Legislature of the City of Buenos Aires, the Alzheimer's Association, and Harvard's Ig Nobel awards. He also received the Early Career Award, from the Society for the Neurobiology of Language; and the UpLink Top Innovator Award, from the World Economic Forum. Our guest will unravel the neurological differences between translation and simultaneous interpretation, give you some useful insights on how to strengthen your memory, teach you about the importance of breaks, and much more. Dr. Garcia does not only explain highly complex scientific concepts in a masterful way, but he also gives us useful tips on how to apply state-of-the art research to improve our memory and take better care of our brain. Furthermore, should your curiosity about the mysteries of the brain and our profession get sparked, Dr. Garcia has generously provided us with more resources to quench your thirst for knowledge. Thank you for listening! SHOW NOTES TREC Network (Translation Research Empiricism Cognition) A network of scholars and research groups devoted to cognitive research on translation and interpreting. https://www.trecwebsite.com/ Podcast: minds between languages Interviews with specialists in translation and interpreting and neurolinguistics amongst others. https://mindsbetweenlanguages.org/ International Network for Cross-Linguistic Research on Brain Health https://include-network.com/ Música: “On The Beach” por JuliusH.Fuente: pixabay
Le Festival Histoire et Cité sur le thème des animaux Les brèves du jour Comment la Guinée s'est débarassée de la maladie du sommeil? Le Ig Nobel Award Tour Show 2025 à lʹEPFL
Une équipe de linguistes de l'institut Max-Planck de psycholinguistique aux Pays-Bas a fait une découverte remarquable en 2013 : l'existence d'un mot véritablement universel, "hein?" (ou ses équivalents), présent dans 31 langues différentes à travers le monde. Ce qui rend cette découverte particulièrement intéressante est que ce mot ne semble pas avoir été emprunté d'une langue à une autre, mais s'être développé de manière indépendante dans diverses cultures. Pour parvenir à cette conclusion, les chercheurs ont mené une étude approfondie, analysant des conversations informelles dans des contextes très variés, allant des grandes métropoles aux villages les plus reculés. Dans certains cas, ils se sont même immergés pendant plusieurs semaines dans des communautés isolées pour observer et enregistrer des échanges spontanés. Ce mot universel partage des caractéristiques phonétiques remarquablement similaires dans toutes les langues étudiées. Il est systématiquement monosyllabique, prononcé avec une intonation interrogative, et souvent accompagné d'un léger coup de glotte. Sa fonction est également identique partout : il sert à signaler une incompréhension et à demander une clarification dans la conversation. Les chercheurs expliquent ce phénomène par ce qu'ils appellent une "convergence évolutive", concept emprunté à la biologie. Tout comme différentes espèces peuvent développer des caractéristiques similaires face à des défis environnementaux communs, les langues auraient évolué vers une solution commune pour répondre au besoin universel de gérer les incompréhensions dans les conversations. Cette découverte est d'autant plus significative qu'elle remet en question l'un des principes fondamentaux de la linguistique : l'arbitraire du signe, selon lequel il n'existe normalement pas de lien direct entre le son d'un mot et sa signification. "Hein?" semble constituer une rare exception à cette règle. Contrairement à des sons instinctifs comme les pleurs ou les gémissements, "hein?" est un mot qui s'apprend au cours du développement linguistique. Les enfants l'acquièrent en observant son usage dans les interactions sociales. Sa simplicité phonétique et sa prosodie interrogative en font un outil optimal pour réagir rapidement et clarifier une situation sans interrompre le flux naturel de la conversation. Cette découverte, récompensée par un Ig Nobel en 2013, illustre comment le langage humain peut développer des solutions universelles pour répondre à des besoins de communication fondamentaux, transcendant ainsi les barrières culturelles et linguistiques. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Une équipe de linguistes de l'institut Max-Planck de psycholinguistique aux Pays-Bas a fait une découverte remarquable en 2013 : l'existence d'un mot véritablement universel, "hein?" (ou ses équivalents), présent dans 31 langues différentes à travers le monde. Ce qui rend cette découverte particulièrement intéressante est que ce mot ne semble pas avoir été emprunté d'une langue à une autre, mais s'être développé de manière indépendante dans diverses cultures. Pour parvenir à cette conclusion, les chercheurs ont mené une étude approfondie, analysant des conversations informelles dans des contextes très variés, allant des grandes métropoles aux villages les plus reculés. Dans certains cas, ils se sont même immergés pendant plusieurs semaines dans des communautés isolées pour observer et enregistrer des échanges spontanés. Ce mot universel partage des caractéristiques phonétiques remarquablement similaires dans toutes les langues étudiées. Il est systématiquement monosyllabique, prononcé avec une intonation interrogative, et souvent accompagné d'un léger coup de glotte. Sa fonction est