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Kids Try 100 Years of Seafood | Bon Appetit

Adults Food History
In this episode of "Kids Try", the kids try 100 years of seafood. Let's see how the kids react to oysters rockefeller, lobster roll, crab cakes, Manhattan clam chowder, tuna casserole, molded salmon mousse, crab rangoon, clam dip, jambalaya, McDonald's Filet-o-Fish, popcorn shrimp, California roll sushi, blackened redfish, scallops, tropical shrimp salad, fried calamari, Stargazy pie, baja fish taco, poke bowl, and sushi burrito.

How to Make Kombu Cured Salmon | From the Test Kitchen | Bon Appetit

Adults Creativity Food
Senior Editor Chris Morocco shows us how to cure salmon with kombu, and then serves it up with a fresh yuzu kosho.

Engineers Love to Break Airplanes Before You Fly in Them, Here's Why

Adults Technology Transportation Travel
Airplane technology has come a long way, but it has limits. Lucky for us, there are teams of people whose job it is to find those limits.

6 scientific tricks for falling asleep

Adults Human Psychology Science
Can't sleep? Don't just lie there in bed and stress about it. These tricks will have you snoozing in no time.

How aspirin was discovered - Krishna Sudhir

Adults History Science
4000 years ago, the ancient Sumerians made a surprising discovery: if they scraped the bark off a particular kind of tree and ate it, their pain disappeared. Little did they know that what they'd found was destined to influence the future course of medicine. Krishna Sudhir traces the history of aspirin.

We Try To Eat Like Michael Phelps For A Day

Adults Food Science
Grits are better with syrup in them!

An Asteroid Didn't Kill the Dinosaurs, Here's a New Theory About What Did

Adults Animals Global Warming History
A new scientific model has discovered what actually happened to the earth after the asteroid impact that killed the dinosaurs.

5 useless human body parts left over from evolution

Adults History Human Biology
Your body is walking proof of evolution, but some parts have grown unnecessary over time. Here are five useless body parts left over from evolution.

This New Pill Could Cure Peanut Allergies

Adults Health Science
A new study might've found a possible cure for peanut allergies. How does it work?

What Are The Chances You'll Die In A Plane Crash?

Adults Life Transportation Travel
Planes are incredibly safe, so these are the reasons you shouldn't worry next time you fly.

The Importance of Vulnerability

Adults Psychology Relationships
We often imagine that what will win us friends and esteem is strength. But surprisingly, it's vulnerability that's at the core of friendship and likeability. This is an invitation to make friends with one's own weaknesses.

How to survive if you get stranded on an island in the middle of nowhere

Adults Environment Life World
What is one supposed to do, if you find yourself in the middle of nowhere? Here are some tips and advice on how to stay alive in the most deserted places.

How To Open Coconuts Without Any Tools

Adults Creativity Food
If you're not a coconut cracking ninja from Samoa, then you'll need an easier way to bust coconuts for pleasure, or for survival. This is the easiest and most effective way I've found to do it, when you don't have any tools.

Stop doing crunches and sit-ups - do planks and leg raises instead

Adults Health Sports Wellness
Heather Milton, a senior exercise physiologist at NYU Langone Health, does not recommend sit-ups or crunches for building your core because they put your spine through unnecessary stress.

Why do we harvest horseshoe crab blood? - Elizabeth Cox

Adults Animals Nature Science
During the warmer months, especially at night during the full moon, horseshoe crabs emerge from the sea to spawn. Waiting for them are teams of lab workers, who capture the horseshoe crabs by the hundreds of thousands, take them to labs, harvest their cerulean blood, then return them to the sea. Why? Elizabeth Cox illuminates the incredible properties of horseshoe crab blood.

The Future of Ocean Exploration

Adults Animals Ecology Nature
The amazing future of oceanographic discovery, featuring biofluorescent sharks, deep sea mining, seafloor vents, ROV's (remote operated vehicles), and the disturbing effects of ocean acidification.

Do You Really Have Two Brains?

Adults Biology Human Neuroscience
Are you a left-brained person or a right-brained person? Spoiler: You're neither. Each of us uses both sides of our brain for most of what we do. But still, there are a number of brain functions that do show lateralization, where they are localized to one side or another. Why is this? And how does it influence our definition of consciousness? People with "split brains" can help us figure it out.

Why Public Transportation Sucks in the US

Adults Business Economy Transportation
Access to transportation is the single most important factor in individual's ability to escape poverty.

I Talked Behind My Best Friend's Back

Adults Relationships Society
When Shannon first got to her new school in third grade, she was on her own, lonely, and the other kids seemed to think she was weird - until, finally, she met a great group of girls - five of them - and they all became the best of friends.

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.