Harry Potter-free links
---David Foster Wallace's archives---if other directors made The Social Network
---an interview with Isabelle Huppert
---Kevin Patterson's "Diseases of Affluence":
---Duncan Jones' Source Code trailer
---the Brighton Rock trailer
---behind the scenes of Peeping Tom
---Google and money
---the dangers of teaching nowadays
---A. O. Scott wonders why he goes to the movies

---the new data journalist:
"The open data movement campaigns for important information -- such as government spending, scientific information and maps -- to be made publicly available for the benefit of society both democratically and economically. The linked data movement (championed by the inventor of the Web, Sir Tim Berners-Lee) campaigns for that data to be made available in such a way that it can be linked to other sets of data.
That means, for instance, a computer can see that the director of a company named in a particular government contract is the same person who was paid as a consultant on a related government policy document. Advocates argue that this will also result in economic and social benefits.
Concrete results of both movements can be seen in the US and UK -- most visibly with the launch of government data repositories Data.gov andData.gov.uk in 2009 and 2010 respectively -- but also less publicised experiments such as "Where Does My Money Go?", which uses data to show how public expenditure is distributed, and "Mapumen-tal," which combines travel data, property prices and public ratings of 'scenicness' to help show at a glance which areas of a city might be the best place to live based on individual requirements.
But there are dozens, possibly hundreds, of similar examples in industries from health and science to culture and sport. We are experiencing an unprecedented release of data -- some have named it 'Big Data' -- and yet for the most part, media organisations have been slow to react.
That is about to change."
---molecular animation
---"This is your brain on metaphors" by Robert Sapolsky
---19 movies that double as movie criticism
---Sheila considers her eight years of blogging:

---OK Go and the art of the viral video
---NYC timelapse
---the welcome return of Whit Stillman
---Angelina Jolie
---@CraigatPorlock reviews The Best American Noir of the Century
---Ted Koppel reflects on the death of real news
---lastly, Jasan Bellamy and Ed Howard consider An Autumn Afternoon


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