également identique partout : il sert à signaler une incompréhension et à demander une clarification dans la conversation. Les chercheurs expliquent ce phénomène par ce qu'ils appellent une "convergence évolutive", concept emprunté à la biologie. Tout comme différentes espèces peuvent développer des caractéristiques similaires face à des défis environnementaux communs, les langues auraient évolué vers une solution commune pour répondre au besoin universel de gérer les incompréhensions dans les conversations. Cette découverte est d'autant plus significative qu'elle remet en question l'un des principes fondamentaux de la linguistique : l'arbitraire du signe, selon lequel il n'existe normalement pas de lien direct entre le son d'un mot et sa signification. "Hein?" semble constituer une rare exception à cette règle. Contrairement à des sons instinctifs comme les pleurs ou les gémissements, "hein?" est un mot qui s'apprend au cours du développement linguistique. Les enfants l'acquièrent en observant son usage dans les interactions sociales. Sa simplicité phonétique et sa prosodie interrogative en font un outil optimal pour réagir rapidement et clarifier une situation sans interrompre le flux naturel de la conversation. Cette découverte, récompensée par un Ig Nobel en 2013, illustre comment le langage humain peut développer des solutions universelles pour répondre à des besoins de communication fondamentaux, transcendant ainsi les barrières culturelles et linguistiques. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
In this edition of Titans of Science, Chris Smith chats with co-founder of Annals of Improbable Research, and the master of ceremonies for the Ig Nobel prize, Marc Abrahams... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Marc Abrahams created the Ig Nobel prizes in 1991, after years of collecting examples of weird research that he included in the Journal of Irreproducible Results. The aim of these satirical awards is to honour achievements that “make people laugh, then think”.While the initial response from the scientific community was mixed, last year the prize received more than 9,000 nominations. Several researchers who have won an ‘Ig' say that it has improved their careers by helping them to reach wider audiences, and spend more time engaging with the public about their work.This is an audio version of our Feature: How a silly science prize changed my career Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Nem toda ciência é feita para mudar o mundo de imediato. Algumas descobertas começam como ideias inusitadas, questionamentos não convencionais ou até mesmo experimentos que parecem piadas internas de laboratório. É nesse universo peculiar que nasce o Prêmio IgNobel, uma celebração do incomum, do inesperado e do hilário, mas sempre com uma pitada de genialidade. Aqui, a fronteira entre o absurdo e o brilhante se mistura, mostrando que a curiosidade humana não conhece limites. Desde experimentos sobre patos mortos como iscas para crocodilos até estudos sobre a eficácia de chicletes para curar ouvidos entupidos, o IgNobel nos lembra que a ciência não precisa ser sempre sisuda. Ela pode nos fazer rir antes de refletir. Neste episódio, os nossos investigadores Andrei Fernandes, Ananda Mida, Ira Croft e Jey Carrillo mergulharão nas histórias por trás dos prêmios mais improváveis, e fascinantes do mundo. Venha descobrir como o riso e a ciência caminham juntos, provando que até a irreverência pode levar a grandes insights. Este episódio é um oferecimento Alura, a maior e mais completa escola de tecnologia do Brasil. Matricule-se com o desconto especial com o cupom MUNDOFREAK: alura.tv/mundofreak
Welcome to another exciting week of weird. Victoria starts off this week;s show with the story of an Ignobel prize wining study showing that mammals can breathe through their butts. Kirk then takes us to the ocean to learn about animals that can drink saltwater without dying like us humans would. Rachel rounds out this week by returning again into the ocean to introduce us to the bizarre looking antarctic scale worm. It is beautiful and awful all at once. Perfect, just how we like it right? Join us weekly for more strange nature. Our supporters on Patreon get every episode ad free! Support us: patreon.com/strangebynature Email us: contact@strangebynaturepodcast.com Visit us at: strangebynaturepodcast.com
In this episode from September, Madeleine Finlay speaks to Dr Saul Newman, an interdisciplinary researcher at University College London and the University of Oxford, who has recently won an Ig Nobel prize – given to scientific research that ‘first makes people laugh, and then makes them think' – for his work showing that many claims of people living extraordinarily long lives come from places with short lifespans, no birth certificates, and where clerical errors and pension fraud abound. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/sciencepod
Claudia Hammond is joined by journalist Andrew Green to check-in on their 2024 health predictions and review just how accurate they were. Together, they explore the stories that we didn't see coming and the game-changing medical innovations that shaped global health this year. Plus, the unusual Ig Nobel medicine prize, and a healthy dose of competition in the form of the ultimate health fact-off.
