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The Gist

Chris Gethard Shows Off His Guns

The Gist

Peach Fish Productions

News, Daily News

4.53.7K Ratings

🗓️ 5 August 2014

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Comedian Chris Gethard shows The Gist his guns. We'll hear how his fans are demanding a new range of creative experimentation and interactivity on his public access program The Chris Gethard Show. His new album is called My Comedy Album. For the Spiel, the country in Africa that's a runaway success story. Photo Illustration by Slate. Photo by Jewel Frankfeldt Photography: https://www.facebook.com/JewelFrankfeldtPhotography Get The Gist by email as soon as it's available: http://slate.com/GistEmail Subscribe to the podcast in iTunes: http://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/slate…id873667927?mt=2 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

GSK believes innovation starts when you stop to listen. That's why GSK and Veeve Health

0:08.1

Care have partnered with the HIV community for decades and developed medicines that better

0:13.9

fit the lives of people living with HIV. That's just one example of how GSK unites science,

0:20.7

technology, and talent to get ahead of disease together. Visit gsk.com to learn more.

0:27.7

The following podcast contains explicit language.

0:36.8

It's Tuesday, August 5th, 2014. From slate, it's the gist I'm Mike Pasca. So researchers from

0:44.0

MIT, along with Microsoft and Adobe, okay, I'm going to stop myself right there. Do you have a good

0:48.1

feeling? Do you have a good feeling right now when I say researchers from where they're from really

0:53.5

a texture expectations? Like researchers from the University of Washington's Gottmann Institute,

0:59.6

you know about these guys? Oh, they always come up with the most delightful surveys and stories,

1:04.7

like guys with mustaches or attracted to ladies with mustaches, whatever. But it's like a love lab.

1:10.2

But then other researchers from researchers from okay, Cupid Bammo. I'm going on a date with

1:15.5

the Steve Adore. All right, so let's let's backtrack. Researchers from MIT, Microsoft,

1:21.9

and Adobe, neutral. Okay, let's see where it goes. Have found out that by reading the video

1:28.8

of an object, you can hear the sound playing in a room. What? Huh? I'll explain. So sounds

1:35.0

are vibrations. We all know this. And when music is loud, maybe you've looked at your plants and

1:39.6

you see the plant leaves vibrating or a glass of water vibrating, picture taking a camera,

1:44.6

not a cell phone camera, but a commercially available SLR camera, and shooting a video of a plant

1:51.3

vibrating or a glass of water, or, and this is what they did, a bag of potato chips, analyze the

1:57.7

video, and you can backtrack and figure out what the sound was. So MIT put out a video explaining how

2:05.2

it works. They played the sound that was in the room, and then they took pictures of things,

2:10.9

objects through soundproof glass, and listen to what it sounded like.

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