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How to Make Life-Changingly Good Cream Puffs | From the Test Kitchen

Adults Creativity Food
The cream puff is the Eiffel Tower of Parisian pastries: iconic, beloved, and displayed everywhere. The recipe is so irrefutably timeless that even Pierre Herme, France's most famous (and endlessly innovative) pastry chef, still uses the formula he learned as a 14-year-old apprentice.

Three anti-social skills to improve your writing - Nadia Kalman

Adults Art Books Creativity
You need social skills to have a conversation in real life -- but they're quite different from the skills you need to write good dialogue. Educator Nadia Kalman suggests a few "anti-social skills," like eavesdropping and muttering to yourself, that can help you write an effective dialogue for your next story.

What's the definition of comedy? Banana. - Addison Anderson

Adults Creativity Humor Psychology
What makes us giggle and guffaw? The inability to define comedy is its very appeal; it is defined by its defiance of definition. Addison Anderson riffs on the philosophy of Henri Bergson and Aristotle to elucidate how a definition draws borders while comedy breaks them down.

Are you a body with a mind or a mind with a body? - Maryam Alimardani

Adults Psychology Science
Our bodies - the physical, biological parts of us - and our minds - the thinking, conscious aspects - have a complicated, tangled relationship. Which one primarily defines you or your self? Are you a body with a mind or a mind with a body? Maryam Alimardani investigates.

In on a secret? That's dramatic irony - Christopher Warner

Adults Creativity Film
You're in a movie theater, watching the new horror flick. The audience knows something that the main character does not. The audience sees the character's actions are not in his best interest. What's that feeling -- the one that makes you want to shout at the screen? Christopher Warner identifies this storytelling device as dramatic irony.

Situational irony: The opposite of what you think - Christopher Warner

Adults Creativity Humor
Leaps and bounds separate that which is ironic and that which many people simply say is ironic. Christopher Warner wants to set the record straight: Something is ironic if and only if it is the exact opposite of what you would expect.

A brief history of banned numbers - Alessandra King

Adults History Math
They say the pen is mightier than the sword, and authorities have often agreed. From outlawed religious tracts and revolutionary manifestos to censored and burned books, we know the potential power of words to overturn the social order. But as strange as it may seem, some numbers have also been considered dangerous enough to ban. Alessandra King details the history behind illegal numbers.

Overcoming obstacles - Steven Claunch

Adults Disability Psychology Society
When faced with a bump in the road, sometimes we forget we have a choice: overcome the obstacle or let it overcome you. Steven Claunch, who was born without fingers on his right hand and with one leg shorter than the other and has excelled in basketball nonetheless, explains why obstacles can provide an opportunity to both inspire others and develop character.

How to use a semicolon - Emma Bryce

Adults Education Language
It may seem like the semicolon is struggling with an identity crisis. It looks like a comma crossed with a period. Maybe that's why we toss these punctuation marks around like grammatical confetti; we're confused about how to use them properly. Emma Bryce clarifies best practices for the semi-confusing semicolon.

Is Reality Real? The Simulation Argument

Adults Human Science
What if we are not creators, but creations?

Overcoming Hate - YouTuber KARIM's Story

Adults Psychology Relationships
YouTuber Karim (AreWeFamousNow, KUKU) is an amazing and powerful voice for peace and understanding, calling social injustices out and fighting for tolerance - making a real difference.

New York: America's MEGACITY

Adults Cities History World
The story of New York City, America's megalopolis.

Grammar's great divide: The Oxford comma - TED-Ed

Adults Education Language
If you read "Bob, a DJ and a clown" on a guest list, are three people coming to the party, or only one? That depends on whether you're for or against the Oxford comma -- perhaps the most hotly contested punctuation mark of all time. When do we use one? Can it really be optional, or is there a universal rule? TED-Ed explores both sides of this comma conundrum.

This guy is mashing-up Drake and Tchaikovsky

Adults Creativity Music
Composer Steve Hackman is creating mash-ups, like Drake & Tchaikovsky or Radiohead & Brahms, so more people will learn to love classical music.

How misused modifiers can hurt your writing - Emma Bryce

Adults Education Language
Modifiers are words, phrases, and clauses that add information about other parts of a sentence-which is usually helpful. But when modifiers aren't linked clearly enough to the words they're actually referring to, they can create unintentional ambiguity. Emma Bryce navigates the sticky world of misplaced, dangling and squinting modifiers.

Why China is putting robots in nursing homes

Adults Technology World
China has more than 230 million senior citizens. To keep them company, it's encouraging nursing homes to buy companionship robots.

What makes a poem ... a poem? - Melissa Kovacs

Adults Art Creativity Language
What exactly makes a poem ... a poem? Poets themselves have struggled with this question, often using metaphors to approximate a definition. Is a poem a little machine? A firework? An echo? A dream? Melissa Kovacs shares three recognizable characteristics of most poetry.