The Ig Nobel awards are a salute to achievements that, in the words of the organizers, “make people laugh, then think.” Each year, the editors of the science humor magazine Annals of Improbable Research choose 10 lucky(?) winners who have unusual achievements in science, medicine, and other fields. This year's awards were presented in a theatrical extravaganza in an MIT lecture hall in September.They included awards for studying coin flipping (including hundreds of thousands of real coin flips), the movements of a dead trout, and an opera about Murphy's Law. In a Science Friday holiday tradition, Ira hosts an hour of highlights from the ceremony.Transcripts for each segment will be available after the show airs on sciencefriday.com. Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.
[We tried to put together a Halloween episode, but everyone was doing med school stuff. Rude. So enjoy this re-run!] As another physician shortage looms, M2s Jeff and Olivia and M1 Fallon look at the reasons–the market forces, political issues, and the missing incentives. There is some good news–a shortage of physicians means that residents get a ton of solicitations for post-training jobs. Elon Musk's Neuralink might be bad for monkeys, but the FDA has cleared the way for human trials to begin. What place do techbros–who have a rep for “moving fast and breaking things”– have in medicine where lives are at stake? And Dave gives a pop quiz on this year's Ig Nobel Prize winners--listen to learn more about the latest technology in excretion analysis!
Chegou o momento do já tradicional episódio duplo sobre o IgNobel, que tem como missão "honrar estudos e experiências que primeiro fazem as pessoas rir e depois pensar", com as descobertas científicas mais estranhas do ano.Esta é a segunda e última parte sobre a edição 2024 do prêmio, que teve como tema a "Lei de Murphy", com as categorias Fisiologia, Probabilidade, Química, Demografia e Paz.Confira no papo entre o leigo curioso, Ken Fujioka, e o cientista PhD, Altay de Souza.> OUÇA (40min 55s)*Naruhodo! é o podcast pra quem tem fome de aprender. Ciência, senso comum, curiosidades, desafios e muito mais. Com o leigo curioso, Ken Fujioka, e o cientista PhD, Altay de Souza.Edição: Reginaldo Cursino.http://naruhodo.b9.com.br*REFERÊNCIASPRÊMIO DE FISIOLOGIA [JAPÃO, EUA]Ryo Okabe, Toyofumi F. Chen-Yoshikawa, Yosuke Yoneyama, Yuhei Yokoyama, Satona Tanaka, Akihiko Yoshizawa, Wendy L. Thompson, Gokul Kannan, Eiji Kobayashi, Hiroshi Date e Takanori Takebe, por descobrir que muitos mamíferos são capazes de respirar pelo ânus.REFERÊNCIA: “Mammalian Enteral Ventilation Ameliorates Respiratory Failure,” Ryo Okabe et al., Med, vol. 2, 11 de junho de 2021.QUEM FOI À CERIMÔNIA: Takanori Takebe, Toyofumi Chen-Yoshikawa, Ryo Okabe, Eiji Kobayashi, Yosuke Yoneyama, Yuhei Yokoyama.https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666634021001537PRÊMIO DE PROBABILIDADE [HOLANDA, SUÍÇA, BÉLGICA, FRANÇA, ALEMANHA, HUNGRIA, REPÚBLICA TCHECA]František Bartoš, Eric-Jan Wagenmakers, Alexandra Sarafoglou, Henrik Godmann e muitos colegas, por mostrar, tanto na teoria quanto em 350.757 experimentos, que ao jogar uma moeda, ela tende a cair no mesmo lado que começou.REFERÊNCIA: “Fair Coins Tend to Land on the Same Side They Started,” František Bartoš et al., arXiv 2310.04153, 2023.QUEM FOI À CERIMÔNIA: Frantisek Bartos e Eric-Jan Wagenmakers.https://arxiv.org/abs/2310.04153Naruhodo #233 - O que é o "efeito cumbuca"?