From the Internet’s Beginnings to Our Understanding of Consciousness, This Editor Has Seen It All
Science Quickly
Scientific American
4.4 • 1.4K Ratings
🗓️ 18 April 2025
⏱️ 20 minutes
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| 0:33.7 | For Scientific American Science quickly, I'm Rachel Feltman. |
| 0:51.8 | It goes without saying that a lot has changed at Scientific American since our first issue came out in 1845. |
| 0:58.8 | But the magazine and the world of science journalism in general also looks radically different today than it did in, say, 1990. |
| 1:07.0 | That's when today's guest first started working at Siam. |
| 1:10.0 | Until his retirement earlier this month, Gary Sticks served as Scientific American Senior Editor of Mind and Brain Topics. |
| 1:16.7 | Given that Gary worked at Siam longer than I've been alive, we thought it would be cool to pick his brain about how his coverage areas of technology and neuroscience have evolved over the last 35 years. |
| 1:27.8 | Gary, thanks so much for coming on to talk to us today. |
| 1:30.2 | Well, thank you for having me. |
| 1:32.0 | So when did you actually start at Scientific American? |
| 1:35.1 | I started in June of 1990. |
| 1:38.9 | I was here largely before the Internet, as we know it now. We take the floppy disk, we create a printout, |
| 1:47.9 | and that was used by the copy desk to actually edit the articles we were doing. And there always |
| 1:55.2 | are corrections to a manuscript. One copy editor would have to read to the other the changes. |
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