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fW6uoBmt83cPRÊMIO DE QUÍMICA [HOLANDA, FRANÇA]Tess Heeremans, Antoine Deblais, Daniel Bonn e Sander Woutersen, por usar cromatografia para separar vermes bêbados de vermes sóbrios.REFERÊNCIA: “Chromatographic Separation of Active Polymer–Like Worm Mixtures by Contour Length and Activity,” Tess Heeremans et al., Science Advances, vol. 8, nº 23, 2022.QUEM FOI À CERIMÔNIA: Tess Heeremans, Antoine Deblais, Daniel Bonn, Sander Woutersen.https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.abj7918Naruhodo #339 - Por que as coisas parecem girar quando estamos bêbados?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YmK1Yq0mwW8Naruhodo #52 - No bar, fazer xixi uma primeira vez aumenta a vontade de urinar mais vezes?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WMUrKMHJovcPRÊMIO DE DEMOGRAFIA [AUSTRÁLIA, REINO UNIDO]Saul Justin Newman, por trabalho investigativo que descobriu que muitas das pessoas famosas por terem as vidas mais longas viveram em lugares com péssimos registros de nascimento e morte.REFERÊNCIAS: “Supercentenarians and the Oldest-Old Are Concentrated into Regions with No Birth Certificates and Short Lifespans,” Saul Justin Newman, BioRxiv, 2019; https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/704080v1“Supercentenarian and Remarkable Age Records Exhibit Patterns Indicative of Clerical Errors and Pension Fraud,” Saul Justin Newman, BioRxiv, 2024.QUEM FOI À CERIMÔNIA: Saul Justin Newman.https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/704080v3PRÊMIO DA PAZ [EUA]B.F. Skinner, por experimentos para verificar a viabilidade de abrigar pombos vivos dentro de mísseis para guiar suas trajetórias.REFERÊNCIA: “Pigeons in a Pelican,” B.F. Skinner, American Psychologist, vol. 15, nº 1, 1960, pp. 28-37.QUEM FOI À CERIMÔNIA: A filha de B.F. Skinner, Julie Skinner Vargas.https://www.appstate.edu/~steelekm/classes/psy3214/Documents/Skinner1960.pdf*APOIE O NARUHODO PELA PLATAFORMA ORELO!Um aviso importantíssimo: o podcast Naruhodo agora está no Orelo: https://bit.ly/naruhodo-no-oreloE é por meio dessa plataforma de apoio aos criadores de conteúdo que você ajuda o Naruhodo a se manter no ar.Você escolhe um valor de contribuição mensal e tem acesso a conteúdos exclusivos, conteúdos antecipados e vantagens especiais.Além disso, você pode ter acesso ao nosso grupo fechado no Telegram, e conversar comigo, com o Altay e com outros apoiadores.E não é só isso: toda vez que você ouvir ou fizer download de um episódio pelo Orelo, vai também estar pingando uns trocadinhos para o nosso projeto.Então, baixe agora mesmo o app Orelo no endereço Orelo.CC ou na sua loja de aplicativos e ajude a fortalecer o conhecimento científico.https://bit.ly/naruhodo-no-orelo
DJ Qualls (@TheOnlyDJQualls) and Kelly Blackheart (@kellyblackheart) of the Locked & Probably Loaded podcast join Matt and Jesse to talk about DJ's upcoming movie Carved, Nashville dive bars, the Ark Encounter, the Ig Nobel prize for butt-breathing, extreme aging, re-creating Mars in a lab and resurrecting the woolly mammoth.
Mind Pump Fit Tip: The one MUST-DO hack to getting lean & healthy if you're starting at 30% body fat. (1:46) Moments when you get tested as a parent. (10:41) Earn phase of your life vs learn phase. (25:50) BPC-157 is crazy! (31:50) Fun Facts with Justin: Anal breathing. (37:47) The only ‘off the rack' suit for “jacked” guys! (40:10) A Pampers commercial is waiting to happen. (41:59) Fall is here, get your Vuori down jacket. (43:50) How CRAZY counterintelligence is getting! (45:16) The secret sauce is NOT baby oil. (49:15) At what point do we not respect authority? (55:29) Shout out to Mind Pump Show ‘mash-ups'. (1:00:27) #ListenerLive question #1 – What do you think about "resetting" each rep during a workout? (1:02:15) #ListenerLive question #2 – What's the best way to regain this muscle post-500-mile hike? (1:13:17) #ListenerLive question #3 – Should I stay in maintenance, do a bit of a bulk, or do a bit of a cut, and for how long if I want to get leaner? (1:23:40) Related Links/Products Mentioned Ask a question to Mind Pump, live! Email: live@mindpumpmedia.com Visit State & Liberty for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! ** Discount is now automatically applied at checkout 15% off your first order! ** Visit Vuori Clothing for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! ** No code to receive 20% off your first order. ** For Mind Pump listeners only, join IHP and Equi.Life for 2 full days of live exhibitions, inspiring keynote discussions, and engaging expert panels at The Reimagining Health Summit October 23 - October 25th in Orlando, FL. Visit here and use the code “LIVE100” which will give $100 off any level ticket (excluding virtual). September Promotion: MAPS Starter | Starter Bundle 50% off! ** Code SEPTEMBER50 at checkout ** Mind Pump #1937: How to Avoid Gaining Weight During the Holiday Season The 360 Degree Leader: Developing Your Influence from Anywhere in the Organization – Book by John C. Maxwell Mind Pump #2125: Heal Like Wolverine: BPC 157 with Dr. William Seeds TRANSCEND your goals! Telehealth Provider • Physician Directed GET YOUR PERSONALIZED TREATMENT PLAN! Hormone Replacement Therapy, Cognitive Function, Sleep & Fatigue, Athletic Performance and MORE. Their online process and medical experts make it simple to find out what's right for you. Gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157 accelerates healing of transected rat Achilles tendon and in vitro stimulates tendocytes growth Scientists win Ig Nobel for discovering anal breathing in mammals What we know about the Hezbollah device explosions Watch Masters of the Air - Show - Apple TV+ Mind Pump Show - YouTube Visit Butcher Box for this month's exclusive Mind Pump offer! ** Choose which high-quality, lean protein you'll get for free in every order for a year—wild-caught salmon, organic chicken breasts, or grass-fed ground beef. Plus, get $20 off your first order with our code. That's up to $404 in savings for the year! ** Mind Pump #2122: Deadlift Masterclass How To Sumo Deadlift (The RIGHT Way) | Jordan Syatt – Mind Pump TV What Is The Prerequisite For The Deadlift? – Dr. Jordan Shallow How To Hip Hinge Properly (Fix THIS!) Building Muscle with Adam Schafer – Mind Pump TV Mind Pump #2287: Bodybuilding 101- How to Bulk and Cut Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources People Mentioned Dr. William Seeds (@williamseedsmd) Instagram
Kurt and Scotty talk about how the scientists who discovered mammals can breathe through their butts receive Ig Nobel prize, a man buys $395k dream home knowing it will get swallowed by ocean, a Florida man arrested after throwing pasta with sauce during road rage incident and Delta is reminding flight prospective attendants that they must wear underwear to interviews! Support this podcast by shopping our latest sponsor deals and promotions at this link: https://bit.ly/4a61tMk Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Brady Report - Monday September 16, 2024 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Like father, like daughter – a new study finds fathers with unhealthy diets can actually cardiovascular disease on to their daughters specifically. Plus, you won't want to miss the Ig Nobel award-winning research this year – Reggie has details. And on TDIH, the NYC riot that started with a hat! Like father, like daughter | ScienceDaily Ig Nobel prize: Scientists who discovered mammals can breathe through their anuses receive award | CNN Studies on pigeon-guided missiles, swimming abilities of dead fish among Ig Nobels winners | AP News 100 Years Ago Men and Boys Fought on the Streets of New York Over Wearing Straw Hats Past Summer | The New York Public Library (nypl.org) Contact the show - coolstuffcommute@gmail.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Vladimir Putin has issued a warning against the UK and US lifting their restrictions on Ukraine using long-range missiles against targets inside Russia. Britain and France have already sent Storm Shadow missiles to Ukraine, but with the caveat that Kyiv can only fire them at targets inside its own borders.From the tone of President Putin's latest remarks, it's clear he considers that the targeting of internationally recognised Russian territory with Western missile systems would take the conflict to a new level. What he didn't make clear is how Moscow would respond.Also in the programme, authorities in Nigeria Borno State say up to two million people affected by floods after the collapse of a dam earlier this week during heavy rainfall; and it's time for the tongue in cheek Ig Nobel awards - amusing studies with serious implications. Photo: Russian President Vladimir Putin Credit: ALEXEI DANICHEV/SPUTNIK/KREMLIN POOL
“Your spouse is cheating on you.” That's the shocking line behind a new sextortion scam. The message includes a link claiming to offer “proof,” but it's a trap to get you to click. Plus, Gen Z is moving away from Google, and strange science wins big at the Ig Nobel awards.